The market for trading commodity options is simply a venue where producers of goods are given the chance to buy or sell a commodity at predetermined and fixed rate. Much like a farmer who is given by an insurance firm the right to collect on a particular plan in the event that his properties catch fire, traders of commodity options may also sell their options at a particular price if prevailing market rates go lower.
There are two kinds of commodity options. One takes the task of insuring products in case their current market price drops, while the other insures products that are bought against price increases.
Like futures, an option gives you the right, but not the obligation, to buy an underlying stock at a specified price at a predetermined date in the future.
You earn a profit if the stock’s market value rises above the price by which you acquired your contract upon the agreement’s expiry. If the stock’s market value drops, then you lose your premium.
There are two forms of options: the call option and the put option. If you buy a call option, you are expecting your stock price to go up and you would prefer the put option if you expect the opposite, meaning you expect prices of your stock to decline.
While stocks are pretty common, you must have heard of options too. Options, like foreign exchange or futures are forms of securities that you can invest and trade in the stock market. Options are considered based on normal stocks.
Very much like futures, an option gives you the right, but not the obligation, to buy an underlying stock at a specified price at a specified date in the future. You earn a profit if the stock’s market value rises above the price by which you acquired your contract upon the agreement’s expiry. If the stock’s market value drops, then you lose your premium.