Futures Trading Journal offers our subscribers a EXTREMELY successful
(see performance history) computer aided commodities trading system for the currency commodities markets, and has been used by top commodities brokers and leading financial institutions since mid-2002. The daily trade entries can be viewed by FTJ subscribers as soon as they a posted; subscribers are immediately notified via email. Posting of the currency commodity trade entries occurs before the trades have been executed given subscribers time to review the information and decide whether or not to utilize such data for their own personal means. Futures Trading Journal may from time to time post trade entries for commodities traded on the metals commodity market other than Light Sweet Crude Oil Futures.
For those individuals who are not familiar with the currency futures / commodities market, here is some basic information that you should be aware of...
A currency future, also FX future or foreign exchange future, is a futures contract to exchange one currency for another at a specified date in the future at a price (exchange rate) that is fixed on the last trading date. Typically, one of the currencies is the US dollar. The price of a future is then in terms of US dollars per unit of other currency. This can be different from the standard way of quoting in the spot foreign exchange markets. The trade unit of each contract is then a certain amount of other currency, for instance EUR 125,000. Most contracts have physical delivery, so for those held at the end of the last trading day, actual payments are made in each currency. However, most contracts are closed out before that.
Example:
Peter buys 10 September CME Euro FX Futures, at 1.2713 USD/EUR. At the end of the day, the futures close at 1.2784 USD/EUR. The change in price is 0.0071 USD/EUR. As each contract is over EUR 125,000, and he has 10 contracts, his profit is USD 8,875. As with any future, this is paid to him immediately.
More generally, each change of 0.0001 USD/EUR (the minimum Commodity tick size), is a profit or loss of USD 12.5 per contract.
Investors use these futures contracts to hedge against foreign exchange risk. They can also be used to speculate and, by incurring a risk, attempt to profit from rising or falling exchange rates. Investors can close out the contract at any time prior to the contract's delivery date.
Currency futures were first created at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) in 1972, less than one year after the system of fixed exchange rates was abandoned along with the gold standard. Some commodity traders at the CME did not have access to the inter-bank exchange markets in the early seventies, when they believed that significant changes were about to take place in the currency market. They established the International Monetary Market (IMM) and launched trading in seven currency futures on May 16, 1972. Today, the IMM is a division of CME. In the second quarter of 2005, an average of 332,000 contracts with a notional value of USD 43 billion were traded every day. Most of these are traded electronically nowadays.
Other futures exchanges that trade currency futures are Euronext.liffe and Tokyo Financial Exchange.
The IMM dates are the third Wednesday in March, June, September and December.
As always, Futures Trading Journal reminds you that any investment, including commodities investments in currencies, carries with it a substantial level of risk. FTJ advises anyone who is considering investing in the Gold Futures or Silver Futures precious metals commodities markets to speak with a licensed and qualified commodities broker to determine if such investments in commodities are suitable for you.