1.
What are commodities?
Commodities are raw materials of a wide variety of areas:
Grains - Corn, Soybeans, Wheat
Livestock - Cattle, Hogs
Precious Metals - Gold, Platinum, Silver
Industrials - Cotton, Copper
Softs - Cocoa, Coffee, Sugar, Orange Juice
Energy - Crude Oil, Heating Oil, Natural Gas
2.
What is a derivative?
A derivative contract is an enforceable agreement whose value is
derived from the value of an underlying asset; the underlying asset
can be a commodity, precious metal, currency, bond, stock, or, indices
of commodities, stocks etc. Four most common examples of derivative
instruments are forwards, futures, options and swaps/spreads.
3.
What is Futures Contract?
Futures are exchange - traded contracts to sell or buy standardized
financial instruments or physical commodities for delivery on a
specified future date at an agreed price. Futures contracts are
used generally for protecting against rich of adverse price fluctuation
(hedging).
4.
What is a Commodity Exchange?
Commodity exchanges are centers where futures trade is
organized in a wider sense. It is taken to include any organized
market place where trade is routed through one mechanism, allowing
effective competition amongst buyers and among sellers.
5.
What is the Commodities Market?
The commodities market consists of the trading of forward contracts
or futures contracts; forward contracts are contractual agreements
to buy/sell any commodity between two entities; futures contracts
are market agreements to buy/sell very specific commodities between
two entities over a recognized commodities exchange.
6.
Why trade in the Commodities Market?
Commodities present an exciting alternative investment and trading
tool, but it is important to be well prepared to enter the markets.
Futures prices are not price predictions, but are the collective
current opinion of the marketplace of where prices appear to be
heading. That opinion, and the direction of prices, can change in
an instant, which makes trading these markets so challenging and
potentially rewarding.
7.
What is Hedging?
Hedging is a mechanism by which the participants in the physical/cash
markets can cover their price risk. Theoretically, the relationship
between the futures and cash prices is determined by cost of carry.
The two prices therefore move in tandem. This enables the participants
in the physical/cash markets to cover their price risk by taking
opposite position in the futures market.
8.
What is Speculation?
Speculation involves selecting investments with higher risk in order
to profit from an anticipated price movement. It is expectation
driven and uses market opportunities to increase ones profitably.
9.
What are Margins?
Margin money is the minimum balance that needs to be maintained
in the exchange to buy or sell a contract. Investors generally use
margin to increase their purchasing power so that they can own more
stock without fully paying for it.
10.
Who are the Market Participants?
Hedgers, speculators and arbitrageurs are the three classes of investors
having divergent goals, which is why their presence in the markets
complements each other so well.
Hedgers - Hedgers wish to eliminate price risk from their already
existing exposures and are essentially safety driven.
Speculators - Speculators willingly take price risks to profit from
price changes and are expectation driven.
Arbitrageurs - Arbitrageurs profit from price differential existing
in two markets by simultaneously operating in two different markets.
11.
Procedure for delivery of goods?
A warehouse receipt is issued in favor of the buyer, which is transferable.
On producing this receipt the buyer can take the commodity from
the warehouse.
12.
What are the different Commodity Exchanges in India?
The three major Commodity Exchanges operating in India are: -
NCDEX (National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange),
NMCEIL (National Multi Commodity Exchange Of India Limited) and
MCX (Multi Commodity Exchange).
13.
List of Commodities traded in NCDEX
1) Soy Bean
2) Refined Soy Oil
3) Mustard Seed
4) Expeller Mustard Oil
5) RBD Palmolein
6) Crude Palm Oil
7) Medium Staple Cotton
8) Gold
9) Kilo Gold
10) Long Staple Cotton
11) Pepper
12) Rubber
13) Jute
14) Chana
15) Guar Seeds
16) Silver
17) Mega Silver
14.
List of Commodities traded in MCX
1) Gold
2) Gold-M
3) Silver
4) Silver-M
5) Castor Seed
6) Soy Seed
7) Castor Oil
8) Refined Soy Oil
9) RBD Palmolein
10) Crude Palm Oil
11) Ground nut Oil
12) Guar Seed
13) Rubber
14) Pepper
15) Steel-Long
16) Steel-Flat
15.
MCX Commodity Indices
REFCOCIX
Refco listed its commodity index "REFCO-CIX" on the MCX
platform. Commodities included in REFCO-CIX are based on three parameters:
trading volume in Rupee value, open interest in terms of number
of contracts and fundamental factor measured by sum of production
and imports. Refco CIX, which has been developed with the technical
support of MCX, will now be a live index on the MCX platform.
MCXCOMDEX
MCX COMDEX is designed & developed by the Research Developed
by the Department of Multi Commodity Exchange of India Ltd. (MCX)
in association of the Indian Statistical Institute (ISI), Kolkata.
This is the median Composite Commodity Index in India based on commodity
futures prices of an exchange.
This index would be an ideal investment tool in commodities market
and also be a barometer for the performance of commodities market
over a period of time. The index allows per se as a “tradable”
index (once approved by the regulatory body), which is readily accessible
to market participants. The MCX COMDEX futures will give users the
ability to efficiently hedge commodity and inflation exposure and
lay off residual risk. Protection can be established regardless
of overall market direction.
MCX COMDEX relies on a unique combination of liquidity on MCX and
physical market size to determine its component weightings. In additional,
several design features such as annual price-percentage rebalancing
help ensure that the index will remain diversified and representative
of the asset class over time while still enabling investors to capitalize
on major a normal year.
16.
NCDEX Commodity Indices
FUTEXAGRI
The NCDEX Agri futures index would have the same basket of commodities
that is present in the spot index and similar to NCDEX Agri spot
index, each individual commodity would have equal weight age in
the index. Prices of the near month futures contract of the respective
commodities shall be used for the construction of the index. If
no futures are available in a particular month, the next nearest
expiration month prices shall be used. Also the base period for
the construction is the same for both i.e. the average of the prices
prevailed during the year 2001. Thus the spot index and the futures
index are comparable and the difference between them conveys the
returns the participants can obtain by buying the futures index.
Participants of the market can observe the real time movements of
the futures Agri Index under the symbol FUTEXAGRI.
NCDEXAGRI
NCDEX Agri futures index is constructed on the prices of the nearest
month expiry contracts for the same basket of commodities that forms
part of the NCDEX Agri spot index. The advantages of the futures
index would be two fold. The futures index if looked in tandem with
the spot index would convey to the market participants the returns
the commodity markets are offering for one month period by buying
the futures index. Second, since the futures index are constructed
based on the futures contracts traded in the Exchange it would be
get updated on real time basis as against the spot index that is
updated twice a day. However, it should be noted that the futures
index is provided to the market participants only for information
and it cannot be traded.
NCDEXRAIN
A higher index would mean that, compared to the
cumulative long period average rainfall up to the date of index,
there has been more rainfall. A lower index would mean the converse.
NCDEX Rainfall Index at any point of time will tell us what percentage
of cumulative
normal expected rainfall (till the date of the index) it has actually
rained. The value is
scaled by 1000 to represent a number.
All historical and current rainfall data has been sourced from India
Meteorological
Department (IMD). The NCDEX Rainfall Index is not intended to be
a weather forecast
or prediction regarding rainfall by NCDEX or any of its employees.
The NCDEX
Rainfall Index is only for information purpose and not for any other
purpose including
any kind of financial transaction.
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