S&P Futures Explained (Part II)
S&P futures contracts are valued in ticks worth 0.1 index points or $25. Regular trading hours for S&P futures contracts are from 8:30 A.M to 3:15 PM. S&P futures contracts are another example of how 24 hours a day trading enables traders to respond to economic news releases in pre-market and after-market sessions.
The evening session starts at 3:30 PM (15 minutes after the close) and continues on the Globex until 8:15 AM overnight. Individual contract holders are limited to no more than 20,000 net long or short contracts at any one time.
A price limit is how far an S&P futures contract can rise or fall in a single trading session. The limits are set on quarterly basis. If the index experiences major declines or increases beyond these limits, a procedure is set in place to halt trading. If these price limits are crossed, circuit breakers are triggered.
Collar Rule: The collar rule addresses price swings related to program trades that move the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) more than 2% by requiring index arbitrage orders, or orders that bet on the spread between the futures and the cash of stock indexes to be stabilizing. This limits the traders from piling buy or sell orders in an attempt to exaggerate the gains or losses of the market. What this rule does is limit the chance of huge gains or losses as a result of futures trading.
Overnight or pre-market trading can be thin and dangerous especially during slow seasons in the stock market such as summer, fall and around the winter holidays. Once you have mastered futures basics such as the performance bond margins, the mark to market requirements and the account specifics, its time to learn how a futures contract ticks.
CMEs most actively traded contracts are Eurodollar futures and S&P futures including the E-minis. Hundreds of futures contracts trade on the federally regulated futures exchanges in the United States. Each of these exchanges trade contract that are somewhat unique to it.
E-mini S&P Futures contracts: The E-mini S&P futures contracts (ES) are among the most popular stock index futures contract because they enable you to trade the markets trend with only one fifth of the requirement. The E-mini S&P futures contracts (ES) are the favorites of the day traders because of its high intraday price volatility and major price swings on a daily basis.
The value of the E-mini S&P futures contract is $50 times the value of the S&P 500 stock index. One tick on E-min S&P futures contract is equal to 0.25 of the index point or $12.50. The E-mini S&P futures contract can be very volatile and can move even more aggressively during times of extreme market volatility. - 23305
The evening session starts at 3:30 PM (15 minutes after the close) and continues on the Globex until 8:15 AM overnight. Individual contract holders are limited to no more than 20,000 net long or short contracts at any one time.
A price limit is how far an S&P futures contract can rise or fall in a single trading session. The limits are set on quarterly basis. If the index experiences major declines or increases beyond these limits, a procedure is set in place to halt trading. If these price limits are crossed, circuit breakers are triggered.
Collar Rule: The collar rule addresses price swings related to program trades that move the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) more than 2% by requiring index arbitrage orders, or orders that bet on the spread between the futures and the cash of stock indexes to be stabilizing. This limits the traders from piling buy or sell orders in an attempt to exaggerate the gains or losses of the market. What this rule does is limit the chance of huge gains or losses as a result of futures trading.
Overnight or pre-market trading can be thin and dangerous especially during slow seasons in the stock market such as summer, fall and around the winter holidays. Once you have mastered futures basics such as the performance bond margins, the mark to market requirements and the account specifics, its time to learn how a futures contract ticks.
CMEs most actively traded contracts are Eurodollar futures and S&P futures including the E-minis. Hundreds of futures contracts trade on the federally regulated futures exchanges in the United States. Each of these exchanges trade contract that are somewhat unique to it.
E-mini S&P Futures contracts: The E-mini S&P futures contracts (ES) are among the most popular stock index futures contract because they enable you to trade the markets trend with only one fifth of the requirement. The E-mini S&P futures contracts (ES) are the favorites of the day traders because of its high intraday price volatility and major price swings on a daily basis.
The value of the E-mini S&P futures contract is $50 times the value of the S&P 500 stock index. One tick on E-min S&P futures contract is equal to 0.25 of the index point or $12.50. The E-mini S&P futures contract can be very volatile and can move even more aggressively during times of extreme market volatility. - 23305
About the Author:
Mr. Ahmad Hassam has done Masters from Harvard University. He is interested in day trading futures and currencies. Trade Dow Futures and S&P Futures!
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