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The Contract Unit
Delivery-type futures contracts stipulate the specifications of
the commodity to be delivered (such as 5,000 bushels of grain,
40,000 pounds of livestock, or 100 troy ounces of gold). Foreign
currency futures provide for delivery of a specified number of
marks, francs, yen, pounds or pesos. U.S. Treasury obligation futures
are in terms of instruments having a stated face value (such as
$100,000 or $1 million) at maturity. Futures contracts that call
for cash settlement rather than delivery are based on a given index
number times a specified dollar multiple. This is the case, for
example, with stock index futures. Whatever the yardstick, it's
important to know precisely what it is you would be buying or selling,
and the quantity you would be buying or selling.
Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.
The risk of loss exists in futures and options trading.
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