FUTURES TRADING FUNDAMENTALS
Master the Derivatives Market - Leverage, Contracts & Risk Management
WHAT ARE FUTURES CONTRACTS?
Futures Basics
- • Agreement to buy/sell an asset at predetermined price
- • On a specific future date (expiry)
- • Standardized contracts traded on exchanges
- • Originally created for commodities (wheat, oil, gold)
- • Now includes indices, currencies, crypto
- Today: Crude oil = $75/barrel
- You buy: 1 March futures contract @ $75
- Contract size: 1,000 barrels
- Total exposure: $75,000
- • March arrives, oil = $82/barrel
- • Profit: ($82 - $75) × 1,000 = $7,000
- • March arrives, oil = $68/barrel
- • Loss: ($68 - $75) × 1,000 = -$7,000
- Stocks: You buy and OWN the asset
- Futures: You enter a CONTRACT (obligation)
- • No ownership until settlement
- • Can close position before expiry (90% do)
- • Cash-settled or physical delivery
Why Trade Futures?
- • Control $100,000 position with $5,000 margin
- • 20:1 leverage typical (varies by contract)
- • Amplifies both gains AND losses
- • Profit from falling markets
- • No borrowing stocks required
- • Same margin requirements as going long
- • Protect existing stock portfolio
- • Lock in commodity prices (producers/consumers)
- • Reduce currency risk for importers/exporters
- • 60/40 rule: 60% long-term, 40% short-term
- • Regardless of holding period
- • Consult tax professional
- • Trade almost 24/7 (except 1 hour daily maintenance)
- • React to global news instantly
- • No overnight gap risk (mostly)
- • High risk - can lose more than initial investment
- • Margin calls (forced liquidation)
- • Expiration dates (time pressure)
- • Complex - not suitable for beginners
FUTURES CONTRACT SPECIFICATIONS
Key Contract Terms
- • E-mini S&P 500 (ES): $50 × index value
- • Crude Oil (CL): 1,000 barrels
- • Gold (GC): 100 troy ounces
- • Euro FX (6E): €125,000
- • CRITICAL: Know your exposure!
- Tick = Minimum price movement
- • ES: 0.25 points = $12.50 per tick
- • CL: $0.01/barrel = $10 per tick
- • GC: $0.10/oz = $10 per tick
- • Quarterly: March, June, September, December
- • Monthly: Every month (some contracts)
- • Front month = nearest expiry (most liquid)
- Cash-Settled (most common):
- • Indices (ES, NQ, YM)
- • Profit/loss credited to account
- • No physical delivery
- Physically-Delivered:
- • Crude oil, gold, agricultural products
- • Must close before First Notice Day!
- • Or you'll receive 1,000 barrels of oil!
- • Regular (RTH): 9:30am-4pm ET
- • Electronic (Globex): 6pm-5pm ET (23 hrs)
- • Sunday open: 6pm ET
Popular Futures Contracts
- • Symbol: /ES
- • Value: $50 × S&P 500 index
- • Tick: 0.25 pts = $12.50
- • Margin: ~$12,000 per contract
- • Most liquid futures contract globally
- • Symbol: /NQ
- • Value: $20 × Nasdaq 100 index
- • Tick: 0.25 pts = $5
- • More volatile than ES
- • Symbol: /CL
- • Size: 1,000 barrels
- • Tick: $0.01 = $10
- • Physical delivery (close before expiry!)
- • Symbol: /GC
- • Size: 100 troy ounces
- • Tick: $0.10 = $10
- • Safe haven asset
- • Symbol: /6E
- • Size: €125,000
- • Alternative to forex spot market
Reading Futures Quotes
- ESH25 breaks down as:
- • ES = E-mini S&P 500
- • H = March expiration
- • 25 = Year 2025
- F = January | G = February | H = March
- J = April | K = May | M = June
- N = July | Q = August | U = September
- V = October | X = November | Z = December
- ESH25: 5,850.50
- Change: +12.75 (+0.22%)
- Volume: 1,234,567 contracts
- Open Interest: 2,345,678
- 1 ES contract at 5,850.50:
- = 5,850.50 × $50
- = $292,525 notional value
- ES moves 1 full point (4 ticks):
- • 4 ticks × $12.50 = $50 P/L
- • Total outstanding contracts
- • Higher OI = more liquidity
- • Stick to front month (highest OI)
- Always check contract specs before trading!
MARGIN & LEVERAGE - The Double-Edged Sword
How Margin Works
- • Money required to OPEN position
- • Set by exchange (CME, NYMEX, etc.)
- • Typically 3-12% of contract value
- • ES at 5,850 = $292,500 exposure
- • Initial margin: ~$12,000
- • Leverage: ~24:1
- • Control $292K with just $12K!
