- Single-stock futures
Single-stock futures (SSF's) are
futures contracts with the underlying asset being one particular stock, usually in batches of 100. When purchased, no transmission of share rights or dividends occur. Being futures contracts they are traded on margin, thus offering leverage. They are traded in various financial markets, including those of the United States, United Kingdom, Spain, India and others. South Africa currently hosts the largest single-stock futures market in the world, trading on average 700,000 contracts daily [http://www.moneyweb.co.za/mw/view/mw/en/page55?oid=146653&sn=Detail] .In the United States, they were disallowed from any exchange listing in the 1980s because the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission and theU.S. Securities and Exchange Commission were unable to decide which would have the regulatory authority over these products.After the
Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 became law, the two agencies eventually agreed on a jurisdiction-sharing plan and SSF's began trading on November 8, 2002.Two new exchanges initially offered "security futures" products, including single-stock futures, although one of these exchanges has since closed. The remaining market is known as
OneChicago because it is a joint venture of three previously-existingChicago -based exchanges, theChicago Board Options Exchange ,Chicago Mercantile Exchange and theChicago Board of Trade . In 2006, the brokerage firmInteractive Brokers made an equity investment in OneChicago and is now a part-owner of the exchange.SSFs have yet to gain significant popularity among securities & derivatives traders in the United States. Daily total contract volume [http://www.onechicago.com/060000_press_news/press_news_2005/images/Dec05VolumeReport.pdf] averaged approximately 26,000 contracts/day in December 2005. Although 2005 total annual volume did increase 188% over 2004, volumes are still small in comparison to more established
derivative contract s. For example, U.S. equity & ETF options trade approximately 6,000,000 contracts/day.Single stock futures values are priced by the market in accordance with the standard theoretical pricing model for forward and futures contracts, which is:
:
where F is the current (time t) cost of establishing a futures contract, S is the current price (spot price) of the underlying stock, r is the annualized risk-free interest rate, PV(Div) is the present value of an expected dividend, t is the present time, and T is the time when the contract expires.
When the risk-free rate is expressed as a continuous return, the contract price is:
:
where S is the stock price, PV(Div) is the
Present value of any dividends generated by the underlying stock between T and t, r is the risk free rate expressed as a continuous return, and e is the base of the natural log. Note the value of r will be slightly different in the two equations. The relationship between continuous returns and annualized returns is rc = ln(1 + r). [http://www.fma.org/Orlando/Papers/Bozanic_SSF_FMA2007.pdf]The value of a futures contract is zero at the moment it is established, but changes thereafter until time T, at which point its value equals ST - Ft, i.e., the current cost of the stock minus the originally established cost of the futures contract.
External links
* [http://cftc.gov/ Commodity Futures Trading Commission] - the main federal agency that regulates futures and the exchanges in the United States.
* [http://www.onechicago.com/ the OneChicago Exchange]
* [http://www.fma.org/Orlando/Papers/Bozanic_SSF_FMA2007.pdf SSF Research]
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