A Forward contract is the simplest form of a
contingent claim
that can be derived from an asset, since it does not contain any element of
choice. Two parties agree, on a future
delivery date
, to exchange an
underlying asset for a predetermined amount
of cash called the delivery price
.
The underlying can be any kind of asset (e.g. commodities, shares, currencies)
that has a fluctuating spot price
; on the delivery date
, the
terminal payoff
is simply calculated from the difference between
the spot and the delivery price
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The opposite is true for the party who enters a
short forward position (right): the holder
has both the right and the obligation to sell the underlying with a
maximum profit of
and potential losses that are unlimited
if the underlying becomes arbitrarily expensive
.
To avoid the unnecessary exchange of cash on the day
when the
contract is written, the delivery price is sometimes chosen equal to the
forward price
, which,
by definition, makes the initial value of the contract worthless
.
A futures contract is a special
type of forward contract with standardized delivery dates and sizes that
allow trading on an exchange: (2.1.2#tab.1) shows an example of a
commodity future that enables the owner of a contract to buy one tone
of wheat some time in the future.
A system of margin requirements is
designed to protect both parties against default: instead of realizing the
profit or the loss at the expiry date, futures are evaluated every day and
margin payments are made across
gradually over the lifetime of the contract.
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