- • Money required to KEEP position open
- • Usually ~80% of initial margin
- • ES maintenance: ~$9,600
- • Fall below this = MARGIN CALL
- What happens:
- 1. Position goes against you
- 2. Account falls below maintenance
- 3. Broker demands MORE money
- 4. Don't deposit? Position LIQUIDATED
- 5. You still owe if account goes negative!
- • Positions settled DAILY
- • Profits/losses added to account each day
- • Win: Money credited immediately
- • Lose: Money debited immediately
- • Different from stocks (settle at close)
Leverage Examples
- • Account: $25,000
- • Buy 1 ES @ 5,850 (margin: $12,000)
- • ES rises to 5,900 (+50 points)
- • Profit: 50 × $50 = $2,500
- • Return on margin: $2,500/$12,000 = 20.8%!
- • New account balance: $27,500
- • Account: $25,000
- • Buy 1 ES @ 5,850 (margin: $12,000)
- • ES falls to 5,800 (-50 points)
- • Loss: 50 × $50 = -$2,500
- • Return on margin: -20.8%
- • New account balance: $22,500
- • Account: $15,000 (minimal buffer)
- • Buy 1 ES @ 5,850 (margin: $12,000)
- • ES falls to 5,740 (-110 points)
- • Loss: 110 × $50 = -$5,500
- • Account now: $15,000 - $5,500 = $9,500
- • Below maintenance ($9,600)
- • MARGIN CALL: Deposit $3,000+ or liquidate!
- • Stocks: 2:1 leverage max (Reg T)
- • Forex: 50:1 typical
- • Futures: 10:1 to 30:1 typical
- • Crypto futures: 100:1+ (extremely risky)
- Higher leverage = Higher risk = Faster wipeout
CONTRACT EXPIRATION & ROLLING
Expiration Rules
- • Physically-delivered contracts only
- • Date you can be assigned delivery
- • MUST close before this or risk delivery!
- • Example: Crude oil, gold, corn
- • Final day to trade the contract
- • Varies by contract
- • ES: 3rd Friday of expiry month
- • Final price determined
- • Cash-settled: P/L credited
- • Physical: Delivery occurs
- 2020: Oil traders forgot to roll
- Crude oil went NEGATIVE (-$37/barrel!)
- Reason: Nobody wanted physical delivery
- Storage full due to COVID lockdowns
How to Roll Contracts
- • Closing expiring contract
- • Opening next month's contract
- • Maintains continuous position
- 1. You hold ESH25 (March 2025)
- 2. March expiry approaching
- 3. Sell ESH25 (close position)
- 4. Buy ESM25 (June 2025)
- 5. Done in single transaction (spread order)
- • 5-10 days before expiration
- • When volume shifts to next month
- • Check open interest (should be higher in next)
- Contango: Next month MORE expensive
- • Costs money to roll
- Backwardation: Next month CHEAPER
- • Earn money rolling
Rolling Best Practices
- ✓ Set calendar reminders:
- • 2 weeks before expiry
- • 1 week before
- • 3 days before (final warning)
- ✓ Monitor volume migration:
- • When next month > current = time to roll
- • Institutional traders roll early
- • Don't wait until last day (illiquid)
- ✓ Use spread orders:
- • Simultaneous buy/sell
- • Better price execution
- • Lower slippage
- × Forgetting to roll entirely
- × Rolling too late (poor liquidity)
- × Not understanding delivery risk
- × Ignoring contango costs
- Brokers usually send notifications, but YOU are responsible!
