T & K Futures and Options Inc.

"SERVING INVESTORS AROUND THE GLOBE"
800-915-4716
772-873-9674


Home
Open Account
Margins
Contract Specs
Charts & Quotes
Special Reports
Education
Risk Disclosure
Links
Forex
Request Info
Research
 

 

 

 


 

 Wheat Futures and Options Market Trading

 Call 1-800-915-4716 or Click Here and open your account now!

 

FREE Practice Account

 

T & K Futures and Options, Inc. is a federally licensed U.S. corporation specializing in helping investors implement futures and options investment strategies. We are happy to answer all of your questions about Wheat Futures and Options. Click here for answers to your questions.

The History of Wheat and Wheat Futures Trading

Wheat is a cereal grass and is believed to have originated in southwestern Asia. Wheat's use by mankind dates back 10,000 years to the ancient Mesopotamians near modern day Turkey and Iraq. Wheat may be the most valued agricultural commodity besides maize throughout the history of mankind. Wheat was first grown in the United States near what is now Massachusetts circa 1602. Today wheat is cultivated all around the world and its demand has made it one to the most actively traded grain commodities in the world. Wheat is also used as a food source for livestock and based on prices competes with corn usage.

CBOT Wheat Futures and Options Quick Facts

  • 5000 bushel contract size

  • one cent move equals $50

  • trades Mar., May, July, Sep., Dec.

 

Fundamental analysis of the wheat market

Top Producers 2010-2011

  • European Union (approx. 21% of world production)

  • China (approx. 17% of world production)

  • India (approx. 12% of world production)

  • United States (approx. 9% of world production)

  • Russia (approx. 6% of world production)

  • Australia (approx. 4% of world production)

Other fundamental factors affecting wheat prices

  • weather (floods, droughts and freeze damage)

  • disease/fungus

  • shipping delays

The Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT), The Kansas City Board of Trade (KCBOT) and The Minneapolis Grain Exchange (MGEX) are all very important exchanges used to trade wheat futures and options for the many different types of wheat that are grown in the USA. The classification terms spring and winter wheat specify when the wheat is planted not harvested.

The Chicago Board of Trade is the largest exchange where wheat futures and options are traded. The CBOT was established in 1858 and is the oldest US commodity exchange still in operation today. The CBOT is the primary exchange for soft red winter wheat which is used to produce biscuits, muffins and cakes. Soft red winter wheat is also crushed to make cake flour. Soft red winter wheat is considered a low protein wheat. The CBOT Chicago wheat futures specifications are down the page.

The Kansas City Board of Trade (KCBT), was established in 1876 near one of the world's most fertile growing regions and is the largest wheat future market for hard red winter wheat. Hard red winter wheat is considered a high protein wheat and is used most often in making breads. (KCBT) wheat futures and options are less liquid than (CBOT) wheat futures and options.

The Minneapolis Grain Exchange (MGEX) was established in 1881 as a cash market for grains. The MGEX is the largest wheat future market for hard red spring wheat. Hard red spring wheat is a high protein wheat used for making breads and hard baked goods. The (MGEX) wheat futures markets are less liquid than the wheat futures of the other exchanges.

Contact us at contact@tkfutures.com   for specific wheat futures and wheat options data. or click here now open an account and open your account today.

First Name
Email
 

 What is a wheat futures contract?

A wheat futures contract is an agreement between a buyer and a seller to receive or deliver a product on a future date at a price they have negotiated today. Learn More >>>

The agreement is standardized as to delivery period, contract size and quality of the product. These specifications are determined by the exchange.

Wheat futures contracts typically are used as a price protection mechanism or an investment tool, not as a method of selling or obtaining a product.

To avoid having to meet his contractual obligation to receive or deliver a product, a buyer or seller must liquidate his wheat futures contract. A buyer (long) would sell his wheat futures contract, and a seller (short) would buy his wheat futures contract back. This procedure is called offsetting a wheat futures position.

The ability to deliver is necessary to maintain the economic relationship between the cash and wheat futures markets. Many savvy wheat farmers use the wheat futures and wheat options to hedge their crops against adverse wheat futures price movements.

 

**Click Here Now! for actual futures and options prices, expirations, charts .....

Wheat Futures Contract Specifications

Kansas City Board of Trade

Hard Red Winter Wheat Futures
(Trade commenced 1876)
 

Trading Hours:

9:30 a.m. to 1:15 p.m., Central Time

Contract Unit:

5,000 bushels

Ticker Symbol:

KW

Delivery Months:

July, September, December, March, May

Price Quotation:

Dollars, cents and 1/4-cents per bushel

Min. Price Fluctuation:

1/4 cent ($12.50 per contract)

Max. Price Fluctuation:

30 cents ($1,500 per contract) above or below previous day's settlement price

Speculative Position Limits:

Combined with wheat options for a net long or net short futures - equivalent maximum of:
  Spot Month *: 600 contracts
  Single Month: 3,000 contracts
  All Months: 4,000 contracts
* Spot month limits go into effect on a contract at the close of trade the day before it's first delivery notice day.

