Starting Out in Futures Trading

(13 customer reviews)

$12.26

Author(s)

Format

PDF

Pages

395

Published Date

2001

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Description

The purpose of Starting Out in Futures Trading is to introduce the beginner to the world of commodity futures trading, including the electronic trading aspects, and to aid in preparing one to take advantage of favorable circumstances that arise in the trading of commodity futures. Electronic tradings’ greatest impact is on the efficiency in the method of trading and its ability to allow the trader nearly instantaneous ability to effectuate a trade. You will still be required to do the same analyses and interpretation of data, though more of it, and to decide whether you are a buyer, a seller, a spreader, and so on. So, the bulk of this book will concentrate on helping you to understand the process of futures trading, decide whether futures trading is for you, and, if so, help you to create a trading plan and execute it.

Introduction:

This book will offer no sure-fire methods for making money, nor will it predict the prices of any commodity. It makes no promises to turn you into a successful trader, because a successful trader needs more than knowledge about the market. It will, however, provide you with an understanding of many of the basic aspects of futures trading—-knowledge without which only “chance luck” can work in your favor. The word commodity is used herein for the most part interchangeably with the word futures. Futures contracts are now traded on many goods and services that are not strictly commodities in the traditional sense. The concepts, ideas, and descriptions in this book are applicable to futures whether the underlying “commodity” is agricultural, industrial, financial, foreign, or domestic.

Commodity futures trading is not for everybody. Commodity futures investments managed by others, however, have a much broader suitability to many investors. For example, you should not trade or invest unless you have money you and your dependents can afford to lose. If you are in the proverbial “orphan or window” class, do not trade, and select your managed futures investments carefully. Some studies have shown that the probabilities are quite high that after a customer pays his commissions and calculates the interest income lost on money deposited with his broker, he will not make money.

You should not trade unless you are psychologically suited to taking large risks. Most commodity futures transactions involve a great deal of risk. Unless you are certain that you can accept that risk and still sleep at night without worry, do not trade. You should not trade unless you are certain that you can control your ego and your greed. High risk and high profit potential go together. If you cannot discipline yourself well enough to admit a mistake on a trade and close it out at a small loss or to be satisfied with a moderate gain on a winning trade, do not trade.

If you tend to live on hopes and dreams instead of on the realities of hard facts, do not trade. If you think you can make money trading futures without doing some hard work, do not trade. Making money consistently is not easy in any line of work. And it is especially hard in futures trading. If after reading the above you have already concluded that trading is not for you, don’t give up. Read on. Investing in a professionally managed futures product, in which you don’t have to do the work, may suit you fine. In that case, when you have finished with this chapter, go directly to Chapter 4, “Managed Futures—A Good Alternative.” As you read the rest of this book, keep these points in mind and try to deter-mine your suitability for trading.

Contents:

  • Trading Stocks versus Trading Commodity Futures
  • The Electronic Exchange
  • Speculation Is Not a Four-Letter Word
  • Managed Futures—A Good Alternative
  • Commodity Index Futures—The Basket Approach to Investing
  • The Trading Plan
  • Choosing a Broker
  • The Order
  • Forecasting Prices—Supply and Demand
  • Basic Price Patterns—Forecasting Tools
  • Technical Analysis
  • Technical Analysis—The Tools and How They Work
  • Volume and Open Interest
  • Commodity Hedging—A Primer
  • Hedging—The Basis
  • Your Banker and Hedging
  • Commodity Hedging in Action
  • Energy Hedging—Some Examples
  • Fact and Fiction About Spreads
  • Financial Futures—An Introduction
  • Money—Trading the Ultimate Commodity
  • Understanding the “Yield Curve”
  • The Interest Rate Contracts
  • Hedging Applications for Interest Rate Futures
  • Stock Index Futures and Options
  • Commodity Options
  • Strategies for Trading Options
  • Historical Development of Commodity Futures Trading
  • The Commodity Futures Exchange
Starting Out in Futures Trading By Mark Powers pdf
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13 reviews for Starting Out in Futures Trading

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  1. Garrett Marin (verified owner)

    This book holds a lot of useful information for people unfamiliar with futures. I have been actively trading for over 3 years and found lots of information I was previously unaware of. I always like to remind myself of some of the finer details which this book does also.

  2. Nolan Solis (verified owner)

    This book definitely provides a lot of information regarding futures. It is the best reference book on futures that I have ever read.

  3. Meghan Vargas (verified owner)

    This is a good book for the basics of futures trading. It has a lot of the basic terms and information you need to get a quick edge in trading. Will it be the last and only book you buy on futures? Probably not! This is a good start that will peak your curiousity. I recommend it.

  4. Elsa Lugo (verified owner)

    just rehashed old information

  5. Callan Phan (verified owner)

    Good

  6. Lillian O’Connor (verified owner)

    Was a good read for someone like me who knew nothing about future trading.

  7. Princeton Blackburn (verified owner)

    basic but good

  8. Miracle Whitehead (verified owner)

    Basic without much detail

  9. Zayd Avery (verified owner)

    I thought I might do some speculative investing so I bought this book. I thought it is was very educational (and even entertaining). I ended up giving it to my brother and he said it was an excellent resource. He works for a wholly owned subsidiary of RBS and is very successful.

  10. Frida Horton (verified owner)

    This book is 90% filler with basic things about investing like what are stocks, bonds, what is a broker, what is technical analysis, what is a trading plan, etc.

    Less than 10% of the book actually discusses futures. Complete waste of money if you already know a thing or two about investing. I learned almost nothing about futures.

  11. Santos Pruitt (verified owner)

    There aren’t too many books on futures trading that are as detailed as this one for the beginner, at least from what I have come across. I made nearly 100% in just a couple of months after gaining a good understanding of how the markets work. Could it have been luck? Sure, but I was able to implement some of what I learned from this book when making those investments.

  12. Brylee Stewart (verified owner)

    This book contains interesting historical information about how futures markets operated 15 – 30 years ago, but it is hard to relate that information to modern electronic trading. It provides verbose detail about basic economic concepts that belong in an economics primer, but then skips over core concepts specific to futures trading. Examples are from another era, with tantalizing references to “9.5% interest rates” and the like. The one part that I found useful was the Risk of Ruin analysis in Chapter 6. It is not a first book because it skips over basic concepts like how futures shorting works. It is not a modern book because, for example, it never references e-minis; nor could I find a description of “trailing stops”, which seem basic to modern trading techniques. I was reduced to skimming the book in search of usable information, and hope it will somehow serve as a reference. As an alternative, I liked “Futures 101: An Introduction To Commodity Trading” by Waldron as a very basic and entertaining introduction for a newcomer. I’m not sure what would be a better second or intermediate book than this one, but I would recommend trying to find that book.

  13. Celia Stevenson (verified owner)

    Excellent starter in Futures. Just be very, very careful with futures.

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