The Good Tech Companies - How to Approach the Most Popular Futures, Options and Other Derivatives in Crypto and Legacy Markets
Episode Date: March 7, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/how-to-approach-the-most-popular-futures-options-and-other-derivatives-in-crypto-and-legacy-markets. ... Not understanding the market you trade can create various problems, especially when the position goes against you. Check more stories related to finance at: https://hackernoon.com/c/finance. You can also check exclusive content about #futures-trading, #options-trading, #crypto-derivatives-trading, #derivatives, #what-are-futures, #what-are-options, #what-are-derivatives, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @adambakay. Learn more about this writer by checking @adambakay's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Derivatives can be created from any underlying asset, Stocks, Bonds, Cryptocurrencies, commodities, etc. Derivatives are used in two major ways. Hedging purposes are usually used by larger players. Speculation and arbitrage are used by smaller/retail traders.
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This audio is presented by Hacker Noon, where anyone can learn anything about any technology.
How to approach the most popular futures, options and other derivatives in crypto and legacy markets,
by Adam Bacay.
HASH HASH HASH understanding futures, options and other derivatives
One of the most mind-boggling things I see from people coming into trading is that,
they have no idea what they are trading.
Not understanding the market you trade can create various problems, especially when the position goes against you. This article will cover the
basics of the most popular derivatives you will find out in crypto and legacy markets.
What is a derivative? A derivative is a contract that derives its value from an underlying asset.
First mentions about derivatives date back to ancient Greek, where a derivative contract
was used in trading olives.
More recent history and the rise of the popularity of derivatives can be found in the 1930s where bucket shops used derivatives.
Derivatives can be created from any underlying asset, stocks, bonds, cryptocurrencies, commodities, etc.
The derivatives market is genuinely enormous. According to European Securities Market Authority,
in 2017, estimated the size of the European derivatives market was 660 trillion euros
with 74 million outstanding contracts. There are two main ways how derivatives are traded,
privately over-the-counter, OTC, and exchange-traded derivatives, ETD.
Derivatives are used in two major ways.
Hedging purposes are usually used by larger players. Speculation and arbitrage are usually
used by smaller, retail traders. This simple example of derivative and one of the most popular
ones is the E-Minis and P500 futures contract which has underlying in Standard and Poor's
500 stock index. Futures.
What is a futures contract?
A futures contract is a legal agreement to buy or sell a pre-determined amount of financial
instrument at a specified price at a specified date in the future.
Before futures became the main instrument of speculators, they were and still are used
as hedging instruments.
For example price of coffee futures that expire in March 2023 is currently at approximately $225.
If you have a company that sells coffee and doesn't want to expose themselves to price fluctuations as they think $225 is a fair price for their coffee, they cancel March futures at $225.
This gives them the obligation to deliver a specified amount of coffee futures at the March expiration date.
But no need to worry, you won't be obligated to deliver physical coffee or oil at the expiration date.
As futures become more and more popular for speculations, futures brokerages prevent physical delivery by closing your positions at rollover dates.
Rolover equals when volume moves from expired futures contract to next month.
Each futures contract has its specific code.
The E-mini S&P 500 is the most popular and traded futures contract globally.
If we look at the contract that is traded right now, you will see that it's called
ESH2022.
As letters S, name of the contract, and 2022, year of the expiration, sound relatively straightforward,
the letter H can be quite confusing. The letter H stands for the month of the expiration,
in this case, that is March. Other expiration months go as follow, January,
F, February, G, March, H, April, J, May, K, June, M, July, N, August, Q, September, U, October, V, November, X, December, Z.
Expiration also differs based on the contract.
Most futures contracts like index futures or cryptocurrencies expire quarterly, but
some commodity futures contracts like crude oil expire every month.
Legacy Futures The legacy futures market is huge and spread
across different venues that offer different products worldwide.
The most famous futures exchange is CME Group, offering index futures such as E-Mini S and
P500, Nasdaq, or Dow Jones.