Delivery Mechanism:

Physical; registered warehouse receipt issued by regular elevators

Deliverable Grades:

No. 2 at contract price; No. 1 at a 1 1/2-cent premium; No. 3 at a 3 cent discount, changing to a 5-cent discount with the July 2003 contract

Delivery Points:

Kansas City, Mo. - Kans. and Hutchinson, Kans.

Delivery Notices:

Must be issued and delivered to the KCBT Clearing Corp. before 4:00 p.m. on the second business day preceding the day of delivery, except on the last notice day of the delivery month, when delivery notices may be delivered to the Clearing Corp. until 2:00 p.m. on the last notice day (business day preceding the last delivery day)

Last Trading Day:

There is no trading during the last seven (7) business days of the liquidating month

First Notice Day:

The business day preceding the first business day of the liquidating month

First Delivery Day:

The first business day of the liquidating month

Last Notice Day:

The business day preceding the last business day of the liquidating month

 

Hard Red Winter Wheat Options
(Trading Began Oct. 30, 1984)
 

Trading Hours:

9:30 a.m. to 1:25 p.m., Central time

Underlying Asset:

One KCBT hard red winter wheat futures contract

Ticker Symbol:

Calls: HC. Puts: HP

Delivery Months:

Serial

Strike Price Intervals:

Integral multiples of 10 cents per bushel

Listing of Strikes:

New strikes are listed to maintain 30 above and 30 below the at-the-money strike in increments of 10 cents

Price Quotation:

Dollars, cents and 1/8-cents per bushel

Min. Price Fluctuation:

1/8 cent ($6.25 per contract)

Max. Daily Price Fluctuation:

30 cents ($1,500 per contract) above or below previous day's settlement price

Speculative Position Limits:

Spot Month *: 600 contracts
Single Month: 3,000 contracts
All Months: 4,000 contract

Last Trading Day:

1:00 p.m., Central time, on the Friday at least two (2) business days before first notice day for wheat futures

Exercise:

Any time prior to expiration by giving notice to the KCBT Clearing Corp. by 4:00 p.m., Central time, on any trading day up to and including the last trading day

Chicago Board of Trade

CBOT Wheat Futures

Contract Size:

5,000 bushels

Deliverable Grades:

No. 2 Soft Red, No. 2 Hard Red Winter, No. 2 Dark Northern Spring, and No. 2 Northern Spring at par. Substitutions at differentials established by the exchange

Tick Size:

1/4 cent/bu ($12.50/contract)

Price Quote:

Cents and quarter-cents/bu

Contract Months:

Jul, Sep, Dec, Mar, May

Last Trading Day:

The business day prior to the 15th calendar day of the contract month

Last Delivery Day:

Last business day of the delivery month. For contracts with delivery in March 2000 and subsequent months: Seventh business days following the last trading day of the delivery month

Trading Hours:

Open Outcry: 9:30 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Chicago time, Mon-Fri.
Electronic (a/c/eSM): 8:30 p.m. - 6:00 a.m. Chicago time, Sun.-Fri.
Trading in expiring contracts closes at noon on the last trading day

Ticker Symbols:

Open Outcry: W. Electronic (a/c/e): ZW

Daily Price Limit:

30 cents/bu ($1,500/contract) above or below the previous day's settlement price (expandable to 30 cents/bu). No limit in the spot month (limits are lifted two business days before the spot month begins)

 

CBOT Wheat Options

Trading Unit:

One CBOT® Wheat futures contract (of a specified contract month) of 5,000 bu

Tick Size:

1/8 cent/bu ($6.25/contract)

Strike Price Intervals:

5 cents/bu for the first two months and 10 cents/bu for all other months. At the commencement of trading, list 5 strikes above and 5 strikes below the at-the-money strike

Contract Months:

Jul, Sep, Dec, Mar, May; a monthly (serial) option contract is listed when the front month is not a standard option contract. The monthly option contract exercises into the nearby futures contract. For example, an August option exercises into a September futures position

Last Trading Day:

For standard option contracts: The last Friday preceding the first notice day of the corresponding wheat futures contract month by at least two business days.
For serial option contracts: The last Friday which precedes by at least two business days the last business day of the month preceding the option month

Exercise:

The buyer of a futures option may exercise the option on any business day prior to expiration by giving notice to the Board of Trade Clearing Corporation by 6:00 p.m. Chicago time. Option exercise results in an underlying futures market position. Options in-the-money on the last day of trading are automatically exercised

