Posts Tagged ‘Commodity’

Option Strategies: Profit-Making Techniques for Stock, Stock Index, and Commodity Options

Product Description
Updated and revised to include a decade of growth in the scope and complexity of options, Options Strategies: Profit-Making Techniques for Stock, Stock Index, and Commodity Options, 3rd Edition is a comprehensive guide to options trading strategies written in clear, non-technical language. In addition to insight into options issues like carrying changes, strike prices, commissions, interest rates, and break-even points, new chapters show how to predict the direction… More >>

Option Strategies: Profit-Making Techniques for Stock, Stock Index, and Commodity Options

Beating the Commodity Trap: How to Maximize Your Competitive Position and Increase Your Pricing Power

  • ISBN13: 9781422103159
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
Commoditization-a virulent form of hypercompetition-is destroying markets, disrupting industries, and shuttering long-successful firms. Conventional wisdom says the best way to combat commoditization is differentiation. But differentiation is difficult and expensive to implement, and keeps you ahead of the pack only temporarily.

In Beating the Commodity Trap, Richard D’Aveni provides a radical new framework for fighting back. Drawing on an in-depth study of … More >>

Beating the Commodity Trap: How to Maximize Your Competitive Position and Increase Your Pricing Power

The CRB Commodity Yearbook 2008, With CD-ROM

Product Description
The essential commodity reference for analysts, traders, and portfolio managers

Dubbed the “bible” by market analysts and traders since 1939, The CRB Commodity Yearbook provides indispensable information on over 100 domestic and international commodities, from aluminum to zinc. It includes seasonal patterns and historical data from the past 10 years, pricing and trading patterns on a monthly and annual basis, plus more than 1,000 charts, tables, and g… More >>

The CRB Commodity Yearbook 2008, with CD-ROM

Commodity Trader

Product Description
Futures market guide.Kindle blogs are fully downloaded onto your Kindle so you can read them even when you’re not wirelessly connected. And unlike RSS readers which often only provide headlines, blogs on Kindle give you full text content and images, and are updated wirelessly throughout the day…. More >>

Commodity Trader

Official Handbook of World Stock Derivatives and Commodity Exchanges

Product Description
This handbook of world stock, derivative, and commodity exchanges is a comprehensive reference tool for those who need to know about the world’s exchanges. It provides all the relevant trading and settlement information about 245 exchanges in 106 countries and regions, along with detailed information on equities, futures, and options…. More >>

Official Handbook Of World Stock Derivatives And Commodity Exchanges

Commodity Fundamentals: How to Trade the Precious Metals, Energy, Grain, and Tropical Commodity Markets

Product Description
Praise for Commodity Fundamentals

“Commodity Fundamentals is THE book for investors looking to enter the commodity markets. This informative guide is a welcome addition on the subject and is a must-read for commodity investors.”
-Jim Atkinson, President, Guinness Atkinson Funds

“Ronald Spurga’s Commodity Fundamentals is an illuminating and very useful guide for the subject. A welcome addition to any business library.”
-Rob… More >>

Commodity Fundamentals: How To Trade the Precious Metals, Energy, Grain, and Tropical Commodity Markets

Trading Commodities – Commodity Types

There are several different types of commodities. Commodities are categorized so that it’s easier to price compare, do research, and to make other trade tasks convenient. If you’re an investor who wants to get involved in commodities trading, you need to know the basics. This is indeed one of the riskiest areas to invest in, but it can also be among the most profitable if you know what you’re doing.


Energies


This area has been one of the most active in commodities trading recently. This category is comprised of products that are used to provide energy that will heat and power businesses and homes. The most common of these is petroleum and its byproducts, among them crude and heating oil, propane, natural gas, coal and some others, including subtypes or derivatives.


Each commodity has its own defined “tick” or price change; these are set by the exchanges. Each commodity also has a standard contract size. The standard contract size is the amount covered by a standard futures contract. For crude oil, for example, the amount is 1000 barrels. For wheat, it is 5000 barrels.


Grains


Wheat, oats, corn, rice and soybeans (although soybeans are not technically a grain) are agricultural products traded on various exchanges, including the well-respected Chicago Board of Trade, or CBOT for short. The exchanges trade the product as well as the futures and options contracts on these and other derivative products, such as bean oil.


Each of these products has its own tick or price change, standard contract size and unit. Some prices are listed in dollars per ton, such as with soybean meal. In this case, the standard contract size is 100 tons. It should be noted that most traders never see the actual commodity they trade in; you can see by the amount quoted here that there’s a reason why.


