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RISK DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
FOR
SECURITY FUTURES CONTRACTS
This disclosure statement
discusses the characteristics and risks of standardized
security futures contracts traded on regulated U.S.
exchanges. At present, regulated exchanges are authorized
to list futures contracts on individual equity securities
registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(including common stock and certain exchange-traded funds
and American Depositary Receipts), as well as narrow-based
security indices. Futures on other types of securities and
options on security futures contracts may be authorized in
the future. The glossary of terms appears at the end of
the document.
Customers should be aware
that the examples in this document are exclusive of fees
and commissions that may decrease their net gains or
increase their net losses. The examples also do not
include tax consequences, which may differ for each
customer.
Section 1 – Risks of
Security Futures
1.1. Risks of Security
Futures Transactions
Trading security futures contracts may not be suitable for
all investors. You may lose a substantial amount of money
in a very short period of time. The amount you may lose is
potentially unlimited and can exceed the amount you
originally deposit with your broker. This is because
futures trading is highly leveraged, with a relatively
small amount of money used to establish a position in
assets having a much greater value. If you are
uncomfortable with this level of risk, you should not
trade security futures contracts.
1.2. General Risks
- Trading security
futures contracts involves risk and may result in
potentially unlimited losses that are greater than the
amount you deposited with your broker. As with
any high risk financial product, you should not risk
any funds that you cannot afford to lose, such as your
retirement savings, medical and other emergency funds,
funds set aside for purposes such as education or home
ownership, proceeds from student loans or mortgages,
or funds required to meet your living expenses.
- Be cautious of
claims that you can make large profits from trading
security futures contracts. Although the high
degree of leverage in security futures contracts can
result in large and immediate gains, it can also
result in large and immediate losses. As with any
financial product, there is no such thing as a
"sure winner."
- Because of the
leverage involved and the nature of security futures
contract transactions, you may feel the effects of
your losses immediately. Gains and losses in
security futures contracts are credited or debited to
your account, at a minimum, on a daily basis. If
movements in the markets for security futures
contracts or the underlying security decrease the
value of your positions in security futures contracts,
you may be required to have or make additional funds
available to your carrying firm as margin. If your
account is under the minimum margin requirements set
by the exchange or the brokerage firm, your position
may be liquidated at a loss, and you will be liable
for the deficit, if any, in your account. Margin
requirements are addressed in Section 4.
- Under certain
market conditions, it may be difficult or impossible
to liquidate a position. Generally, you must
enter into an offsetting transaction in order to
liquidate a position in a security futures contract.
If you cannot liquidate your position in security
futures contracts, you may not be able to realize a
gain in the value of your position or prevent losses
from mounting. This inability to liquidate could
occur, for example, if trading is halted due to
unusual trading activity in either the security
futures contract or the underlying security; if
trading is halted due to recent news events involving
the issuer of the underlying security; if systems
failures occur on an exchange or at the firm carrying
your position; or if the position is on an illiquid
market. Even if you can liquidate your position, you
may be forced to do so at a price that involves a
large loss.
- Under certain
market conditions, it may also be difficult or
impossible to manage your risk from open security
futures positions by entering into an equivalent but
opposite position in another contract month, on
another market, or in the underlying security.
This inability to take positions to limit your risk
could occur, for example, if trading is halted across
markets due to unusual trading activity in the
security futures contract or the underlying security
or due to recent news events involving the issuer of
the underlying security.
- Under certain
market conditions, the prices of security futures
contracts may not maintain their customary or
anticipated relationships to the prices of the
underlying security or index. These pricing
disparities could occur, for example, when the market
for the security futures contract is illiquid, when
the primary market for the underlying security is
closed, or when the reporting of transactions in the
underlying security has been delayed. For index
products, it could also occur when trading is delayed
or halted in some or all of the securities that make
up the index.
- You may be
required to settle certain security futures contracts
with physical delivery of the underlying security.
If you hold your position in a physically settled
security futures contract until the end of the last
trading day prior to expiration, you will be obligated
to make or take delivery of the underlying securities,
which could involve additional costs. The actual
settlement terms may vary from contract to contract
and exchange to exchange. You should carefully review
the settlement and delivery conditions before entering
into a security futures contract. Settlement and
delivery are discussed in Section 5.
- You may experience
losses due to systems failures. As with any
financial transaction, you may experience losses if
your orders for security futures contracts cannot be
executed normally due to systems failures on a
regulated exchange or at the brokerage firm carrying
your position. Your losses may be greater if the
brokerage firm carrying your position does not have
adequate back-up systems or procedures.
- All security
futures contracts involve risk, and there is no
trading strategy that can eliminate it.
Strategies using combinations of positions, such as
spreads, may be as risky as outright long or short
positions. Trading in security futures contracts
requires knowledge of both the securities and the
futures markets.
- Day trading
strategies involving security futures contracts and
other products pose special risks. As with any
financial product, persons who seek to purchase and
sell the same security future in the course of a day
to profit from intra-day price movements ("day
traders") face a number of special risks,
including substantial commissions, exposure to
leverage, and competition with professional traders.
You should thoroughly understand these risks and have
appropriate experience before engaging in day trading.
The special risks for day traders are discussed more
fully in Section 7.
- Placing contingent
orders, if permitted, such as "stop-loss" or
"stop-limit" orders, will not necessarily
limit your losses to the intended amount. Some
regulated exchanges may permit you to enter into
stop-loss or stop-limit orders for security futures
contracts, which are intended to limit your exposure
to losses due to market fluctuations. However, market
conditions may make it impossible to execute the order
or to get the stop price.
- You should
thoroughly read and understand the customer account
agreement with your brokerage firm before entering
into any transactions in security futures contracts.
- You should
thoroughly understand the regulatory protections
available to your funds and positions in the event of
the failure of your brokerage firm. The
regulatory protections available to your funds and
positions in the event of the failure of your
brokerage firm may vary depending on, among other
factors, the contract you are trading and whether you
are trading through a securities account or a futures
account. Firms that allow customers to trade security
futures in either securities accounts or futures
accounts, or both, are required to disclose to
customers the differences in regulatory protections
between such accounts, and, where appropriate, how
customers may elect to trade in either type of
account.
