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Learn about trading soybean and corn futures contracts, market positions, trading procedures, and key terms in agricultural marketing.
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ECON 337: Agricultural Marketing Lee Schulz Associate Professor lschulz@iastate.edu 515-294-3356 Chad Hart Associate Professor chart@iastate.edu 515-294-9911
CME Group • http://www.cmegroup.com/ • Products • Agricultural commodities • Corn, soy, cattle, hogs, etc. • Energy • Currency • Metals • Weather • Others
Futures Contracts • A legally binding contract to make or take delivery of the commodity • Trading the promise to do something in the future • You can “offset” your promise • Standardized contract • Form (weight, grade, specifications) • Time (delivery date) • Place (delivery location)
Soybean Futures • Form • 5,000 bushels • No. 2 Yellow Soybeans (at price), No. 1 Yellow soybeans (at 6 cents over price), and No. 3 Yellow Soybeans (at 6 cents under price) • Time • Contract months: Sept, Nov, Jan, Mar, May, July, and August Source: CME Group
Corn and Soybean Shipping Stations Source: CME Group Rulebook
Delivery Points Corn Soybeans Wheat Source: Irwin, Garcia, Good, and Kunda, 2009 Marketing and Outlook Research Report 2009-02
Futures Contracts • No physical exchange takes place when the contract is traded (no actual commodity moves) • Payment is based on the price established when the contract was initially traded (prices can and will change before delivery is taken) • Deliveries can be made when the contract expires or the offsetting futures position must be taken to settle up • Deliveries occur on less than 5 percent of the traded contracts
Market Positions • You can either buy or sellinitially to open a position in the futures market • “Make” a promise to make or take delivery • Do the opposite to close the position at a later date • “Offset” the promise (and no commodity changes hands) • Trader may also hold the position until expiration and make or take physical delivery of the commodity
Trading Futures Contracts • All trades through a licensed broker • Brokerage house has a “seat” at the exchange and is allowed to trade • Represented “on the floor” to exercise trade • Local broker to initiate transaction and manage account with client • Full service and discount brokers
CME Group • http://www.cmegroup.com/ • Open, High, Low, Last Price • Settlement Price • Volume • Open Interest • Daily Limits
Terms and Definitions • Basis • The difference between the spot or cash price and the futures price of the same or a related commodity. • Bear • Someone that thinks the price will decline • Bull • Someone that thinks the price will increase
Cash vs. Futures Prices Iowa Corn in 2018 The gap between the lines is the basis.
Terms and Definitions • Clearing House • The division of the futures exchange through which all trades made must be confirmed, matched and settled each day until offset or delivered. • Commission • For futures contracts, the one-time fee charged by a broker to cover the trades you make to open and close each position.
Terms and Definitions • Long position • A position in which the trader has bought a futures contract that does not offset a previously established short position. • Short position • A position in which the trader has sold a futures contract that does not offset a previously established long position.
Going Short Sold Dec. 2019 Corn @ $4.015 What type of trader (bull or bear) would go short? What events would send prices in a favorable direction?
Going Long What type of trader (bull or bear) would go long? Bought Dec. 2019 Corn @ $4.015 What events would send prices in a favorable direction?
Class web site: http://www2.econ.iastate.edu/faculty/hart/Classes/econ337/Spring2019/index.htm