Softs


Orange juice, cotton, sugar, cocoa and coffee are all what are called “soft” commodities. Many of these are traded on the Coffee, Sugar and Cocoa Exchange, or CSCE. It should be noted that 80% of the oranges grown in the United States are turned into frozen orange juice concentrate, and that it is the juice itself traded as the commodity, not the orange.


There’s a relative newcomer on the New York Cotton Exchange, Frozen Concentrated Orange Juice, or FCOJ. This has been actively traded since the creation and widespread use and integration of inexpensive refrigeration, beginning after WWII.


Meats


Pork bellies, lean hogs and live cattle are traded on various exchanges, as are some derivatives. One of these exchanges is the Kansas City Board of Trade, or KCBT, which is the United States’ livestock trading historical center.


One very unique commodity here is pork bellies, because the bacon that comes from pork bellies can’t be substituted with a similar product. Their prices also usually interdependent with the price of grain, because hogs are fed a diet of corn and other grains. These prices are generally less volatile than they are within many other commodities.


Financials


Most traders invest in commodities futures or options rather than the good itself. Because of this, financial products are often listed on the same exchanges.


U.S. Treasury bonds futures are traded on the CBOT, as well as other places. A few indexes track stocks. The S&P index futures contract is one popularly-traded item.


It should be noted that some sites will list abbreviations showing the expiration month of the futures contract within the prices quoted. For example, these are shown are as follows, listed by quarter:


January – F, February -G, March – H

April – J, May – K, June – M

July – N, August – Q, September – U

October – V, November – X, December – Z


For example, you might see an item listed as PBH07; this is a pork belly contract that is due to expire in March of 2007.

The CRB Commodity Yearbook 2009

Product Description
The Single Most Comprehensive Source of Commodity and Futures Market Information Available Since 1939, professional traders, commercial hedgers, portfolio managers, and speculators have come to regard The CRB Commodity Yearbook as the “bible” of the industry. Here is a wealth of authoritative data, gathered from government reports, private industry, and trade and industry associations, all compiled by the Commodity Research Bureau, the organization of … More >>

The CRB Commodity Yearbook 2009

How to Get Started With Online Commodity Trading

If you are a first-time trader, the easiest and most useful avenue to choose for yourself is commodity trading, with its myriad choices. It is an upcoming avenue for investors who are looking to earn a lot of money, with an extremely comprehensive and unlimited list of products which can range from agricultural products to petroleum and consumer products, or even currencies.


It is only natural with the advent of technology that commodity trading now takes places on the world wide web as well. Online commodity trading is quite the rage, especially with first-time traders.


It is advisable for novices to begin with seven to eight commodities – this ensures the two fold purpose of proper monitoring and remaining on the safe side. Since commodities are tracked online everyday, it makes sense to have a reasonable number of commodities, especially in order to truly understand the hows and whys of the market. Not only novices but experienced traders too opt for no more than eight commodities because the simultaneous tracking of more than eight is a confusing and troublesome job.


Online commodity trading, in essence, is no different from a classic trading environment. The trading floor and the broker along with all the basic principles of trading apply to online commodity trading too. The only difference is that the trading is going on online.


If you are a novice commodity trader and are looking for a sure-fire formula to help with the management of online commodities, you will be disappointed. You should be extremely careful as to where you click because that one click could prove fatal.


If you don’t want to or can’t handle online commodity trading directly, it is possible for your chosen executor to hold an account, as long as you use a written power of attorney. This executor must be extremely reliable because trading involves making very important financial decisions and in this case you are handing over this power on your own behalf to the executor.


If you would prefer to work in a group as opposed to trading individually, then you can join commodity-related mutual funds and commodity pools similar to limited partnerships. You can make this even easier for yourself by simply going through online commodity trading exchanges. You can offset risks in your whole portfolio by combining the low-margin markets of commodities with stocks and bonds investments. This is one of the major reasons why commodity trading is so useful.


You have to be really careful while making financial decisions online, although the basic principles behind online commodity trading and classic commodity trading are absolutely the same. Just don’t let the simplicity and ease of the Internet blind you from making well informed and smart choices when it comes to your finances.

Commodity Derivatives: Markets and Applications

Product Description
In Commodity Derivatives: Markets and Applications, Neil Schofield provides a complete and accessible reference for anyone working in, or studying commodity markets and their associated derivatives. Dealing primarily with over the counter structures, the book provides extensive coverage of both hard and soft commodities, including gold, crude oil, electricity, plastics, emissions and agriculturals. Using structures unique to the individual market, each chapter in… More >>

Commodity Derivatives: Markets and Applications

Free T-Mobile Phones on Sale | Thanks to CD Rates, Best New Business and Registry Software