Section 2 – Description
of a Security Futures Contract
2.1. What is a Security
Futures Contract?
A security futures contract is a legally binding agreement
between two parties to purchase or sell in the future a
specific quantity of shares of a security or of the
component securities of a narrow-based security index, at
a certain price. A person who buys a security futures
contract enters into a contract to purchase an underlying
security and is said to be "long" the contract.
A person who sells a security futures contract enters into
a contract to sell the underlying security and is said to
be "short" the contract. The price at which the
contract trades (the "contract price") is
determined by relative buying and selling interest on a
regulated exchange.
In order to enter into a
security futures contract, you must deposit funds with
your brokerage firm equal to a specified percentage
(usually at least 20 percent) of the current market value
of the contract as a performance bond. Moreover, all
security futures contracts are marked-to-market at least
daily, usually after the close of trading, as described in
Section 3 of this document. At that time, the account of
each buyer and seller reflects the amount of any gain or
loss on the security futures contract based on the
contract price established at the end of the day for
settlement purposes (the "daily settlement
price").
An open position, either a
long or short position, is closed or liquidated by
entering into an offsetting transaction (i.e., an equal
and opposite transaction to the one that opened the
position) prior to the contract expiration. Traditionally,
most futures contracts are liquidated prior to expiration
through an offsetting transaction and, thus, holders do
not incur a settlement obligation.
Examples:
Investor A is long one
September XYZ Corp. futures contract. To liquidate the
long position in the September XYZ Corp. futures
contract, Investor A would sell an identical September
XYZ Corp. contract.
Investor B is short one
December XYZ Corp. futures contract. To liquidate the
short position in the December XYZ Corp. futures
contract, Investor B would buy an identical December XYZ
Corp. contract.
Security futures contracts
that are not liquidated prior to expiration must be
settled in accordance with the terms of the contract. Some
security futures contracts are settled by physical
delivery of the underlying security. At the expiration of
a security futures contract that is settled through
physical delivery, a person who is long the contract must
pay the final settlement price set by the regulated
exchange or the clearing organization and take delivery of
the underlying shares. Conversely, a person who is short
the contract must make delivery of the underlying shares
in exchange for the final settlement price.
Other security futures
contracts are settled through cash settlement. In this
case, the underlying security is not delivered. Instead,
any positions in such security futures contracts that are
open at the end of the last trading day are settled
through a final cash payment based on a final settlement
price determined by the exchange or clearing organization.
Once this payment is made, neither party has any further
obligations on the contract.
Physical delivery and cash
settlement are discussed more fully in Section 5.
2.2. Purposes of
Security Futures
Security futures contracts can be used for speculation,
hedging, and risk management. Security futures contracts
do not provide capital growth or income.
Speculation
Speculators are individuals
or firms who seek to profit from anticipated increases or
decreases in futures prices. A speculator who expects the
price of the underlying instrument to increase will buy
the security futures contract. A speculator who expects
the price of the underlying instrument to decrease will
sell the security futures contract. Speculation involves
substantial risk and can lead to large losses as well as
profits.
The most common trading
strategies involving security futures contracts are buying
with the hope of profiting from an anticipated price
increase and selling with the hope of profiting from an
anticipated price decrease. For example, a person who
expects the price of XYZ stock to increase by March can
buy a March XYZ security futures contract, and a person
who expects the price of XYZ stock to decrease by March
can sell a March XYZ security futures contract. The
following illustrates potential profits and losses if
Customer A purchases the security futures contract at $50
a share and Customer B sells the same contract at $50 a
share (assuming 100 shares per contract).
| Price
of XYZ at Liquidation |
Customer A
Profit/Loss |
Customer B
Profit/Loss |
|
| $55 |
$500 |
-
$500 |
| $50 |
0 |
0 |
| $45 |
-
$500 |
$500 |
Speculators may also enter
into spreads with the hope of profiting from an expected
change in price relationships. Spreaders may purchase a
contract expiring in one contract month and sell another
contract on the same underlying security expiring in a
different month (e.g., buy June and sell September XYZ
single stock futures). This is commonly referred to as a
"calendar spread."
Spreaders may also purchase
and sell the same contract month in two different but
economically correlated security futures contracts. For
example, if ABC and XYZ are both pharmaceutical companies
and an individual believes that ABC will have stronger
growth than XYZ between now and June, he could buy June
ABC futures contracts and sell June XYZ futures contracts.
Assuming that each contract is 100 shares, the following
illustrates how this works.
| Opening
Position |
Price at Liquidation |
Gain or Loss |
Price at Liquidation |
Gain or Loss |
|
| Buy
ABC at 50 |
$50 |
$300 |
53 |
$300 |
| Sell
XYZ at 45 |
$46 |
-
$100 |
$50 |
-
$500 |
| Net
Gain or Loss |
$200 |
|
-
$200 |
Speculators can also engage
in arbitrage, which is similar to a spread except that the
long and short positions occur on two different markets.
An arbitrage position can be established by taking an
economically opposite position in a security futures
contract on another exchange, in an options contract, or
in the underlying security.
Hedging
Generally speaking, hedging
involves the purchase or sale of a security future to
reduce or offset the risk of a position in the underlying
security or group of securities (or a close economic
equivalent). A hedger gives up the potential to profit
from a favorable price change in the position being hedged
in order to minimize the risk of loss from an adverse
price change.
An investor who wants to
lock in a price now for an anticipated sale of the
underlying security at a later date can do so by hedging
with security futures. For example, assume an investor
owns 1,000 shares of ABC that have appreciated since he
bought them. The investor would like to sell them at the
current price of $50 per share, but there are tax or other
reasons for holding them until September. The investor
could sell ten 100-share ABC futures contracts and then
buy back those contracts in September when he sells the
stock. Assuming the stock price and the futures price
change by the same amount, the gain or loss in the stock
will be offset by the loss or gain in the futures
contracts.