Besides that, you can also trade currency futures or cryptocurrency futures, namely
Bitcoin and ETH.
Other popular venues are CBOT which is the partner organization of the CME group and offer mostly bond futures. Commodities such as gold, siler, natural gas or crude oil are traded
at NYMEX and COMEX. Outside of the US, there are exchanges such as ICE, Eurex, Moex, Osaka Exchange, etc. The products by themselves
differ based on sizes, expiration dates, or trading hours. What always stays the same
is the underlying principle of futures and the fact all these futures expire.
Cryptocurrency Perpetual Futures Perpetual Futures contracts, also called Perpetual Swaps,
became the most popular futures contracts
after BitMEX introduced them in 2016.
Although most people think they were created especially for the cryptocurrency market,
it is not true.
They appeared first in 1992, created by Robert Shiller to bring futures to illiquid assets.
Nowadays, they are an inseparable part of the cryptocurrency market.
There has been an attempt to introduce, deliverable, futures contracts by an exchange called coinflex, but it never really
caught up. Like index futures, cryptocurrencies settle in cash. The only difference is that
perpetual swaps don't have an expiration date. Since these perpetual contracts don't expire,
traders pay or receive a fee in regular hourly windows, this dynamic
is called funding rate.
Funding rates when bitmechs introduced perpetual swaps, they also created a never-ending cycle
of an 8-hour time window where they started charging interest rates based on a premium
discount of swap contract and underlying price of bitcoin.
The funding fee is exchanged directly between buyers and sellers every 8 hours. When the funding rate is positive, long position holders pay short position holders.
When the funding rate is negative, short position holders pay long position holders.
The amount differs based on your position size and the calculation looks like this.
Funding fee equals position value asterisk funding rate IF funding is negative.
The swap was trading below, at the discount, against the spot and shorts have to pay a fee to longs.
If funding is positive, it means that the swap was trading above, at the premium, against the spot and longs have to pay a fee to shorts.
Most of the time, this is directly correlated with the direction the market is heading.
Funding works as a mechanism to incentivize traders to open counter-trend positions and
balance out the order book.
Since we all know retail traders usually tend to be wrong, extremes of funding rates can
be used in building a trading strategy.
Prolonged periods of high funding rates can be signals for markets being overbought, oversold.
Funding rates differ based on the exchange. The most
common is 8-hour funding cycle, but we could also see hourly funding rates in the past
difference between funding rates on different exchanges often provides traders with delta
neutral trading opportunities.
Types of cryptocurrency futures contracts There are two types of futures contracts exchanges
offer nowadays, inverse, coinmarginated, and USD marginated futures.
USD marginated futures are straightforward, you deposit synthetic USD, usually USDT, to
the exchange, and your account balance and equity always stay in USDT.
These futures are more popular as they are offered by exchanges such as Binance, Bybit.
They are newer products as inverse futures were the first one introduced by
BitMEX. Inverse futures keep your balance in the coin instead of dollars. This brings another factor
traders have to deal with, coin fluctuations by itself. The most popular exchanges nowadays
that offer inverse contracts are Bybit and BitMEX. Suppose you are interested to learn more about
bitcoin futures and going into the nitty gritty of the contracts.
In that case, I recommend you to read the documentation on the exchanges or medium posts
from Romano and austerity sucks as they have plenty of articles about crypto derivatives.
Futures mechanics futures are traded on leverage.
Leverage gives you more buying power than your account has.
Every position requires margin from your side, but
the rest is compensated with leverage. Because you are trading with more money you have,
the last thing exchange wants is to pay for your losses. So if positions go against a
certain amount, your trade can get automatically close, liquidated. If the price of bitcoin
is $10,000 and you will buy 1 BTC with 10x leverage, you are only depositing
10% of the position for the trade, $1,000. If the price of bitcoin drops 10% and it is
currently at $9,000, your position gets liquidated. Always be mindful of these things and how
leverage can affect your position.
