Commodities trading, like any other
commodity trading, utilize a principle called "leverage" to expand the
reach of the investor. Much like mechanical leverage in your old physics
class, financial leverage is about multiplying the amount of motion you
get from the energy you put into a transaction.
How it works is like this: Instead of
ponying up $10,000 of your own money to make a commodities trade, you
put up about $500 (1/20th of the amount purchased), and borrow the
remaining $9,500. Let's say that your trade shifts by 10 basis points
between the price you purchased the commodity at and the price you sold
it at; you've made a $10,000 purchase and sold it for $10,100, making a
$100 profit on the transaction. Now, you will have to pay back the
$9,500 you made, plus some interest on the loan. Let's assume that the
interest is 9% per year, and that you made the margin purchase and sale
in a 24-hour period. If you held on to the $9,500 for an entire year,
you would have to pay $855 in interest.
Since you only held on to it for one
day, you pay $855/365=$2.35 in interest on it. Your net profit on your
$500 investment is $100 (the profit from the transaction) minus the
interest on the money you used for leverage ($2.35), or about $97.65,
which is about a 19.5% rate of return in one day. Margin trades are
the fundamental tool of the trade of the day trader in commodities
trading. They're also useful for position traders to magnify their
leverage on a market, particularly if they can get a good rate on the
interest they're paying on their margin run.
Let's say you make a trade that goes
up, but you think it has farther to go; you can make an informed
decision about how far up you're willing to wait, or what signals you're
waiting for, and just pay the daily interest and fee on the money you
borrowed for the margin run. Yes, it'll eat into your profit, but it can
be used to play a bet long rather than frantically watching for every
possible blip in the market. Leverage and margin are useful tools, but
going back to the analogy from physics, they can be dangerous ones. Most
trading houses will have a margin ratio - this is how many of your own
dollars you have to put in for each dollar of leverage you get to exert.
The reason for this is that many trade
choices don't pan out, and a call to pay back the money (a margin call)
can cause an entire network of trades to go under if you default. (As an
historical aside, most of the stock market and commodities and futures
market horror stories in circulation were magnified by margin calls and
leverage gone bad.) If you're serious about commodity trading as your
job, and by serious, we mean willing to work 9 to 10 hours a day on it
at odd hours of the night; leverage and margin are tools you should
know. If you're just dabbling in it, trade commodities markets with a
position trading strategy instead, and keep your margin ratios sane.