Price
in
September |
Value of 1,000
Shares of ABC |
Gain or Loss
on Futures |
Effective
Selling Price |
| $40 |
$40,000 |
$10,000 |
$50,000 |
| $50 |
$50,000 |
$
0 |
$50,000 |
| $60 |
$60,000 |
-$10,000 |
$50,000 |
Hedging can also be used to
lock in a price now for an anticipated purchase of the
stock at a later date. For example, assume that in May a
mutual fund expects to buy stocks in a particular industry
with the proceeds of bonds that will mature in August. The
mutual fund can hedge its risk that the stocks will
increase in value between May and August by purchasing
security futures contracts on a narrow-based index of
stocks from that industry. When the mutual fund buys the
stocks in August, it also will liquidate the security
futures position in the index. If the relationship between
the security futures contract and the stocks in the index
is constant, the profit or loss from the futures contract
will offset the price change in the stocks, and the mutual
fund will have locked in the price that the stocks were
selling at in May.
Although hedging mitigates
risk, it does not eliminate all risk. For example, the
relationship between the price of the security futures
contract and the price of the underlying security
traditionally tends to remain constant over time, but it
can and does vary somewhat. Furthermore, the expiration or
liquidation of the security futures contract may not
coincide with the exact time the hedger buys or sells the
underlying stock. Therefore, hedging may not be a perfect
protection against price risk.
Risk Management
Some institutions also use futures contracts to manage
portfolio risks without necessarily intending to change
the composition of their portfolio by buying or selling
the underlying securities. The institution does so by
taking a security futures position that is opposite to
some or all of its position in the underlying securities.
This strategy involves more risk than a traditional hedge
because it is not meant to be a substitute for an
anticipated purchase or sale.
2.3. Where Security
Futures Trade
By law, security futures contracts must trade on a
regulated U.S. exchange. Each regulated U.S. exchange that
trades security futures contracts is subject to joint
regulation by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
A person holding a position
in a security futures contract who seeks to liquidate the
position must do so either on the regulated exchange where
the original trade took place or on another regulated
exchange, if any, where a fungible security futures
contract trades. (A person may also seek to manage the
risk in that position by taking an opposite position in a
comparable contract traded on another regulated exchange.)
Security futures contracts
traded on one regulated exchange might not be fungible
with security futures contracts traded on another
regulated exchange for a variety of reasons. Security
futures traded on different regulated exchanges may be
non-fungible because they have different contract terms
(e.g., size, settlement method), or because they are
cleared through different clearing organizations.
Moreover, a regulated exchange might not permit its
security futures contracts to be offset or liquidated by
an identical contract traded on another regulated
exchange, even though they have the same contract terms
and are cleared through the same clearing organization.
You should consult your broker about the fungibility of
the contract you are considering purchasing or selling,
including which exchange(s), if any, on which it may be
offset.
Regulated exchanges that
trade security futures contracts are required by law to
establish certain listing standards. Changes in the
underlying security of a security futures contract may, in
some cases, cause such contract to no longer meet the
regulated exchange's listing standards. Each regulated
exchange will have rules governing the continued trading
of security futures contracts that no longer meet the
exchange's listing standards. These rules may, for
example, permit only liquidating trades in security
futures contracts that no longer satisfy the listing
standards.
2.4. How Security
Futures Differ from the Underlying Security
Shares of common stock represent a fractional ownership
interest in the issuer of that security. Ownership of
securities confers various rights that are not present
with positions in security futures contracts. For example,
persons owning a share of common stock may be entitled to
vote in matters affecting corporate governance. They also
may be entitled to receive dividends and corporate
disclosure, such as annual and quarterly reports.
The purchaser of a security
futures contract, by contrast, has only a contract for
future delivery of the underlying security. The purchaser
of the security futures contract is not entitled to
exercise any voting rights over the underlying security
and is not entitled to any dividends that may be paid by
the issuer. Moreover, the purchaser of a security futures
contract does not receive the corporate disclosures that
are received by shareholders of the underlying security,
although such corporate disclosures must be made publicly
available through the SEC's EDGAR system, which can be
accessed at www.sec.gov. You should review such
disclosures before entering into a security futures
contract. See Section 9 for further discussion of the
impact of corporate events on a security futures contract.
All security futures
contracts are marked-to-market at least daily, usually
after the close of trading, as described in Section 3 of
this document. At that time, the account of each buyer and
seller is credited with the amount of any gain, or debited
by the amount of any loss, on the security futures
contract, based on the contract price established at the
end of the day for settlement purposes (the "daily
settlement price"). By contrast, the purchaser or
seller of the underlying instrument does not have the
profit and loss from his or her investment credited or
debited until the position in that instrument is closed
out.
Naturally, as with any
financial product, the value of the security futures
contract and of the underlying security may fluctuate.
However, owning the underlying security does not require
an investor to settle his or her profits and losses daily.
By contrast, as a result of the mark-to-market
requirements discussed above, a person who is long a
security futures contract often will be required to
deposit additional funds into his or her account as the
price of the security futures contract decreases.
Similarly, a person who is short a security futures
contract often will be required to deposit additional
funds into his or her account as the price of the security
futures contract increases.
Another significant
difference is that security futures contracts expire on a
specific date. Unlike an owner of the underlying security,
a person cannot hold a long position in a security futures
contract for an extended period of time in the hope that
the price will go up. If you do not liquidate your
security futures contract, you will be required to settle
the contract when it expires, either through physical
delivery or cash settlement. For cash-settled contracts in
particular, upon expiration, an individual will no longer
have an economic interest in the securities underlying the
security futures contract.
2.5. Comparison to
Options
Although security futures contracts share some
characteristics with options on securities (options
contracts), these products are also different in a number
of ways. Below are some of the important distinctions
between equity options contracts and security futures
contracts.
If you purchase an options
contract, you have the right, but not the obligation, to
buy or sell a security prior to the expiration date. If
you sell an options contract, you have the obligation to
buy or sell a security prior to the expiration date. By
contrast, if you have a position in a security futures
contract (either long or short), you have both the right
and the obligation to buy or sell a security at a future
date. The only way that you can avoid the obligation
incurred by the security futures contract is to liquidate
the position with an offsetting contract.
A person purchasing an
options contract runs the risk of losing the purchase
price (premium) for the option contract. Because it is a
wasting asset, the purchaser of an options contract who
neither liquidates the options contract in the secondary
market nor exercises it at or prior to expiration will
necessarily lose his or her entire investment in the
options contract. However, a purchaser of an options
contract cannot lose more than the amount of the premium.
