Title: ECON 337:
1ECON 337 Agricultural Marketing
Chad Hart Associate Professor chart_at_iastate.edu 51
5-294-9911
Lee Schulz Assistant Professor lschulz_at_iastate.edu
515-294-3356
2Market Participants
- Speculators have no use for the physical
commodity - They buy or sell in an attempt to profit from
price movements - Add liquidity to the market
- May be part of the general public, professional
traders or investment managers - Short-term day traders
- Long-term buy or sell and hold
3Corn Futures Trade
Source CFTC
4Soybean Futures Trade
Source CFTC
5Live Cattle Futures Trade
Source CFTC
6Lean Hogs Futures Trade
Source CFTC
7Bullish Speculator
Long futures position
No futures position
No futures position
Time
Now
Maturity
Later
Buy futures contract
Sell contract back
Open a long futures position
Close the long position
Make a promise
Offset the promise
8Going Long
Bought Dec. 2014 Corn _at_ 4.47
9Bearish Speculator
Short futures position
No futures position
No futures position
Time
Now
Maturity
Later
Sell futures contract
Buy contract back
Open a short futures position
Close the short position
Make a promise
Offset the promise
10Going Short
Sold Nov. 2014 Soybeans _at_ 11.09
11Speculators
- Speculators
- Buy or sell in an attempt to profit from
favorable price movements - Face the risk of losses from unfavorable price
movements - Do not produce or consume the commodity
- Benefit the market because they add liquidity
- Often trade the news of the day
12Why Speculators Like Futures Markets
- Relatively little capital required
- Initial margin, margin calls
- No need to handle commodity (e.g.,
transportation, storage, cleaning) - Easy to speculate on either side of the market
(Up or Down)
13How Would You Speculate?
- Flooding is projected for Iowa
- Reports of a bumper crop in Brazilian soybeans
- Rumors of foot and mouth disease in the U.S.
- Inflation is projected to rise
14Day Traders
- Looking for quick within-day price moves
- Might be long today and short tomorrow
- Limit the risk they face by limiting their amount
of time in the market
15Going Short
Sold Nov. 2014 Soybeans _at_ 11.09
16Short Hedge
Hedging Nov. 2014 Soybeans _at_ 11.09
17Going Long
Bought Dec. 2014 Corn _at_ 4.47
18Long Hedge
Hedging Dec. 2014 Corn _at_ 4.47
19Cash Contracts
- When we talk about a cash contract, it is an
agreement between a seller and a buyer covering a
quantity and quality of a product to be delivered
at a specified location and time for a specific
price - If the time is now, we call it a cash contract
- If the time is sometime in the future, then its
a forward cash contract
20Cash Bids
Key Coop http//www.keycoop.com/cash-bids
Heartland Coop https//myaccount.heartlandcoop
.com/bids.htm Cargill http//www.cargillag.com/
Marketing/LocalBids/local-bids-center West
Central Coop http//www.west-central.com/grain/w
est-central-bids/default.aspx
21The Highest Cash Price Is
- Not always the highest return
- Need to think about transportation and storage
costs - Compare the cash prices weve seen today
- If storage is costing me 3 cents/bushel/month, do
the May bids look better than the current cash
price? - If transportation is costing me 0.5
cents/bushel/mile, which is the better price? - Boone (16 miles) Gilbert (8
miles) - Nevada (10 miles) Alleman (16
miles) - Eddyville (100 miles)
22Cash vs. Futures Hedge
- Cash Sales
- Locks in full price and delivery terms
- No margin requirements
- Futures Hedge
- Locks in futures price, but leaves basis open
- Could see price improvement/loss
- Can be easily offset if problems arise
23- Class web site
- http//www.econ.iastate.edu/chart/Classes/econ337
/Spring2014/ - Have a great Super Bowl weekend!