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WHAT ARE ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS?  
Commodity and financial futures provide unique opportunities to speculate or diversify into global markets that have practically zero or negative correlation with stocks and bonds5. Many analysts agree that the recent exponential increase in commodity investments has been from several factors: recent attention focused on the growth in international demand for raw materials, the addition of new commodity instruments to global exchanges, mounting interest in commodity-based indices, and renewed attention on inflation risks to traditional debt-equity portfolios6.
 
Commodity Trading Advisors: Assets Under Management2       
 
The Mechanics of
Trading Commodity Futures
 
Commodity futures are not traditional asset classes. A futures contract is a binding agreement to buy or sell a commodity or financial instrument sometime in the future at a price agreed upon at the time of the trade. While actual physical delivery seldom takes place, these contracts are nevertheless standardized and their trading is regulated. Price is the variable that is of the greatest concern to speculators. Today, commodity futures markets include agricultural products, metals, petroleum, financial instruments, foreign currencies and stock indices. Similarly, options on futures contracts exist and are traded on open exchanges.
One of the key benefits of trading in the futures markets is that it offers the trader financial leverage. Leverage is the ability of a trader to control large dollar amounts of a commodity with a comparatively small amount of capital. As such, leverage magnifies both gains and losses in the futures market. To trade a futures contract, the amount you must deposit in your account is called initial margin. Based on the closing prices on each day that you have that open position, your account is either debited or credited daily for you to maintain your position7.

If you would like to learn more about how to trade commodity futures, please contact us.

   
  What are Alternative Investments?Commodity Futures for Profit SpeculationCommodities Futures for Portfolio DiversificationCommodities Compared to Stocks and Bonds
Quick Topics:
What are Alternative Investments? What are Alternative Investment?
Commodity Futures for Profit Speculation.
Commodities Futures for Portfolio Diversification.
Commodities Compared to Stocks and Bonds.
 
 
Risk Disclosure: There is a risk of loss in futures and options trading. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Nothing in this site is intended to be a recommendation to buy or sell any futures or options market. All information has been obtained from sources, which are believed to be reliable, but accuracy and thoroughness cannot be guaranteed. Readers are solely responsible for how they use the information and for their results.
 
Research Sources:
1. Sesit, Michael R. ”Commodities Enter Investment Mainstream: Pension Funds, Universities Jump Into the Asset Class; High Returns, Low Risk”. 9 Sep 2004. Wall Street Journal.
2. Barclay Group, LTD. “Money Under Management in Managed Futures”. 1 Mar 2006.
3. Gorton, Gary (University of Pennsylvania) and Rouwenhorst, K. Geert (Yale School of Management ). “Facts and Fantasies About Commodity Futures”. June 14, 2004. Yale ICF Working Paper No. 04-20.
4. S&P Corp. and D.B. Stark & Company. S&P 500 Index and Stark 300 Managed Futures Index Data. Dec 1981 to Dec 2005. Starkonline.com.
5. Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT). “Managed Futures Portfolio Diversification Opportunities”. 2005.
6. The Center for International Securities and Derivatives Markets (CISDM) of the University of Massachusetts Amherst. “The Benefits of Managed Futures 2005 Update”. June 2005.
7. Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT). “Trading in Futures – An Introduction”. 2005.