Conversely, the seller of an options contract receives the
premium and assumes the risk that he or she will be
required to buy or sell the underlying security on or
prior to the expiration date, in which event his or her
losses may exceed the amount of the premium received.
Although the seller of an options contract is required to
deposit margin to reflect the risk of its obligation, he
or she may lose many times his or her initial margin
deposit.
By contrast, the purchaser
and seller of a security futures contract each enter into
an agreement to buy or sell a specific quantity of shares
in the underlying security. Based upon the movement in
prices of the underlying security, a person who holds a
position in a security futures contract can gain or lose
many times his or her initial margin deposit. In this
respect, the benefits of a security futures contract are
similar to the benefits of purchasing an option, while the
risks of entering into a security futures contract are
similar to the risks of selling an option.
Both the purchaser and the
seller of a security futures contract have daily margin
obligations. At least once each day, security futures
contracts are marked-to-market and the increase or
decrease in the value of the contract is credited or
debited to the buyer and the seller. As a result, any
person who has an open position in a security futures
contract may be called upon to meet additional margin
requirements or may receive a credit of available funds.
Example:
Assume that Customers A and
B each anticipate an increase in the market price of XYZ
stock, which is currently $50 a share. Customer A
purchases an XYZ 50 call (covering 100 shares of XYZ at
a premium of $5 per share). The option premium is $500
($5 per share X 100 shares). Customer B purchases an XYZ
security futures contract (covering 100 shares of XYZ).
The total value of the contract is $5000 ($50 share
value X 100 shares). The required margin is $1000 (or
20% of the contract value).
Price
of
XYZ at
expiration |
Customer A
Profit/Loss |
Customer B
Profit/Loss |
| 65 |
1000 |
1500 |
| 60 |
500 |
1000 |
| 55 |
0 |
500 |
| 50 |
-500 |
0 |
| 45 |
-500 |
-500 |
| 40 |
-500 |
-1000 |
| 35 |
-500 |
-1500 |
The most that Customer A
can lose is $500, the option premium. Customer A breaks
even at $55 per share, and makes money at higher prices.
Customer B may lose more than his initial margin
deposit. Unlike the options premium, the margin on a
futures contract is not a cost but a performance bond.
The losses for Customer B are not limited by this
performance bond. Rather, the losses or gains are
determined by the settlement price of the contract, as
provided in the example above. Note that if the price of
XYZ falls to $35 per share, Customer A loses only $500,
whereas Customer B loses $1500.
2.6. Components of a
Security Futures Contract
Each regulated exchange can choose the terms of the
security futures contracts it lists, and those terms may
differ from exchange to exchange or contract to contract.
Some of those contract terms are discussed below. However,
you should ask your broker for a copy of the contract
specifications before trading a particular contract.
2.6.1. Each security
futures contract has a set size. The size of a security
futures contract is determined by the regulated exchange
on which the contract trades. For example, a security
futures contract for a single stock may be based on 100
shares of that stock. If prices are reported per share,
the value of the contract would be the price times 100.
For narrow-based security indices, the value of the
contract is the price of the component securities times
the multiplier set by the exchange as part of the contract
terms.
2.6.2. Security
futures contracts expire at set times determined by the
listing exchange. For example, a particular contract may
expire on a particular day, e.g., the third Friday of the
expiration month. Up until expiration, you may liquidate
an open position by offsetting your contract with a
fungible opposite contract that expires in the same month.
If you do not liquidate an open position before it
expires, you will be required to make or take delivery of
the underlying security or to settle the contract in cash
after expiration.
2.6.3. Although
security futures contracts on a particular security or a
narrow-based security index may be listed and traded on
more than one regulated exchange, the contract
specifications may not be the same. Also, prices for
contracts on the same security or index may vary on
different regulated exchanges because of different
contract specifications.
2.6.4. Prices of
security futures contracts are usually quoted the same way
prices are quoted in the underlying instrument. For
example, a contract for an individual security would be
quoted in dollars and cents per share. Contracts for
indices would be quoted by an index number, usually stated
to two decimal places.
2.6.5. Each security
futures contract has a minimum price fluctuation (called a
tick), which may differ from product to product or
exchange to exchange. For example, if a particular
security futures contract has a tick size of 1¢, you can
buy the contract at $23.21 or $23.22 but not at $23.215.
2.7. Trading Halts
The value of your positions in security futures contracts
could be affected if trading is halted in either the
security futures contract or the underlying security. In
certain circumstances, regulated exchanges are required by
law to halt trading in security futures contracts. For
example, trading on a particular security futures contract
must be halted if trading is halted on the listed market
for the underlying security as a result of pending news,
regulatory concerns, or market volatility. Similarly,
trading of a security futures contract on a narrow-based
security index must be halted under such circumstances if
trading is halted on securities accounting for at least 50
percent of the market capitalization of the index. In
addition, regulated exchanges are required to halt trading
in all security futures contracts for a specified period
of time when the Dow Jones Industrial Average ("DJIA")
experiences one-day declines of 10-, 20- and 30-percent.
The regulated exchanges may also have discretion under
their rules to halt trading in other circumstances –
such as when the exchange determines that the halt would
be advisable in maintaining a fair and orderly market.
A trading halt, either by a
regulated exchange that trades security futures or an
exchange trading the underlying security or instrument,
could prevent you from liquidating a position in security
futures contracts in a timely manner, which could prevent
you from liquidating a position in security futures
contracts at that time.
2.8. Trading Hours
Each regulated exchange trading a security futures
contract may open and close for trading at different times
than other regulated exchanges trading security futures
contracts or markets trading the underlying security or
securities. Trading in security futures contracts prior to
the opening or after the close of the primary market for
the underlying security may be less liquid than trading
during regular market hours.
Section 3 – Clearing
Organizations and Mark-to-Market Requirements
Every regulated U.S.
exchange that trades security futures contracts is
required to have a relationship with a clearing
organization that serves as the guarantor of each security
futures contract traded on that exchange. A clearing
organization performs the following functions: matching
trades; effecting settlement and payments; guaranteeing
performance; and facilitating deliveries.
