Vader;
DTN just had an article on Index Funds.
DO you produce grain and or livestock?
Then we should care who else is buying or selling corn, cotton, heating oil, lean hogs, live cattle, natural gas, soybeans, soybean oil, sugar, unleaded gasoline, or wheat.
Now we have more players wanting to buy our commodity, at least in the futures markets.
Index Funds.
More than $100 billion, today, in noncommercial activity in commodity markets has changed the way they function. It was about $6 billion in 1999
lndex funds may actually mean new opportunities for farmers with crops or livestock to market.
New offerings called sub-index funds, are like index funds already offered.
They bring new money into the commodity markets. These sub-indexes are traded in the equities markets.
They are classified as exchange-traded funds, (ETFs); money going into them is typically being taken out of stocks and bonds, as is the money going into the broader index funds.
Sub-index funds represent a way to trade commodities without having to buy into large contracts and with no risk of physical delivery. For us as producers of the underlying commodities, they also mean bigger price swings in the futures markets.
So if our grain prices don’t track, what you think are the fundamentals… don’t be surprised.
The trading of the Index Funds affect every grain we grow, either the input cost, or the price of the grain or livestock we produce itself.
Index funds create focused ebbs and flows of money going into or coming out of commodities. This buying and selling power will exaggerate price movement and volatility in both directions.
Everything… is not as it seems… from the seat of the tractor as we seed our crops, or produce our livestock!
Vader, what risk management strategy does the CWB use in the pooling accounts... to maximise our returns from these new marketing alternatives?
DTN just had an article on Index Funds.
DO you produce grain and or livestock?
Then we should care who else is buying or selling corn, cotton, heating oil, lean hogs, live cattle, natural gas, soybeans, soybean oil, sugar, unleaded gasoline, or wheat.
Now we have more players wanting to buy our commodity, at least in the futures markets.
Index Funds.
More than $100 billion, today, in noncommercial activity in commodity markets has changed the way they function. It was about $6 billion in 1999
lndex funds may actually mean new opportunities for farmers with crops or livestock to market.
New offerings called sub-index funds, are like index funds already offered.
They bring new money into the commodity markets. These sub-indexes are traded in the equities markets.
They are classified as exchange-traded funds, (ETFs); money going into them is typically being taken out of stocks and bonds, as is the money going into the broader index funds.
Sub-index funds represent a way to trade commodities without having to buy into large contracts and with no risk of physical delivery. For us as producers of the underlying commodities, they also mean bigger price swings in the futures markets.
So if our grain prices don’t track, what you think are the fundamentals… don’t be surprised.
The trading of the Index Funds affect every grain we grow, either the input cost, or the price of the grain or livestock we produce itself.
Index funds create focused ebbs and flows of money going into or coming out of commodities. This buying and selling power will exaggerate price movement and volatility in both directions.
Everything… is not as it seems… from the seat of the tractor as we seed our crops, or produce our livestock!
Vader, what risk management strategy does the CWB use in the pooling accounts... to maximise our returns from these new marketing alternatives?
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