Showing posts with label margin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label margin. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
How to Trade Stock Futures (5 Steps)
Learn the mechanics of how to trade stock futures. Stock futures are traded as standardized contracts of 100 shares. They are issued for a specified time period and expire on the third Friday of their final month. At that point they must be settled. This means you must buy (or sell) the actual shares unless you have an offsetting option contract (see Step 5). The attraction of stock futures lies in the fact that they can be traded on margin, allowing investors to leverage trades and increase potential profits.
Open a margin account with a brokerage firm. Trading accounts with margin privileges are similar to regular (cash) brokerage accounts, except that you are allowed to borrow money or stock from the broker. Because you buy a futures contract instead of the stock, there are no interest charges. However, this is considered a margin transaction because your potential liability is greater than the money you put up as a margin requirement. A margin account typically requires a $2,000 minimum balance, although for day traders this may be as high as $25,000.
Place an order to for a call (buy) or put (sell) futures contract with your broker. SEC regulations require a 20 percent margin. For example, if you purchase a contract for a stock selling at $25 a share, you must put up $5 a share or $500. If the stock goes up by $5 a share you make $500---a 100 percent profit, instead of the 20 percent you would make by buying the stock itself.
Keep up with daily fluctuations in the market price of the stock. The risk when you trade stock futures is as great as the potential profit. If the stock falls in price (or rises for a put futures contract) your investment decreases quickly and you will get a margin call. For example (using the example from step 3), if the stock falls from $25 to $23 a share, your margin falls to $3 a share, or 13 percent of the share price. You must then add more funds or the broker has to close out the account. Since small changes in price have such a large effect, you need to monitor the stock on a daily basis, if not more often.
Close out the transaction when you are ready. Very few stock futures contracts are actually exercised (that is, the underlying shares purchased and delivered). Instead, trades are normally settled by purchasing a second futures contract of the opposite type (a put if you are holding a call and vice versa). The two contracts simply cancel each other out at expiration.
How to Invest in Rice on the Stock Market
Open a brokerage account that will allow you to trade futures, options and stocks (see Resources below for suggestions).
Buy an options or futures contract on rice. The ticker symbol for rice is ZR. You will need a minimum margin of $2,430 for a futures contract and $250 for an options contract.
Enter the ticker symbol into the brokerage software and click on 'Search.' This will bring up a list of rice-related products and their contract dates.
Select the month of the contract that you wish to purchase and the price that you wish to buy it at under the “Limit” price. Click on “Buy” or “Submit Order.” When the price of the contract is reached, the software will automatically purchase the contract.
Buy a stock or exchange traded fund (ETF). Since rice producers are not publicly traded companies you cannot purchase their stock directly. You can, however, buy the stock of companies related to the production of rice.
Buy stock from companies that make pesticides and seed-related products related to rice. You can research these types of companies at MarketWatch.com or Morningstar.com.
Buy an exchange traded fund (ETF). These are funds that invest in several different, but related companies for diversification. There are several agricultural ETFs that you can consider. These include the ELEMENTS Rogers International Commodity fund (NYSE: RJA), the iPath DJ AIG Agriculture Fund (NYSE: JJA) and the PowerShares DB Agriculture ETF (NYSE: DBA).
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