Another Big Inflation Report Is Expected Tomorrow. Here Are Some Futures to Know About
David Russell
February 9, 2022
Inflation has done more than just roil the stock market this year. It’s also triggering activity across the futures market, covered in today’s post.
Contracts tracking products like crude oil, gold, natural gas and soybeans have been on the move as the economy swings back into gear. Demand for many products has surged as lingering effects of the coronavirus pandemic limit production and supply.
The result has been an upward spiral in prices. Economists forecast that the Bureau of Labor Statistics will report a 7.3 percent consumer inflation (CPI) reading tomorrow, which would be the highest since February 1982. The business-focused producer price index (PPI) follows on February 15.
While costs like used cars and housing have driven some of the increase, commodities account for most of the cost pressures. For example, the last CPI report showed products like gasoline and fuel oil up more than 40 percent in December. Meat prices and other non-food commodities also had double-digit jumps.
Investors looking for exposure to these trends may consider owning stocks associated with commodities. For example, a wide range of companies produce energy, metals and agricultural goods. But traders can also target the products directly with futures.
What Are Futures?
Futures are derivative contracts, tied to an underlying asset. Investors access them through separate accounts than stocks and options.
Futures track simple price movements. Traders don’t own shares, but go “long” (buy) or “short” (sell) a certain number of contracts. They must hold a certain amount of capital, known as margin, to take positions. This is different than stocks, which you own directly.
The most actively traded futures contracts track major stock indexes like the S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100. Those are covered in other articles. Today we’ll focus on futures contracts impacted by higher inflation.
Crude Oil Futures
Crude oil futures are the most actively traded commodity futures, according to TradeStation data. The main product in the U.S. is Nymex WTI, trading with the root symbol CL.
Each contract represents 1,000 barrels of West Texas Intermedia crude oil. A customer long one contract will make $1,000 if oil rises $1 per barrel. Likewise he or she would lose $1,000 from a $1 drop. The exact opposite would be true if they were short.
CL contracts expire each month, three business days prior to the 25th (assuming it’s a business day). It’s usually on the 22nd, but can fall on the 21st. The symbol for the current month is CLH22.
Note that CL uses the expiration code for its delivery month — not the expiration month. Therefore the contract that stops trading in February includes the March code of “H”.
Corn and Soybean Futures
Corn and soybeans are the most actively traded agricultural commodities. Both have rallied in the last year, spurred by high fertilizer prices and weather conditions.
Corn futures use the root C. Each contract represents 5,000 bushels. They expire in March, May, July, September and December. The symbol for the current corn contract is CH22.
Soybeans use the root S. Each contract represents 5,000 bushels. They expire in January, March, May, July, August, September and November. The symbol for the current soybean contract is SH22.
Unlike crude oil, corn and soybeans have the same expiry and delivery months. Both stop trading on the business day prior to the 15th of each month.
Gold Futures
Gold futures control 100 ounces of gold each. Investors often view the precious metal as an inflation hedge because of its scarcity.
Gold futures use the root GC. They expire on the third last business day of each month.
While the next gold contract expires in February, the current active contract expires in April. Its symbol is GCJ22.
Natural Gas Futures
Natural-gas prices have more than doubled from their long-term low in December 2020. It’s the most volatile of all the commodities cited in this article.
Natural gas futures control 10,000 Metric Million British Thermal Unit (MMBtu). They use the root NG and expire each month on the third last business day.
The symbol for the current month is NGH22.
Like crude oil, NG expires one month before its delivery month.
Treasury Futures
While U.S. Treasury securities aren’t commodities, they’ve been moving as the Federal Reserve prepares to raise interest rates.
Treasuries are priced based on their yield, which moves opposite to price. Their values decline when interest rates rise. (Yields are basically the same as interest rates.) Longer-dated Treasuries are typically more volatile.
Ten-year Treasury bond futures control $100,000 in face value of U.S. sovereign debt. They expire quarterly: in March, June, September and December. Their last day of trading falls seven business days before the last business days of their contract month.
Ten-year Treasury bond futures use the root TY. The symbol for the current month is TYH22.
There are also five-year futures using the root FV. The symbol for the current month is FVH22.
The 30-year Treasury futures use the root US. The symbol for the current month is USH22.
More Information For Futures Traders
Customers seeking more information on futures can get further more details on TradeStation’s specifications page.
Traders can also use “continuous” contracts for charting purposes (“@”+root). These combine expired contracts into a single historical price feed. The table below includes some basic details on the products covered above.
Product
Active Month
12-month Change
Volatility
Crude Oil (@CL)
CLH22
+65%
24%
Corn (@C)
CH22
+60%
21%
Soybeans (@S)
SH22
+21%
21%
Gold (@GC)
GCJ22
-1%
13%
Natural Gas (@NG)
NGH22
+38%
102%
10-Year Treasuries (@TY)
TYH22
-5%
5%
Five-Year Treasuries (@FV)
FVH22
-5%
3%
30-Year Treasuries (@US)
USH22
-5%
9%
Source: TradeStation Data. 30-day historical volatility is shown.
David Russell is Global Head of Market Strategy at TradeStation. Drawing on nearly two decades of experience as a financial journalist and analyst, his background includes equities, emerging markets, fixed-income and derivatives. He previously worked at Bloomberg News, CNBC and E*TRADE Financial.
Russell systematically reviews countless global financial headlines and indicators in search of broad tradable trends that present opportunities repeatedly over time. Customers can expect him to keep them appraised of sector leadership, relative strength and the big stories – especially those overlooked by other commentators. He’s also a big fan of generating leverage with options to limit capital at risk.
Uranium miner Cameco has been stuck at an old high, and one big options trader is bracing for a potential drop as earnings approach. This large transaction was detected yesterday in CCJ, unfolding in several blocks over the course of the afternoon: Some 30,000 May 45...
Stocks hit a new record for the third straight month in March, but there was significant rotation away from growth names and technology The S&P 500 rose 3.1 percent, outpacing the Nasdaq-100 by 1.9 percentage points. It was the biggest underperformance in the...
The stock market has been optimistic about inflation since late 2023, but price pressures may be returning as the Federal Reserve considers interest-rate cuts. The price of energy, shelter and materials have quietly risen in the last month. The increases follow months...
Leaving TradeStation
You are leaving TradeStation.com for another company’s website. Click the button below to acknowledge that you understand that you are leaving TradeStation.com.
This event is hosted on YouCanTrade. The information for this event is being provided for informational and educational purposes only.
You are leaving TradeStation Securities and going to YouCanTrade. YouCanTrade is an online media publication service which provides investment educational content, ideas and demonstrations, and does not provide investment or trading advice, research or recommendations. YouCanTrade is not a licensed financial services company or investment adviser and does not offer brokerage services of any kind.
TradeStation Securities, Inc. provides support and training channels hosted on YouCanTrade, its affiliate. Other than these support and training channels, any services offered by YouCanTrade are not sponsored, endorsed, sold or promoted by TradeStation Securities and it makes no representation regarding any YouCanTrade goods or services.
To acknowledge you are leaving TradeStation Securities to go to YouCanTrade, please click
This website uses cookies to offer a better browsing experience and to collect usage information. By browsing this site with cookies enabled or by clicking on the "ACCEPT COOKIES" button you accept our Cookies Policy. To block, delete or manage cookies, please visit your browser settings. Restricting cookies will prevent you benefiting from some of the functionality of our website.ACCEPT COOKIES