CFDs What is a CFD? CFD stands for contract for difference, and it is another type of derivative
traders can trade. You will find CFDs offered mainly through Forex brokers as a substitution
for futures contracts. They don't exactly have the best reputation as Forex brokers run different
B-Book models, opening positions against traders, and can essentially widen the spreads of those
CFDs. Of course, if you choose a trusted and regulated broker, you have nothing to worry about.
CFDS vs Futures As I have already mentioned, CFDs and Futures
are very similar. CFDs are also perpetual, therefore they don't
expire. Also, if you will look at Esch 2022 on the CFD platform, you wouldn't find it.
CFDs are always under different names as official names by futures exchanges are trademarked.
So S&P 500 is usually called US 500 instead of ES and so on.
There is only one reason to trade CFDs rather than futures contracts if you are working
with a small balance.
One point on E-mini S&P 500 futures equals $50, on CFDs which is usually only $1 for
the smallest position size.
CFDs are a very niche market that gets a lot of hate often.
They are banned in the US and other parts of the world but offered by many European
regulated brokers.
If you have higher capital, I would always suggest you trade the futures markets, especially with microcontracts available.
Other than that, CFDs can be used to trade thin markets like Nasdaq or DAX.
Wairspread does not play a high role or to build a long-term position with fewer margin requirements compared to futures where you are forced to deploy more margin for holding outside of regular trading hours.
Options. What are options?
Options give a holder right but not an obligation to buy or sell the underlying asset at a specified
price on the specified date.
The buyer of the options pays a premium, seller of the option receives the premium.
To translate this two much more simple terms, let's say you want to buy a house and find
a seller.
You ask the seller if he can issue you an option that expires
in 3 months and gives you the right to buy the house for $500,000. He will also receive
a premium for this option which equals $10,000. If he agrees, you have a right to buy a house
for $500,000 anytime in those 3 months, and you don't need to care about housing market
price fluctuations. Let's say the 3 months passed, and the current
price of the house is only $450,000. In this case, you are obviously not going to buy a
house for 500k, so you will not exercise your right to buy the house. But you lost the $10,000
premium, which was the risk you put in. In another example, let's say that the housing
market skyrocketed, and the current price of that house is now $700,000.
Of course, you are going to exercise your right to buy the house for $500,000, and you
made a profit of $190,000, final price, $700k, strike price, $500k, premium, $10k.
Let's now flip the table and look at the situation from the perspective of the option seller. In the first scenario, the option expired worthless as the price
of the house was below the option price, and the seller ended up in profit of premium he
waspayed to. In the second scenario, the options ended up in the money, and the seller technically
lost $190,000 as he now has to sell a house that has a $700,000 value only for $500,000,
minus the premium. This principle is the same in options trading as well. If you are an
option buyer, your risk is limited only to the premium paid, and your reward is technically
unlimited. If you are an option seller, your reward is limited only to the premium you
receive, and your risk is technically unlimited.
Although this might sound like selling options is the worst idea ever, options are extremely
complex derivatives, and things are not as simple as they might seem.
Options Basic SSO Now that you know how options work, it is a great time to translate this
knowledge into the markets.
Although the example of buying a house was rather simple, if you open an option chain on a platform such as Deribit, it looks like everything but simple.
When you want to open an order on futures, it is usually very straightforward, you either buy or sell.
On options chains, there are much more elements to consider.
To make things as simple as possible, you first need to pick up a strike price.
When choosing a strike price, you usually
hear three terms that are related to the current price of the underlying asset. You might hear
the term, moneyness, of the option, in the money, ITM, option strike prices, in the money,
with the underlying asset. An example of this is you buying January 28th call with 4500
strike price, and Bitcoin is currently trading at 47000.
At the money, ATM, option strike price is the same as the current price of an underlying.
Buying a January 28 call with a 47000 strike price and bitcoin trading at 47000 mean you
are buying, at the money option.