FUTURES ORDER TYPES
Basic Order Types
- • Execute immediately at best price
- • Guaranteed fill
- • Price NOT guaranteed (slippage risk)
- • Use only in liquid markets
- • Specify maximum buy / minimum sell price
- • Price guaranteed (if filled)
- • Fill NOT guaranteed
- Example: "Buy ES at 5,850 limit"
- → Only fills at 5,850 or better
- • Trigger: Price reaches stop level
- • Becomes market order when triggered
- • Protects profits / limits losses
- • Can have slippage on fill
- Example: Long at 5,850, stop at 5,830
- • Trigger: Stop price reached
- • Becomes LIMIT order (not market)
- • Controls worst fill price
- • May not fill in fast markets
- Example: Stop 5,830, Limit 5,825
- • Like limit but becomes market when triggered
- • Good for entering on pullbacks
Advanced Order Types
- • Two orders linked together
- • One fills → other cancels automatically
- • Perfect for bracket orders
- Example: Stop-loss AND profit target
- • Entry + Stop-loss + Profit target
- • All placed simultaneously
- • Automatic risk management
- Example:
- • Buy ES at 5,850
- • Stop-loss: 5,830 (-20 pts)
- • Profit target: 5,890 (+40 pts)
- • 2:1 reward-to-risk ratio
- • Stop that follows price at fixed distance
- • Locks in profits as price moves favorably
- • Never moves against you
- Example: Trail by 20 points
- • Enter 5,850, trail activates at 5,870
- • Stop now at 5,850 (breakeven)
- • Price hits 5,900, stop now 5,880
- • Fill entire order immediately or cancel
- • No partial fills allowed
- • Rarely used by retail
- Most traders use: Limit entry + Bracket order
Order Execution Tips
- ✓ Always use limit orders during RTH:
- • Tight spreads = minimal slippage
- • Control your entry price
- ✓ Market orders overnight = risky:
- • Wide spreads during Globex
- • Can get filled 5-10 ticks worse
- ✓ Place stops as STOP-LIMIT:
- • Stop-market can gap through badly
- • Stop-limit controls worst-case fill
- • Set limit 5-10 ticks away from stop
- ✓ Use bracket orders religiously:
- • Forces you to define risk BEFORE entry
- • Removes emotion from exits
- • Professional approach
- × Market orders in illiquid times
- × No stop-loss at all
- × Moving stop-loss away from price
- × Taking profit too early (fear)
- × Holding losers too long (hope)
- Set alerts 5 ticks before your levels
- Gives you time to adjust if needed
- Let automation handle exits (no emotion)
FUTURES RISK MANAGEMENT - SURVIVAL RULES
Critical Rules
- Never risk more than 1-2% per trade
- Example Calculation:
- • Account: $50,000
- • Risk: 1% = $500 max loss
- • Stop: 20 points on ES
- • 20 pts × $50 = $1,000 per contract
- • Can only trade 0.5 contracts ($500 risk)
- • OR use micro E-mini (MES) instead
- NO EXCEPTIONS. EVER.
- • Set stop BEFORE entering trade
- • Based on technical levels (not arbitrary)
- • Don't widen stops "to give it room"
- • Total open positions risk ≤ 5% account
- • Example: 3 contracts @ 1% each = 3% total
- • Prevents catastrophic drawdown
- Before every trade, calculate:
- "If stopped out, I lose exactly $___"
- If that number makes you uncomfortable, don't trade
- Risk management > Strategy. Always.
Account Management
- • MES, MNQ, etc. (1/10 size)
- • Minimum: $2,000-$5,000
- • Recommended: $10,000+
- • ES, NQ, CL, etc.
- • Minimum: $10,000-$15,000
- • Recommended: $25,000-$50,000
- • Under $25K = very risky
- Set a hard stop for the day:
- • Down 2-3% = STOP TRADING
- • Come back tomorrow fresh
- • Prevents revenge trading
- Max drawdown thresholds:
- • -10%: Review strategy, reduce size
- • -20%: STOP. Take break. Reassess.
- • -30%: Major problem. Seek help.
- • Lose 20% → Need 25% to recover
- • Lose 50% → Need 100% to recover
Risk/Reward Ratios
- Never take trades worse than 1.5:1
- Target: 2:1 or better
- • Entry: 5,850
- • Stop: 5,830 (risk 20 pts = $1,000)
- • Target: 5,890 (reward 40 pts = $2,000)
- • R:R = 2:1 ✓ GOOD
- At 2:1 R:R:
- • Need only 40% win rate to profit
- • 10 trades: 4 wins, 6 losses
- • 4 × $2,000 = $8,000
- • 6 × -$1,000 = -$6,000
- • Net: +$2,000 profit
- • Take 50% off at 1:1 (risk-free)
- • Move stop to breakeven
- • Let 50% run to 2:1+ target
- • "You can't go broke taking profits"
- • Losing trade? Exit and reassess
- • Don't add to losers (disaster recipe)
FUTURES TRADING BEST PRACTICES
FUTURES TRADING RISK DISCLAIMER
Futures trading involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. You can lose more than your initial investment due to leverage. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Margin calls can force liquidation of positions at unfavorable prices. The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you. Physical delivery of commodities is a real risk if positions are not closed before First Notice Day. Contract specifications, margin requirements, and trading hours are subject to change by exchanges. This material is for educational purposes only and does not constitute trading advice or recommendations. Examples provided are for illustration only and do not represent actual trading results. Market conditions can result in rapid losses. Stop loss orders do not guarantee execution at the stop price during volatile markets or gap moves. Options on futures are complex instruments requiring specialized knowledge. Only trade with risk capital - money you can afford to lose entirely. Futures trading is not suitable for retirement accounts, emergency funds, or borrowed money. Most traders lose money. Brokerage firms may have different margin requirements than stated. You are responsible for understanding all contract specifications before trading. TradeHive and its affiliates are not registered investment advisors and accept no liability for trading losses. Consult with licensed professionals before trading. This is not a recommendation to trade futures. You trade at your own risk.
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