Share:

I’m often asked if a Futures contract expiration can cause a seasonal tradable pattern. The answer is yes, no and maybe. All Future’s contracts expire at some point, but not all contracts are deliverable. As well, only long positions in the market are ever delivered against.

When trading in the Futures market, the trader is simply entering into a contractual obligation to buy or sell a Commodity at today’s price and take or make delivery at some point in the Future when that contract expires. But, rarely are deliveries made today. Approximately 98% of them are offset before the contract expires to avoid taking or making delivery.

Even the Commercials will use the cash from a Futures hedge of the physical Commodity at times. Some of this is to avoid the excessive delivery charges for where the Futures contract is written to be delivered from. Or perhaps the commercial does not want to pay to store the Commodity over time.

Not all Futures contracts are physically delivered. Some are simply settled in cash at settlement of the contract expiration. Cash settled contracts carry no risk of being delivered against. These contracts do not see the same panic of exit near expiration like a deliverable contract does.

Traders can be long or short a Futures contact. The traders holding long positions going into expiration or First Notice Day (FND) are the ones who face delivery of the physical Commodity.

When prices are trending either up or down that means speculators, both large (professional) and small (novice), are in that trend. Following trends is how speculators make money. As a result, the last thing a speculator wants is to take delivery of a Futures contract. Just one Live Cattle contract would be 40,000 pounds of on the hoof beef. Due to this lack of desire to take delivery, they will exit uptrends in masses near contract expirations and FND’s.

The interest rate market has been in a strong seasonal uptrend as I wrote about recently that Moore Research had shown to have a high percentage win rate through the month of August.

First Notice Day – First day notice is given to broker of intent to take or make delivery. For the interest rate products that date is August 31 for the September contract. Treasury Futures are a deliverable product for $100,000 of a Treasury per contract. The chart below shows this price action. I would like to thank Moore Research again for use of their charts.

Futures

From the chart we can see that the 10 year Treasury Futures contract has been in a strong uptrend since June. This would mean there are a lot of speculators in this market and they must exit by August 31 FND or face taking delivery of a 10 Year Treasury.

I used MRCI’s chart to illustrate how the Open Interest (contracts entered into, but have not yet been offset) has dropped off during the last few days coming into the end of August.

Below the price chart are two sub-charts. The upper one is the contract specific volume (purple) and open interest (black) and does very little for analysis as the volume and open interest must go up and down as the contract becomes the front month and when it comes into expiration. Unfortunately, most of our charting packages only show contract specific open interest and volume making the information useless.

The lower chart shows cumulative (all 10 Year Futures contracts traded) volume and open interest. Using cumulative allows us to see traders truly entering markets and showing strength or weakness in the trend.

A trader could use this information to gain an edge in their trading. If there is a strong uptrend in a Futures market that is physically delivered and it is days from FND or expiration, they should anticipate the open interest to drop off showing traders are leaving the market to avoid delivery.

If you look at a weekly continuous chart of the 10 year Treasury Futures contract you will see a beautiful supply (resistance) level that the market traded into the day before the mass exit started which caused the price to drop.

“To be upset over what you don’t have is to waste what you do have” Ken Keyes

Learn to Trade Now

This content is intended to provide educational information only. This information should not be construed as individual or customized legal, tax, financial or investment services. As each individual's situation is unique, a qualified professional should be consulted before making legal, tax, financial and investment decisions. The educational information provided in this article does not comprise any course or a part of any course that may be used as an educational credit for any certification purpose and will not prepare any User to be accredited for any licenses in any industry and will not prepare any User to get a job. Reproduced by permission from OTAcademy.com click here for Terms of Use: https://www.otacademy.com/about/terms

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD clings to daily gains above 1.0650

EUR/USD clings to daily gains above 1.0650

EUR/USD gained traction and turned positive on the day above 1.0650. The improvement seen in risk mood following the earlier flight to safety weighs on the US Dollar ahead of the weekend and helps the pair push higher.

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD recovers toward 1.2450 after UK Retail Sales data

GBP/USD recovers toward 1.2450 after UK Retail Sales data

GBP/USD reversed its direction and advanced to the 1.2450 area after touching a fresh multi-month low below 1.2400 in the Asian session. The positive shift seen in risk mood on easing fears over a deepening Iran-Israel conflict supports the pair.

GBP/USD News

USD/JPY goes on a roller-coaster ride prompted by geopolitical risk

USD/JPY goes on a roller-coaster ride prompted by geopolitical risk

USD/JPY whipsaws lower and then higher on alternating risk-on risk-off caused by Middle East tensions. Governor Ueda talks about defending the Yen from further weakness and currency-induced imported inflation. USD/JPY price chart shows bearish Hanging Man forming, boding ill for future price action. 

USD/JPY News

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD clings to daily gains above 1.0650

EUR/USD clings to daily gains above 1.0650

EUR/USD gained traction and turned positive on the day above 1.0650. The improvement seen in risk mood following the earlier flight to safety weighs on the US Dollar ahead of the weekend and helps the pair push higher.

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD recovers toward 1.2450 after UK Retail Sales data

GBP/USD recovers toward 1.2450 after UK Retail Sales data

GBP/USD reversed its direction and advanced to the 1.2450 area after touching a fresh multi-month low below 1.2400 in the Asian session. The positive shift seen in risk mood on easing fears over a deepening Iran-Israel conflict supports the pair.

GBP/USD News

Gold holds steady at around $2,380 following earlier spike

Gold holds steady at around $2,380 following earlier spike

Gold stabilized near $2,380 after spiking above $2,400 with the immediate reaction to reports of Israel striking Iran. Meanwhile, the pullback seen in the US Treasury bond yields helps XAU/USD hold its ground.

Gold News

Bitcoin Weekly Forecast: BTC post-halving rally could be partially priced in Premium

Bitcoin Weekly Forecast: BTC post-halving rally could be partially priced in

Bitcoin price shows no signs of directional bias while it holds above  $60,000. The fourth BTC halving is partially priced in, according to Deutsche Bank’s research. 

Read more

Week ahead – US GDP and BoJ decision on top of next week’s agenda

Week ahead – US GDP and BoJ decision on top of next week’s agenda

US GDP, core PCE and PMIs the next tests for the Dollar. Investors await BoJ for guidance about next rate hike. EU and UK PMIs, as well as Australian CPIs also on tap.

Read more

RECOMMENDED LESSONS

7 Ways to Avoid Forex Scams

The forex industry is recently seeing more and more scams. Here are 7 ways to avoid losing your money in such scams: Forex scams are becoming frequent. Michael Greenberg reports on luxurious expenses, including a submarine bought from the money taken from forex traders. Here’s another report of a forex fraud. So, how can we avoid falling in such forex scams?

What Are the 10 Fatal Mistakes Traders Make

Trading is exciting. Trading is hard. Trading is extremely hard. Some say that it takes more than 10,000 hours to master. Others believe that trading is the way to quick riches. They might be both wrong. What is important to know that no matter how experienced you are, mistakes will be part of the trading process.

Strategy

Money Management

Psychology