Out the money, OTM, option strike price has no intrinsic value compared to underlying.
Buying a January 28 call with a 50,000 strike price and bitcoin trading at 47,000 mean you
are buying out of the money option. Backslash.Moneyness is the intrinsic value of an option's premium in
the market. If you are wondering what intrinsic value is, every option has two values intrinsic
and extrinsic value.
The intrinsic value of an option is the value of the option at expiration.
In other words, the 45,000 strike price option of underlying that is currently trading at 50,000 has an intrinsic value of 5,000. Extrinsic value is also called a time value.
Extrinsic value depends on time to expiration, volatility, dividends and risk
free interest rate of underlying. If we take a look at two options, one that expires tomorrow
and one that expires a month from now. The option with a longer period of expiration
has a higher extrinsic value because it has a longer time to expiration. Options strategies
when trading options, you will notice the lack of classic, long, and
short, buttons you might be used to from other derivatives.
You trade calls and puts in options, and you can go both long and short on them.
When you are trading options, you can be either bullish or bearish and make a profit when
markets are either not moving or profit on a significant move without being correct in
the direction.
Let's start with simple things.
When you buy a call, you are bullish, your risk is a premium you paid, and your profit
potential is unlimited when the market goes up.
When you buy a put, you are bearish, your risk is a premium you paid, and your profit
potential is unlimited when the market goes down.
When you sell a call, you are bearish, your risk is unlimited, and your maximum gain is
the premium you received.
When you sell a put, you are bullish, your risk is unlimited, and your maximum gain is
the premium you received.
The thing about the option is that you can buy or sell more of them simultaneously to
create multi-leg positions.
If you are still convinced of the direction, you can trade call or put spreads.
This means you are buying an option
and also selling a less expensive option at the same time. This limits your upside, but you also
pay less premium for the option. The last thing you can express with options trading is trading
volatility. Butterflies, straddles, strangles, iron condors and so on are different names for
different options strategies that are used. One of the examples is a straddle. When you buy a straddle, you buy put and call at the same strike
price. Thanks to that, you make money when the market goes either direction from your strike price.
You are basically betting on volatility to come into the market soon. When you sell a straddle,
you sell put and call at the same strike price. It is the opposite of buying straddle and you don't want any significant move to happen, and you make money thanks
to time decay for your option to expire worthlessly, and you collect the premium. There is a ton
of option strategies, and it is way beyond the scope of this article to cover them. If
you want to learn more about options overall, I recommend you pick up option volatility
and pricing by nattenberg or if you prefer more
of a fun meme format kamikaze cash on youtube is an excellent channel for it. Volatility so if you
got this far in the article and thought options are quite confusing, this is where the complicated
part starts. Once again, it is beyond the scope of this article to cover everything in detail,
but I will try to give you just a brief overview of volatility and Greeks.
everything in detail but I will try to give you just a brief overview of volatility and Greeks. So what is volatility? Volatility refers to the
fluctuation in the price. In options it reflects on the volatility of the
underlying asset. When the market is stable it has lower volatility. When the
market experiences large swings in price, volatility is high. The price of the
option has three key factors. Intrinsic value,
time value, volatility. The higher volatility is, the more expensive option is as it has more
potential for movement. There are two types of volatility you will see mentioned in the option
space. Historical volatility Historical, sometimes called Statistical, volatility is a backward
looking indicator that shows the volatility of underlying assets in the past.
This is a simple indicator that looks like any other oscillator.
Implied volatility compared to historical volatility.
Implied volatility is a forward-looking indicator and tells us what volatility we can expect in the future.
It is calculated by using standard deviation from the underlying asset.
Implied volatility increases with large price movements in the underlying, with increasing
implied volatility options also get more expensive as the expected price range increases.
IV, implied volatility, usually increases before macroeconomic releases and decreases shortly
after them.
In the IV, there is also an IV rank that compares the current IV to values over
the past year, and the IV percentile that represents the current IV relative topast values.
