|
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE -
The person who deals with customers and their orders in
commission house offices.
ACTUALS - The physical
or cash commodity, as distinguished from commodity futures
contracts.
ARBITRAGE - The simultaneous
purchase of one commodity against the sale of another in
order to profit from distortions in usual price relationships.
AT THE MARKET - Orders
which are intended to be executed immediately by the floor
broker at the best obtainable price.
Back to Top
BASIS - Point difference
over or under a designated future at which a cash commodity
of a certain description is sold or quoted. A most important
term for those who hedge.
BEAR MARKET - A market
characterized by falling prices.
BID - An offer to buy a
specific quantity of a commodity that is subject to immediate
acceptance.
BROKER - A person paid
a fee or commission for acting as a agent in making contracts
or sales.
BULL MARKET - A market
characterized by rising prices.
BUOYANT - Describes a market
in which prices have a tendency to rise easily with a considerable
show of strength.
BUYING HEDGE - A hedge
that is initiated by taking a long position in the futures
market equal to the amount of the cash commodity which eventually
needed.
Back
to Top
CARRYING CHARGE - The
cost to store and insure a physical commodity.
CFTC - The Commodity Futures
Trading Commission.
CHART - Futures prices
plotted in a way that the chartist believes gives insight
into futures price movements. Several futures markets are
regularly influenced by buying or selling based on traders'
price chart indications.
CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE (CBOT)
- The world's largest futures exchange, it was founded in
1848.
CHICAGO MERCANTILE EXCHANGE (CME)
- The world's largest livestock exchange, it traces its
origins to a group of agricultural dealers who formed the
Chicago Produce Exchange in 1874. It was given its present
name in 1919.
CLOSE - A period of time
at the end of the trading session when all orders are filled
within the closing range.
CLOSING RANGE - A range
of closely related prices in which transactions take place
at the closing of the market; buying and selling orders
at the closing might have been filled at any point within
such a range.
CONTRACT - In futures markets,
a standardized traded instrument that specifies the quantity
and quality of a commodity (or financial asset) for delivery
(or cash settlement) at a specified future date.
COVER - To buy futures
contracts in order to offset previous selling.
CRUSH - The process of
reducing the raw, unusable soybean into its two major components,
oil and meal.
CRUSH SPREAD - A futures
spreading position in which a trader attempts to profit
from what he believes to be discrepancies in the price relationship
between soybeans and their two derivative products.
Back to Top
DAY ORDER - An order
that expires on the close of trading if not filled during
that day.
DAY TRADING - A purchase
and a sale of the same futures during the trading hours
of a single day.
DELIVERY NOTICE - A notice
of a clearing member's intentions to deliver a stated quantity
of a commodity in settlement of a futures contract.
DISCRETIONARY ACCOUNT -
An account in which the customer authorizes another person
to make full trading decisions.
Back to Top
FILL OR KILL - An order
that must be filled immediately or canceled.
FIRST NOTICE DAY (FND)
- The first day on which notice of intentions to deliver
actual commodities against futures contracts can be made.
FLOOR BROKER - A member
who executes orders for the accounts of other members on
the trading floor.
FLOOR TRADER - An exchange
member who fills orders for his own account by being personally
on the floor. Normally called a "local."
FUTURES COMMISSION MERCHANT (FCM)
- An intermediary who stands between the brokers in the
pits and the nonmember speculating and hedging public. Every
brokerage house must be a futures commission merchant in
order to do business with the public.
FUTURES CONTRACT - A firm
commitment to make or accept delivery of a specified quantity
and quality of a commodity during a specific month in the
future at a price agreed upon at the time the commitment
was made.
Back to Top
GOOD TILL CANCELED ORDER (GTC)
- An open order that remains in force until the customer
explicitly cancels the order, until the futures contract
expires, or until the order is filled.
Back to Top
HEDGE - To use the futures
market to reduce the price risks inherent in buying and
selling cash commodities. For example, as an elevator operator
buys cash grain from farmers, he can hedge his purchases
by selling futures contracts; when he sells the cash commodity,
he purchases an offsetting number of futures contracts to
liquidate his position.
HEDGING - The sale of futures
contracts in anticipation of future sales of cash commodities
as a protection against possible price declines, or the
purchase of futures contracts in anticipation of future
purchases of cash commodities as a protection against the
possibility of increasing costs.
Back to Top
INTERMARKET SPREAD -
A spread between commodities that are traded on more than
one market. For example, a typical intermarket spread might
be made between Chicago wheat and Kansas City wheat.