Throughout each trading
day, the clearing organization matches trade data
submitted by clearing members on behalf of their customers
or for the clearing member's proprietary accounts. If an
account is with a brokerage firm that is not a member of
the clearing organization, then the brokerage firm will
carry the security futures position with another brokerage
firm that is a member of the clearing organization. Trade
records that do not match, either because of a discrepancy
in the details or because one side of the transaction is
missing, are returned to the submitting clearing members
for resolution. The members are required to resolve such
"out trades" before or on the open of trading
the next morning.
When the required details
of a reported transaction have been verified, the clearing
organization assumes the legal and financial obligations
of the parties to the transaction. One way to think of the
role of the clearing organization is that it is the
"buyer to every seller and the seller to every
buyer." The insertion or substitution of the clearing
organization as the counterparty to every transaction
enables a customer to liquidate a security futures
position without regard to what the other party to the
original security futures contract decides to do.
The clearing organization
also effects the settlement of gains and losses from
security futures contracts between clearing members. At
least once each day, clearing member brokerage firms must
either pay to, or receive from, the clearing organization
the difference between the current price and the trade
price earlier in the day, or for a position carried over
from the previous day, the difference between the current
price and the previous day's settlement price. Whether a
clearing organization effects settlement of gains and
losses on a daily basis or more frequently will depend on
the conventions of the clearing organization and market
conditions. Because the clearing organization assumes the
legal and financial obligations for each security futures
contract, you should expect it to ensure that payments are
made promptly to protect its obligations.
Gains and losses in
security futures contracts are also reflected in each
customer's account on at least a daily basis. Each day's
gains and losses are determined based on a daily
settlement price disseminated by the regulated exchange
trading the security futures contract or its clearing
organization. If the daily settlement price of a
particular security futures contract rises, the buyer has
a gain and the seller a loss. If the daily settlement
price declines, the buyer has a loss and the seller a
gain. This process is known as
"marking-to-market" or daily settlement. As a
result, individual customers normally will be called on to
settle daily.
The one-day gain or loss on
a security futures contract is determined by calculating
the difference between the current day's settlement price
and the previous day's settlement price.
For example, assume a
security futures contract is purchased at a price of
$120. If the daily settlement price is either $125
(higher) or $117 (lower), the effects would be as
follows:
| (1
contract representing 100 shares) |
Daily
Settlement
Value |
Buyer's
Account |
Seller's
Account |
| $125 |
$500
gain
(credit) |
$500
loss
(debit) |
| $117 |
$300
loss
(debit) |
$300
gain
(credit) |
The cumulative gain or loss
on a customer's open security futures positions is
generally referred to as "open trade equity" and
is listed as a separate component of account equity on
your customer account statement.
A discussion of the role of
the clearing organization in effecting delivery is
discussed in Section 5.
Section 4 – Margin and
Leverage
When a broker-dealer
lends a customer part of the funds needed to purchase a
security such as common stock, the term "margin"
refers to the amount of cash, or down payment, the
customer is required to deposit. By contrast, a security
futures contract is an obligation and not an asset. A
security futures contract has no value as collateral for a
loan. Because of the potential for a loss as a result of
the daily marked-to-market process, however, a margin
deposit is required of each party to a security futures
contract. This required margin deposit also is referred to
as a "performance bond."
In the first instance,
margin requirements for security futures contracts are set
by the exchange on which the contract is traded, subject
to certain minimums set by law. The basic margin
requirement is 20% of the current value of the security
futures contract, although some strategies may have lower
margin requirements. Requests for additional margin are
known as "margin calls." Both buyer and seller
must individually deposit the required margin to their
respective accounts.
It is important to
understand that individual brokerage firms can, and in
many cases do, require margin that is higher than the
exchange requirements. Additionally, margin requirements
may vary from brokerage firm to brokerage firm.
Furthermore, a brokerage firm can increase its
"house" margin requirements at any time without
providing advance notice, and such increases could result
in a margin call.
For example, some firms may
require margin to be deposited the business day following
the day of a deficiency, or some firms may even require
deposit on the same day. Some firms may require margin to
be on deposit in the account before they will accept an
order for a security futures contract. Additionally,
brokerage firms may have special requirements as to how
margin calls are to be met, such as requiring a wire
transfer from a bank, or deposit of a certified or
cashier's check. You should thoroughly read and understand
the customer agreement with your brokerage firm before
entering into any transactions in security futures
contracts.
If through the daily cash
settlement process, losses in the account of a security
futures contract participant reduce the funds on deposit
(or equity) below the maintenance margin level (or the
firm's higher "house" requirement), the
brokerage firm will require that additional funds be
deposited.
If additional margin is not
deposited in accordance with the firm's policies, the firm
can liquidate your position in security futures contracts
or sell assets in any of your accounts at the firm to
cover the margin deficiency. You remain responsible for
any shortfall in the account after such liquidations or
sales. Unless provided otherwise in your customer
agreement or by applicable law, you are not entitled to
choose which futures contracts, other securities or other
assets are liquidated or sold to meet a margin call or to
obtain an extension of time to meet a margin call.
Brokerage firms generally
reserve the right to liquidate a customer's security
futures contract positions or sell customer assets to meet
a margin call at any time without contacting the customer.
Brokerage firms may also enter into equivalent but
opposite positions for your account in order to manage the
risk created by a margin call. Some customers mistakenly
believe that a firm is required to contact them for a
margin call to be valid, and that the firm is not allowed
to liquidate securities or other assets in their accounts
to meet a margin call unless the firm has contacted them
first. This is not the case. While most firms notify their
customers of margin calls and allow some time for deposit
of additional margin, they are not required to do so. Even
if a firm has notified a customer of a margin call and set
a specific due date for a margin deposit, the firm can
still take action as necessary to protect its financial
interests, including the immediate liquidation of
positions without advance notification to the customer.
Here is an example of the
margin requirements for a long security futures position.
A customer buys 3 July EJG
security futures at 71.50. Assuming each contract
represents 100 shares, the nominal value of the position
is $21,450 (71.50 x 3 contracts x 100 shares). If the
initial margin rate is 20% of the nominal value, then the
customer's initial margin requirement would be $4,290. The
customer deposits the initial margin, bringing the equity
in the account to $4,290.
