Thursday 15 June 2017

FUTURES & OPTIONS

What are futures and options (F&O) contracts?
These are derivative instruments traded on the stock exchange. The instrument has no independent value, with the same being ‘derived’ from the value of the underlying asset. The asset could be securities, commodities or currencies. Its value varies with the value of the underlying asset. The contract or the lot size is fixed. For example, a Nifty futures contract has 50 stocks.


What is a futures contract?
This means you agree to buy or sell the underlying security at a 'future' date. If you buy the contract, you promise to pay the price at a specified time. If you sell it, you must transfer it to the buyer at a specified price in the future.

How can the contract be settled?
The contract will expire on a pre-specified expiry date (for example, it is the last Thursday of the month for equity futures contracts). Upon expiry, the contract must be settled by delivering the underlying asset or cash. You can also roll over the contract to the next month. If you do not wish to hold it till expiry, you can close it mid-way.

What is an options contract?
This gives the buyer the right to buy/sell the underlying asset at a predetermined price, within, or at end of a specified period. He is, however, not obligated to do so. The seller of an option is obligated to settle it when the buyer exercises his right.

What are the types of options?
These are two types of options — call and put. Call is the right but not the obligation to purchase the underlying asset at the specified price by paying a premium. The seller of a call option is obligated to sell the underlying asset at the specified strike price. Put is the right but not the obligation to sell the underlying asset at the specified price by paying a premium.
However, the seller is obligated to buy the underlying asset at the specified strike price. Thus, in any options contract, the right to exercise the option is vested with the buyer of the contract. The seller only has the obligation. As the seller bears the obligation, he is paid a price known as the premium.

Should you invest in F&O contracts?
Investing in F&O needs less capital as you are required to pay only a margin money (5-20 per cent of the contract) and take a larger exposure. However, it is meant for high networth individuals.

How are F&O contracts different from each other?
In futures contracts, the buyer and the seller have an unlimited loss or profit potential. The buyer of an option can make unlimited profit and faces limited downside risk. The seller, on the other hand, can make limited profit but faces unlimited downside.

SPREAD ORDER

What is spread order?
A spread order is a trading strategy which involves going long (buying) in one contract whilst shorting (selling) another contract of the same or different underlying. Spread orders are normally executed in the F&O segment and look at capitalizing on the difference between the prices of the executed legs referred to as the "Spread".


NSE provides trading the "Spread contract" which is the difference between 2 months Index contracts trading on NSE. You can either buy or sell a spread based on your view whether the spread difference will widen or narrow. The margins required for a spread contract is relatively lower because any change in market dynamics will affect both legs similarly.
The different types of spread trades are:
a) Calendar Spread: Involves entering into long & short position of the same underlying asset with 2 different expiry periods.
Eg: Assume Nifty Jan Futures is trading at 6150 and Feb Futures is at 6190 [difference between the 2 contracts being 40 points] you could short Nifty Feb Futures and buy Nifty Jan Futures. Any reduction in this difference would be profitable and vice versa.
b) Inter commodity spread: Trading and trying to cash in on the difference between 2 closely derived Commodity contracts. For eg: A 'Crack Spread' which involves purchasing crude oil futures and taking an offsetting position by refined products of crude oil like gasoline, diesel etc.
c) Option spreads: Involves a combination of two or more different option strikes in forming a strategy which involves limited risk.