Back to Top
LAST TRADING DAY (LTD)
- The final day in which trading may occur for a particular
delivery month. After the last trading day, any remaining
commitment must be settled for delivery.
LIMIT ORDER - An order
in which the trader sets a limit to the price, as contrasted
with a market order on which no limit is set.
LIQUIDATION - The closing
out of a previous position by taking an opposite position
in the same contract.
LIQUIDITY - The degree
to which a given market is liquid.
LONG - A position established
by owning the actual commodity unhedged or by purchasing
futures.
Back to Top
MARGIN - A good faith
deposit a speculator gives to his broker prior to initiating
his first trade.
MARGIN CALL - A demand
by a broker for additional funds sufficient to raise your
deposit on a commodity futures contract above the minimum
acceptable level.
MARKET IF TOUCHED (MIT)
- An order that may be executed only if the market reaches
a specified point. (NOTE: Not all exchanges accept MIT orders.)
MARKET ORDER - An order
that is to be filled as soon as possible at the best obtainable
price.
MOVING AVERAGE - A method
of smoothing prices to more easily discern market trends.
Back
to Top
NEW YORK MERCANTILE EXCHANGE
(NYMEX) - Founded in 1872 as a market for cheese,
butter, eggs, its principle commodities today include heating
oil and petroleum products.
Back to Top
OFFER - An indication
of a willingness to sell at a certain price, as opposed
to a bid.
OPEN INTEREST - The total
number of futures contracts entered into during a specified
period of time that have not been liquidated either by offsetting
futures transactions or by actual delivery.
OPENING RANGE - Range of
closely related prices at which transactions took place
at the opening of the market; buying and selling orders
at the opening might be filled at any point within such
a range.
Back to Top
PIT - The area on an
exchange floor where futures trading takes place.
PRICE LIMIT - The maximum
price advance or decline from the previous day's settlement
price permitted for a commodity in one trading session by
the rules of the exchange.
PYRAMIDING - The practice
of using accrued paper profits to margin additional trades.
Back to Top
RALLY - Quick advance
in prices following a decline.
RANGE - The difference
between the highest and lowest prices recorded during a
given trading session, week, month, or year.
RISK CAPITAL - Money which,
if lost, would not materially affect one's living habits
or deny one the necessities and comforts of normal life.
Back to Top
SELLING HEDGE - Selling
futures contracts to protect against possible decreased
prices of commodities which will be sold in the future.
SETTLEMENT PRICE - The
price at which the clearing house clears all transactions
at the close of the day.
SHAKEOUT - A healthy technical
correction of an overbought situation, characterized by
a comparatively short but sharp decline in prices.
SHORT - A trader who has
sold futures, speculating that prices will decline.
SHORT SQUEEZE - A situation
in which futures traders are unable to buy the cash commodity
to deliver against their positions, and so are forced to
buy offsetting futures at prices much higher than they'd
ordinarily be willing to pay.
SPECULATION - Buying or
selling in hopes of making a profit.
SPECULATOR - One who is
interested in profiting from a price change in a commodity
futures contract. Speculators may trade from the floor of
an exchange if they are members, or through a broker if
they are not.
SPOT DELIVERY MONTH - The
nearest delivery month among all those traded at any point
in time. The actual contract month represented by the spot
delivery month is constantly changing throughout the calendar
year as each contract month reaches its last trading day.
SPOT PRICE - The price
quoted for the actual commodity same; same as cash commodity
price.
SPREAD - The purchase of
one futures contract and sale of another, in the expectation
that the price relationships between the two will change
so that a subsequent offsetting sale and purchase will yield
a net profit.
STOP ORDER - A buy order
placed above the market (or sell order placed below the
market) that becomes a market order when the specified price
is reached.
SUPPORT - Any barrier to
a price decline.
Back to Top
TOPPING OUT - A term
employed to denote loss of upside energy at the top after
a long price run-up.
TRADING RANGE - The amount
that futures prices can fluctuate during one trading session-essentially,
the price "distance" between limit up and limit
down.
Back to Top
VOLUME - The number
of purchases and sales of a commodity made during a specified
period of time.
Back to Top
WHIPSAW - term used
to describe what has happened to traders that have had stop
orders executed as a result of volatile market swings. The
traders' intentions were for the stop orders to be executed
on market movements indicative of a sustained trend.
Back to Top
This information is obtained from sources
believed to be reliable. However, CommodityBroker.com cannot
guarantee its completeness or accuracy.
|