Expiration:

Unexercised options expire at 10:00 a.m. Chicago time on the first Saturday following the last day of trading

Trading Hours:

Open Outcry: 9:30 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Chicago time, Mon-Fri.
Electronic (a/c/eSM): 8:30 p.m. - 6:00 a.m. Chicago time, Sun.-Fri.
Trading in expiring contracts closes at the same time as the underlying futures contract (1:15 p.m.) on the last trading day

Ticker Symbols:

Open Outcry: WY for calls/WZ for puts
Electronic (a/c/e): OZW

Daily Price Limit:

30 cents/bu ($1,500/contract) above or below the previous day's settlement premium. Limits are lifted on the last trading day

 

Hard Red Spring Wheat Futures Contract Specifications

Minneapolis Grain Exchange (MGEX)

TRADING HOURS: 
Open Outcry:  9:30 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Monday - Friday (Central Time)

Electronic:  7:32 p.m. - 6:00 a.m. Sunday - Friday (Central Time)

CONTRACT UNIT: 
5,000 bushels

TICKER SYMBOL: 
Open Outcry:  MW
Electronic:  MWE


DELIVERY MONTHS: 
March, May, July, September and December 

DAILY PRICE LIMITS: 
$.30 per bushel or $1,500 per contract.

MINIMUM PRICE FLUCTUATION: 
1/4 cent per bushel or $12.50 per contract

SPECULATIVE POSITION LIMITS: 
Spot month: 600 contracts
Single month: 3000 contracts
All months: 4000 contracts

DELIVERABLE GRADES: 
No. 2 or better Northern Spring Wheat with a protein content of 13.5% or higher, with 13% protein deliverable at a discount.

DELIVERY POINTS: 
Elevators located in Minneapolis/St. Paul, Red Wing and Duluth/Superior

LAST TRADING DAY: 
The business day preceding the fifteenth calendar day of that contract month

FIRST NOTICE DAY: 
The last business day of the month preceding the delivery month

FIRST DELIVERY DAY: 
The first business day of the delivery month

LAST NOTICE DAY: 
The last business day preceding the last delivery day

LAST DELIVERY DAY: 
The seventh business day following the last trading day

HARD RED SPRING WHEAT OPTIONS CONTRACT SPECIFICATIONS

TRADING HOURS: 
Open Outcry: 9:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Monday - Friday (Central Time)

Electronic:  7:34 p.m. - 6:00 a.m. Sunday - Friday ( Central Time)

UNDERLYING ASSET: 
One Minneapolis Grain Exchange Hard Red Spring Wheat futures contract (5,000 bushels)

TICKER SYMBOL: 
Open Outcry:  WP - puts,   WC - calls

Electronic:  OMW



DELIVERY MONTHS: 
March, May, July, September and December 
MINIMUM PRICE FLUCTUATION: 
1/8 cent per bushel or $6.25 per contract

DAILY PRICE LIMIT: 
$.30 per bushel (same as underlying futures)
SPECULATIVE POSITION: 
3000 futures-equivalent contracts--any one month
4000 futures-equivalent contracts--all months combined

LAST TRADING DAY: 
Trading in an option class shall terminate on the last Friday which preceded by at least two business days, the last business day of the month preceding the options contract month.  If such Friday is not an Exchange business day, then trading shall terminate on the preceding business day.

AUTOMATIC EXERCISE: 
Based upon the settlement price for Spring Wheat futures on the last day of trading for Spring Wheat options, the Clearing House shall automatically exercise all in-the-money options unless notice to cancel automatic exercise is given to the Clearing House.

Contract specifications are subject to change without notice.

 

 

Wheat Futures Facts

 

1 bushel of wheat weighs 60 pounds

 

1 bushel of wheat makes 73 one pound loaves of bread

 

North Dakota State University says that the yield of spring wheat that is planted after April begins to decline by a third of a bushel for each day of delay.

 

To see other grain futures visit corn futures and soybean futures.

 

Also visit Wheat Futures Special Report

 

 

 

For specific option trading information visit future market research.

  SITE MAP

 

EDUCATION | ACCOUNT PLANS | HOME
Copyright © 2004-2012 TKFutures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The information presented in this commodity futures and options site is not investment advice and is for informational purposes only. Investments in commodity futures and options involves a high degree of risk, your investment may fall as well as rise, you may lose all your original investment and you may also have to pay more than the original amount invested. Consult your broker or advisor prior to making any investment decisions. Past or simulated performance is not a guide to future performance. Futures Trading is not suitable for everyone. This site provides information on online commodity trading, online future trading, commodity future online trading, commodity options, futures trading commodity brokerage.