Financial Markets: Futures
The futures market is the oldest of all the financial markets dating back to the year 1710 with the establishment of the Dojima Rice Exchange in Japan. Instead of shares like in stocks, the unit of measurement in the futures market is referred to as a contract. This name is derived from the original purpose of futures markets which was to establish agreements between buyers and sellers of rice in Japan. Essentially, a futures contract allows a buyer and a seller of a physical good to agree to purchase a commodity at a specific price in the future. This is highly useful today in the agricultural sector. Producers of crops purchase futures contracts from buyers of their crops in advance of the harvest so as to hedge against any possible movements in the value of the crop. For instance, if a farmer buys 100 corn futures contracts at an underlying price of $400 that is set to expire after the crop has been collected, he or she has guaranteed the price and quantity of crop to be sold at a ...