First, assume that the next
day the settlement price of EJG security futures falls to
69.25. The marked-to-market loss in the customer's equity
is $675 (71.50 - 69.25 x 3 contacts x 100 shares). The
customer's equity decreases to $3,615 ($4,290 - $675). The
new nominal value of the contract is $20,775 (69.25 x 3
contracts x 100 shares). If the maintenance margin rate is
20% of the nominal value, then the customer's maintenance
margin requirement would be $4,155. Because the customer's
equity had decreased to $3,615 (see above), the customer
would be required to have an additional $540 in margin
($4,155 - $3,615).
Alternatively, assume that
the next day the settlement price of EJG security futures
rises to 75.00. The mark-to-market gain in the customer's
equity is $1,050 (75.00 - 71.50 x 3 contacts x 100
shares). The customer's equity increases to $5,340 ($4,290
+ $1,050). The new nominal value of the contract is
$22,500 (75.00 x 3 contracts x 100 shares). If the
maintenance margin rate is 20% of the nominal value, then
the customer's maintenance margin requirement would be
$4,500. Because the customer's equity had increased to
$5,340 (see above), the customer's excess equity would be
$840.
The process is exactly the
same for a short position, except that margin calls are
generated as the settlement price rises rather than as it
falls. This is because the customer's equity decreases as
the settlement price rises and increases as the settlement
price falls.
Because the margin deposit
required to open a security futures position is a fraction
of the nominal value of the contracts being purchased or
sold, security futures contracts are said to be highly
leveraged. The smaller the margin requirement in relation
to the underlying value of the security futures contract,
the greater the leverage. Leverage allows exposure to a
given quantity of an underlying asset for a fraction of
the investment needed to purchase that quantity outright.
In sum, buying (or selling) a security futures contract
provides the same dollar and cents profit and loss
outcomes as owning (or shorting) the underlying security.
However, as a percentage of the margin deposit, the
potential immediate exposure to profit or loss is much
higher with a security futures contract than with the
underlying security.
For example, if a security
futures contract is established at a price of $50, the
contract has a nominal value of $5,000 (assuming the
contract is for 100 shares of stock). The margin
requirement may be as low as 20%. In the example just
used, assume the contract price rises from $50 to $52 (a
$200 increase in the nominal value). This represents a
$200 profit to the buyer of the security futures contract,
and a 20% return on the $1,000 deposited as margin. The
reverse would be true if the contract price decreased from
$50 to $48. This represents a $200 loss to the buyer, or
20% of the $1,000 deposited as margin. Thus, leverage can
either benefit or harm an investor.
Note that a 4% decrease in
the value of the contract resulted in a loss of 20% of the
margin deposited. A 20% decrease would wipe out 100% of
the margin deposited on the security futures contract.
Section 5 – Settlement
If you do not liquidate
your position prior to the end of trading on the last day
before the expiration of the security futures contract,
you are obligated to either 1) make or accept a cash
payment ("cash settlement") or 2) deliver or
accept delivery of the underlying securities in exchange
for final payment of the final settlement price
("physical delivery"). The terms of the contract
dictate whether it is settled through cash settlement or
by physical delivery.
The expiration of a
security futures contract is established by the exchange
on which the contract is listed. On the expiration day,
security futures contracts cease to exist. Typically, the
last trading day of a security futures contract will be
the third Friday of the expiring contract month, and the
expiration day will be the following Saturday. This
follows the expiration conventions for stock options and
broad-based stock indexes. Please keep in mind that the
expiration day is set by the listing exchange and may
deviate from these norms.
5.1. Cash settlement
In the case of cash settlement, no actual securities are
delivered at the expiration of the security futures
contract. Instead, you must settle any open positions in
security futures by making or receiving a cash payment
based on the difference between the final settlement price
and the previous day's settlement price. Under normal
circumstances, the final settlement price for a
cash-settled contract will reflect the opening price for
the underlying security. Once this payment is made,
neither the buyer nor the seller of the security futures
contract has any further obligations on the contract.
5.2. Settlement by
physical delivery
Settlement by physical delivery is carried out by clearing
brokers or their agents with National Securities Clearing
Corporation ("NSCC"), an SEC-regulated
securities clearing agency. Such settlements are made in
much the same way as they are for purchases and sales of
the underlying security. Promptly after the last day of
trading, the regulated exchange's clearing organization
will report a purchase and sale of the underlying stock at
the previous day's settlement price (also referred to as
the "invoice price") to NSCC. If NSCC does not
reject the transaction by a time specified in its rules,
settlement is effected pursuant to the rules of NSCC
within the normal clearance and settlement cycle for
securities transactions, which currently is three business
days.
If you hold a short
position in a physically settled security futures contract
to expiration, you will be required to make delivery of
the underlying securities. If you already own the
securities, you may tender them to your brokerage firm. If
you do not own the securities, you will be obligated to
purchase them. Some brokerage firms may not be able to
purchase the securities for you. If your brokerage firm
cannot purchase the underlying securities on your behalf
to fulfill a settlement obligation, you will have to
purchase the securities through a different firm.
Section 6 – Customer
Account Protections
Positions in security
futures contracts may be held either in a securities
account or in a futures account. Your brokerage firm may
or may not permit you to choose the types of account in
which your positions in security futures contracts will be
held. The protections for funds deposited or earned by
customers in connection with trading in security futures
contracts differ depending on whether the positions are
carried in a securities account or a futures account. If
your positions are carried in a securities account, you
will not receive the protections available for futures
accounts. Similarly, if your positions are carried in a
futures account, you will not receive the protections
available for securities accounts. You should ask your
broker which of these protections will apply to your
funds.
You should be aware that
the regulatory protections applicable to your account are
not intended to insure you against losses you may incur as
a result of a decline or increase in the price of a
security futures contract. As with all financial products,
you are solely responsible for any market losses in your
account.
Your brokerage firm must
tell you whether your security futures positions will be
held in a securities account or a futures account. If your
brokerage firm gives you a choice, it must tell you what
you have to do to make the choice and which type of
account will be used if you fail to do so. You should
understand that certain regulatory protections for your
account will depend on whether it is a securities account
or a futures account.
