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Futures Trading

Understanding futures contracts, margin, and trading sessions

What Are Futures Contracts?

A futures contract is a standardized legal agreement to buy or sell a specific asset at a predetermined price at a specified time in the future. Unlike stocks, futures have expiration dates and are traded on regulated exchanges like the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME).

Standardized

Each contract specifies exact quantity, quality, and delivery terms

Obligation

Both buyer and seller must fulfill the contract at expiration

Leverage

Control large positions with relatively small capital through margin

Two-Sided

Every contract has a buyer (long) and seller (short)

Cash SettlementNo physical delivery; profits/losses are settled in cash (common for equity index futures like ES and NQ)
Physical DeliveryThe actual commodity is delivered (common for agricultural and some energy contracts)

Popular Futures Markets

The most liquid equity index futures contract, representing 50× the S&P 500 index value.

SpecificationValue
Point Value$50 per point
Tick Size0.25 points ($12.50)
Contract MonthsMarch, June, September, December
Trading HoursNearly 24 hours via Globex
Typical Margin$12,000-$15,000

Tracks the tech-heavy Nasdaq-100 index, representing 20× the index value.

SpecificationValue
Point Value$20 per point
Tick Size0.25 points ($5.00)
Contract MonthsQuarterly (H, M, U, Z)
Trading HoursNearly 24 hours via Globex
Typical Margin$16,000-$20,000

Represents 100 troy ounces of gold, a safe-haven asset often moving inversely to equities.

SpecificationValue
Point Value$100 per point
Tick Size0.10 points ($10.00)
Contract MonthsBimonthly
Trading HoursNearly 24 hours via Globex
Typical Margin$8,000-$11,000

Margin and Leverage

Futures margin is a performance bond—a good-faith deposit ensuring you can meet your obligations. It's not a down payment; you're controlling the full contract value with a fraction of the capital.

Initial MarginThe minimum amount required to open a futures position
Maintenance MarginThe minimum equity to maintain a position (typically 70-90% of initial margin)
Margin CallOccurs when account falls below maintenance margin—must deposit more funds or close position

ES at 4500:

  • Notional value: 4500 × $50 = $225,000
  • Initial margin: $12,500
  • Leverage ratio: ~18:1

If ES rises 10 points to 4510:

  • Profit: 10 × $50 = $500
  • Return on margin: 4% on a 0.22% market move
Important
High leverage means small market moves create large percentage gains or losses on your margin. A 2% market move can wipe out 36% of your margin. Always use stop losses and size positions appropriately.

Trading Sessions

8:30 AM - 3:00 PM CT (9:30 AM - 4:00 PM ET)

  • Corresponds to US stock market hours
  • 60-80% of daily volume trades during RTH
  • Highest liquidity and tightest spreads
  • Major economic data releases occur here

Asia/Overnight: 5:00 PM - 8:30 AM CT — Lower volume, wider spreads

European: 2:00 AM - 8:30 AM CT — Moderate volume, European data influence

After-Hours: 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM CT — Reaction to late news

SessionVolumeSpreadBest For
RTHHighestTightestDay trading, scalping
EuropeanModerateModerateSwing trades
Asia/OvernightLowestWidestGap setups

Key Terminology

Tick SizeMinimum price increment (ES: 0.25 points = $12.50)
Point ValueDollar amount per one-point move (ES: $50)
VolumeTotal contracts traded during a period
Open InterestOutstanding contracts not yet closed or delivered
Front MonthContract with nearest expiration—highest liquidity
RolloverClosing expiring contract and opening next month to maintain exposure
ContangoNext month trades higher than front month (common in equity indexes)
BackwardationNext month trades lower (common in commodities)

Futures use codes: [Symbol][Month][Year]

F = January
G = February
H = March
J = April
K = May
M = June
N = July
Q = August
U = September
V = October
X = November
Z = December

Example: ESH5 = E-mini S&P 500, March 2025

Pro Tip
Most retail traders roll their positions 5-10 days before expiration when volume begins shifting to the next contract. Watch for when the front month's volume drops below the next month.
Futures Trading Guide | Trading Knowledge Base