Although these two sound similar, the difference is that the IV percentile tells us a percentage
of days over the past year that IV was below the current level. The IV percentile of 80 means that
IV was below the current level 80% of the time in the past year.
Volatility Index, VIX, the CBOE, Chicago Board Options Exchange, created the Volatility Index, VIX,
to measure the 30-day expected volatility of the US stock market.
The VIX is using real-time prices of S and P500 call and put options. As you can see from the VIX chart, volatility tends to be mean reverting, and periods of
low volatility are followed by significant moves and vice versa.
For Bitcoin, we can look at the BVOL index created by BitMEX, which is telling us the
same thing.
Greeks you might have heard about Greeks in the past.
Greeks represent variables that determine options price, which is constantly changing. If you ever traded options, you might have
encountered a situation where option price did not really correlate with underlying price,
Greeks will tell you why. You will usually find Greeks right at the options table. As
you can see, there are first order, second order and third order Greeks. In this article,
we just stick to first order greeks.
Honestly, you don't need to bother much with the second and third order ones.
Delta amount of options price changes for one dollar change in the underlying.
Calls have delta between 0 and 1. Puts have delta between 0 and minus 1.
Gamma closely related to delta. Gamma is the rate of change in Delta for every $1 change in
underlying. Theta also known as time decay, Theta describes how the options value will change closer
to expiration. Vega amount of options price change for 1% change in IVRHOAN option price
sensitivity to interest rate change non-directional trading using derivatives. Now you should have a
decent understanding of derivatives. In the last part of this article, I will take you through some
strategies used in the markets but don't rely on being correct if the underlying is going to goop
or down. Volatility trading thanks to options, you can trade volatility, and I already covered a little
bit in this article. You can either be long volatility or short volatility. If you are long volatility,
you are expecting a significant move to happen in the coming days. If you are short volatility,
it's the opposite. Buying or selling a straddle is the most popular strategy for it. You can
use a chart of VIX or BVOL to see levels where the volatility usually bounces or short after
a large price spike.
Cash and carry cash and carry is an arbitrage type of trade that exploits imbalance between
underlying and derivative, mostly futures with an expiration date.
In practice, this would mean you open a short on a futures contract that trades above the
spot market price.
At the same time, you are also holding the same spot, this would create a delta neutral
position and you would profit on the difference between futures and spot as prices converge at the expiration. Premium in futures is
correlated with overall market conditions. In bullish trends, premiums rise, and in downtrends,
they decrease. Basis trade in cryptocurrencies, there are many ways to generate passive income
by creating a delta neutral position that will generate some returns. These opportunities are usually in the defy space, where volumes tend to be relatively
low, and I don't want to ruin those opportunities for those who take time to seek them. The
opportunities are often found in significant shifts in funding rates compared to the centralized
exchange counterparts. Pairs trade when you are pair trading, you are picking up two highly
correlated assets and if their correlation breaks, you are betting on return in the future.
When correlation breaks, you take long in underperforming asset A and short ITOUT performing
asset B until correlation is back to high numbers. Bitcoin and ETH have a correlation
of around 95 currently, you can see that on January 4th, when correlation
dipped toward 50, you could take long in BTC that was underperforming on a day and short
in ETH that was outperforming. BTC played a nice, catch up, to ETH in both instances
just minutes later.
Conclusion, the world of derivatives is huge, and it can be scary for those that lack an
understanding of simple mechanics.
If you feel extra motivated to read another 900 plus pages about derivatives, I recommend
picking up this book from Hull.
I hope this article gave you at least a general understanding, and you will understand things
you trade now a little bit better.
Warning editors note.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
You should consider your financial situation, investment purposes, and consult with a financial
advisor before making any investment decisions. The Hacker Noon editorial team has only verified
the story for grammatical accuracy and does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy, reliability,
or completeness of the information stated in this article.
accuracy, reliability, or completeness of the information stated in this article. Hashtag Dyor.
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