6.1. Protections for
Securities Accounts
If your positions in security futures contracts are
carried in a securities account, they are covered by SEC
rules governing the safeguarding of customer funds and
securities. These rules prohibit a broker/dealer from
using customer funds and securities to finance its
business. As a result, the broker/dealer is required to
set aside funds equal to the net of all its excess
payables to customers over receivables from customers. The
rules also require a broker/dealer to segregate all
customer fully paid and excess margin securities carried
by the broker/dealer for customers.
The Securities Investor
Protection Corporation (SIPC) also covers positions held
in securities accounts. SIPC was created in 1970 as a
non-profit, non-government, membership corporation, funded
by member broker/dealers. Its primary role is to return
funds and securities to customers if the broker/dealer
holding these assets becomes insolvent. SIPC coverage
applies to customers of current (and in some cases former)
SIPC members. Most broker/dealers registered with the SEC
are SIPC members; those few that are not must disclose
this fact to their customers. SIPC members must display an
official sign showing their membership. To check whether a
firm is a SIPC member, go to www.sipc.org, call the SIPC
Membership Department at (202) 371-8300, or write to SIPC
Membership Department, Securities Investor Protection
Corporation, 805 Fifteenth Street, NW, Suite 800,
Washington, DC 20005-2215.
SIPC coverage is limited to
$500,000 per customer, including up to $100,000 for cash.
For example, if a customer has 1,000 shares of XYZ stock
valued at $200,000 and $10,000 cash in the account, both
the security and the cash balance would be protected.
However, if the customer has shares of stock valued at
$500,000 and $100,000 in cash, only a total of $500,000 of
those assets will be protected.
For purposes of SIPC
coverage, customers are persons who have securities or
cash on deposit with a SIPC member for the purpose of, or
as a result of, securities transactions. SIPC does not
protect customer funds placed with a broker/dealer just to
earn interest. Insiders of the broker/dealer, such as its
owners, officers, and partners, are not customers for
purposes of SIPC coverage.
6.2. Protections for
Futures Accounts
If your security futures positions are carried in a
futures account, they must be segregated from the
brokerage firm's own funds and cannot be borrowed or
otherwise used for the firm's own purposes. If the funds
are deposited with another entity (e.g., a bank, clearing
broker, or clearing organization), that entity must
acknowledge that the funds belong to customers and cannot
be used to satisfy the firm's debts. Moreover, although a
brokerage firm may carry funds belonging to different
customers in the same bank or clearing account, it may not
use the funds of one customer to margin or guarantee the
transactions of another customer. As a result, the
brokerage firm must add its own funds to its customers'
segregated funds to cover customer debits and deficits.
Brokerage firms must calculate their segregation
requirements daily.
You may not be able to
recover the full amount of any funds in your account if
the brokerage firm becomes insolvent and has insufficient
funds to cover its obligations to all of its customers.
However, customers with funds in segregation receive
priority in bankruptcy proceedings. Furthermore, all
customers whose funds are required to be segregated have
the same priority in bankruptcy, and there is no ceiling
on the amount of funds that must be segregated for or can
be recovered by a particular customer.
Your brokerage firm is also
required to separately maintain funds invested in security
futures contracts traded on a foreign exchange. However,
these funds may not receive the same protections once they
are transferred to a foreign entity (e.g., a foreign
broker, exchange or clearing organization) to satisfy
margin requirements for those products. You should ask
your broker about the bankruptcy protections available in
the country where the foreign exchange (or other entity
holding the funds) is located.
Section 7 – Special Risks
for Day Traders
Certain traders who pursue
a day trading strategy may seek to use security futures
contracts as part of their trading activity. Whether day
trading in security futures contracts or other securities,
investors engaging in a day trading strategy face a number
of risks.
- Day trading in
security futures contracts requires in-depth knowledge
of the securities and futures markets and of trading
techniques and strategies. In attempting to
profit through day trading, you will compete with
professional traders who are knowledgeable and
sophisticated in these markets. You should have
appropriate experience before engaging in day trading.
- Day trading in
security futures contracts can result in substantial
commission charges, even if the per trade cost is low.
The more trades you make, the higher your total
commissions will be. The total commissions you pay
will add to your losses and reduce your profits. For
instance, assuming that a round-turn trade costs $16
and you execute an average of 29 round-turn
transactions per day each trading day, you would need
to generate an annual profit of $111,360 just to cover
your commission expenses.
- Day trading can be
extremely risky. Day trading generally is not
appropriate for someone of limited resources and
limited investment or trading experience and low risk
tolerance. You should be prepared to lose all of the
funds that you use for day trading. In particular, you
should not fund day trading activities with funds that
you cannot afford to lose.
Section 8 – Other
8.1. Corporate Events
As noted in Section 2.4, an equity security represents a
fractional ownership interest in the issuer of that
security. By contrast, the purchaser of a security futures
contract has only a contract for future delivery of the
underlying security. Treatment of dividends and other
corporate events affecting the underlying security may be
reflected in the security futures contract depending on
the applicable clearing organization rules. Consequently,
individuals should consider how dividends and other
developments affecting security futures in which they
transact will be handled by the relevant exchange and
clearing organization. The specific adjustments to the
terms of a security futures contract are governed by the
rules of the applicable clearing organization. Below is a
discussion of some of the more common types of adjustments
that you may need to consider.
Corporate issuers
occasionally announce stock splits. As a result of these
splits, owners of the issuer's common stock may own more
shares of the stock, or fewer shares in the case of a
reverse stock split. The treatment of stock splits for
persons owning a security futures contract may vary
according to the terms of the security futures contract
and the rules of the clearing organization. For example,
the terms of the contract may provide for an adjustment in
the number of contracts held by each party with a long or
short position in a security future, or for an adjustment
in the number of shares or units of the instrument
underlying each contract, or both.
Corporate issuers also
occasionally issue special dividends. A special dividend
is an announced cash dividend payment outside the normal
and customary practice of a corporation. The terms of a
security futures contract may be adjusted for special
dividends. The adjustments, if any, will be based upon the
rules of the exchange and clearing organization. In
general, there will be no adjustments for ordinary
dividends as they are recognized as a normal and customary
practice of an issuer and are already accounted for in the
pricing of security futures.
