Commodities And How To Trade
Posted by GuestPoster in Personal Finances
A common issue with trading in commodity future trading however is that many traders carry with the commodity too much leverage. So for example, take a 100 oz. gold contract with a value of $1000 an ounce and thus a total value of $100,000. The margin or if you prefer – good faith deposit – to have 100 oz. of gold could be around 10% of the total contract value, which is $10,000.
Now this is where the problems begin to arise. A commodity trader who is being bullish on gold may think its a good time to buy into 10 gold contracts at a cost of $100,000 to their trading account. So if the price of gold were to move to $1100 an oz. then all is well and the money in the traders account doubles.
But if the price of gold were to reduce by that $100 an oz. and provide the trader with a value of $900 an oz. then the trader would be wiped out unless they were in a position to meet a margin call from their broker and place further funds into their account.