Corporate issuers
occasionally may be involved in mergers and acquisitions.
Such events may cause the underlying security of a
security futures contact to change over the contract
duration. The terms of security futures contracts may also
be adjusted to reflect other corporate events affecting
the underlying security.
8.2. Position Limits and
Large Trader Reporting
All security futures contracts trading on regulated
exchanges in the United States are subject to position
limits or position accountability limits. Position limits
restrict the number of security futures contracts that any
one person or group of related persons may hold or control
in a particular security futures contract. In contrast,
position accountability limits permit the accumulation of
positions in excess of the limit without a prior
exemption. In general, position limits and position
accountability limits are beyond the thresholds of most
retail investors. Whether a security futures contract is
subject to position limits, and the level for such limits,
depends upon the trading activity and market
capitalization of the underlying security of the security
futures contract.
Position limits apply are
required for security futures contracts that overlie a
security that has an average daily trading volume of 20
million shares or fewer. In the case of a security futures
contract overlying a security index, position limits are
required if any one of the securities in the index has an
average daily trading volume of 20 million shares or
fewer. Position limits also apply only to an expiring
security futures contract during its last five trading
days. A regulated exchange must establish position limits
on security futures that are no greater than 13,500 (100
share) contracts, unless the underlying security meets
certain volume and shares outstanding thresholds, in which
case the limit may be increased to 22,500 (100 share)
contracts.
For security futures
contracts overlying a security or securities with an
average trading volume of more than 20 million shares,
regulated exchanges may adopt position accountability
rules. Under position accountability rules, a trader
holding a position in a security futures contract that
exceeds 22,500 contracts (or such lower limit established
by an exchange) must agree to provide information
regarding the position and consent to halt increasing that
position if requested by the exchange.
Brokerage firms must also
report large open positions held by one person (or by
several persons acting together) to the CFTC as well as to
the exchange on which the positions are held. The CFTC's
reporting requirements are 1,000 contracts for security
futures positions on individual equity securities and 200
contracts for positions on a narrow-based index. However,
individual exchanges may require the reporting of large
open positions at levels less than the levels required by
the CFTC. In addition, brokerage firms must submit
identifying information on the account holding the
reportable position (on a form referred to as either an
"Identification of Special Accounts Form" or a
"Form 102") to the CFTC and to the exchange on
which the reportable position exists within three business
days of when a reportable position is first established.
8.3. Transactions on
Foreign Exchanges
U.S. customers may not trade security futures on foreign
exchanges until authorized by U.S. regulatory authorities.
U.S. regulatory authorities do not regulate the activities
of foreign exchanges and may not, on their own, compel
enforcement of the rules of a foreign exchange or the laws
of a foreign country. While U.S. law governs transactions
in security futures contracts that are effected in the
U.S., regardless of the exchange on which the contracts
are listed, the laws and rules governing transactions on
foreign exchanges vary depending on the country in which
the exchange is located.
8.4. Tax Consequences
For most taxpayers, security futures contracts are not
treated like other futures contracts. Instead, the tax
consequences of a security futures transaction depend on
the status of the taxpayer and the type of position (e.g.,
long or short, covered or uncovered). Because of the
importance of tax considerations to transactions in
security futures, readers should consult their tax
advisors as to the tax consequences of these transactions.
Section 9 – Glossary of
Terms
This glossary is intended
to assist customers in understanding specialized terms
used in the futures and securities industries. It is not
inclusive and is not intended to state or suggest the
legal significance or meaning of any word or term.
Arbitrage – taking
an economically opposite position in a security futures
contract on another exchange, in an options contract, or
in the underlying security.
Broad-based security
index – a security index that does not fall within
the statutory definition of a narrow-based security index
(see Narrow-based security index). A future on a
broad-based security index is not a security future. This
risk disclosure statement applies solely to security
futures and generally does not pertain to futures on a
broad-based security index. Futures on a broad-based
security index are under exclusive jurisdiction of the
CFTC.
Cash settlement –
a method of settling certain futures contracts by having
the buyer (or long) pay the seller (or short) the cash
value of the contract according to a procedure set by the
exchange.
Clearing broker –
a member of the clearing organization for the contract
being traded. All trades, and the daily profits or losses
from those trades, must go through a clearing broker.
Clearing organization
– a regulated entity that is responsible for settling
trades, collecting losses and distributing profits, and
handling deliveries.
Contract – 1) the
unit of trading for a particular futures contract (e.g.,
one contract may be 100 shares of the underlying
security), 2) the type of future being traded (e.g.,
futures on ABC stock).
Contract month –
the last month in which delivery is made against the
futures contract or the contract is cash-settled.
Sometimes referred to as the delivery month.
Day trading strategy
– an overall trading strategy characterized by the
regular transmission by a customer of intra-day orders to
effect both purchase and sale transactions in the same
security or securities.
EDGAR – the SEC's
Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval system
maintains electronic copies of corporate information filed
with the agency. EDGAR submissions may be accessed through
the SEC's Web site, www.sec.gov.
Futures contract –
a futures contract is (1) an agreement to purchase or sell
a commodity for delivery in the future; (2) at a price
determined at initiation of the contract; (3) that
obligates each party to the contract to fulfill it at the
specified price; (4) that is used to assume or shift risk;
and (5) that may be satisfied by delivery or offset.
Hedging – the
purchase or sale of a security future to reduce or offset
the risk of a position in the underlying security or group
of securities (or a close economic equivalent).
Illiquid market –
a market (or contract) with few buyers and/or sellers.
Illiquid markets have little trading activity and those
trades that do occur may be done at large price
increments.
Liquidation –
entering into an offsetting transaction. Selling a
contract that was previously purchased liquidates a
futures position in exactly the same way that selling 100
shares of a particular stock liquidates an earlier
purchase of the same stock. Similarly, a futures contract
that was initially sold can be liquidated by an offsetting
purchase.
Liquid market – a
market (or contract) with numerous buyers and sellers
trading at small price increments.
Long – 1) the
buying side of an open futures contact, 2) a person who
has bought futures contracts that are st |