What Are Eminis?
Eminis, sometimes referred to as emini futures are smaller units
of older, "grown-up" futures contracts that have been around for
quite a while. Emini contracts are still relatively new to the
trading scene having arrived at it only a decade ago, while the
"full" contracts have been around for longer than two decades.
There are several futures markets that have developed both full and
emini contracts. The most popular of them is the S&P 500 futures
whose emini contract is often denoted by "ES," its ticker. Another
very popular emini contract, which was launched two years after the
S&P 500 eminis is the NASDAQ 100 emini, frequently referred to by
its ticker "NQ." Yet another one is Russell 2000, known among
traders as "ER2." And while in real life situations these tickers
may differ depending on your broker and even more on the charting
platform you use, there is one thing all these contracts have in
common: they all trade electronically on Globex, while their bigger
"brothers" trade on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME). There is
one well known emini contract that calls the Chicago Board of Trade
(CBOT) its home and that is the Dow Jones emini. It trades
electronically just as the other mentioned above. Its often used
ticker is "YM."
All of these eminis have yet another thing in common: they are
futures contracts for stock indices. While there are now eminis for
other futures in the markets that can be commodities (such as gold,
silver or crude oil) or currencies (e.g. yen, euro), these newcomers
are usually much less liquid then the stock index eminis and so
trading them can be much tougher if not much riskier. If you are
just starting in this field, I suggest that you stick to the more
established emini markets that guarantee better volumes and thus
also better trades due to better liquidity.
Stock index eminis are very often used for day trading which boils
down to speculating in which direction the value (price) of their
underlying index will move. If you expect it to move up, you buy one
or more emini contracts and if the price indeed moves in your favor
you can then unload these contracts for a profit. If you expect it
to move down, you take a short position, selling emini contracts,
and if you predicted the move right, you can brag about the dough
you have made riding the move and exiting it at your target.
Clearly, when your predictions do not pan out, you will end up with
a loss. It is because of this speculation on which way the index
will move that futures often lead the index price.
This price for some indices can be calculated to the second decimal
point, but even in such cases the price of the related emini market
changes by some larger fixed values known as ticks. For ES, 1 tick
corresponds to $12.5 and one point consists of 4 such ticks. For YM,
the tick is the same as the point and both are equal to $5. When
your position moves in your favor by 1 pt, you can make $50 in ES or
$5 in YM per contract, assuming you are able to unload it after the
move is over. Whether this is possible or not depends on your emini
liquidity at the given (exit) price. Now, you should better
understand why it is always a good idea to trade liquid markets.
Simply because these markets allow you to take your profits (or
losses) more easily.
The size of the profits you can make while day trading eminis is a
function of the intraday range of your emini market. In ES, whose
average intraday range is about 10 pts, the profits of 10 pts could
in principle be possible, but in practice, because of the market
unpredictability, most daytraders should be happy with a consistent
daily profit of 2 pts which not infrequently is made only after
several trades. If the commission is included (around $5 per round
turn for the average emini broker), this profit is smaller than $100
per contract and thus in order to increase it most daytraders employ
more than one contract in their trading.
How many contracts you can trade depends primarily on the emini
margin which in turn varies from one broker to another. Some brokers
out there, those who cater specifically to emini traders, set their
daytrading margins as low as $500 per contract, and sometimes even
lower. Most, though, require you to have at least $1000-2000 per
contract in your account before you can trade. It is, however,
highly advisable to have at least twice the margin per contract if
you are to feel comfortable trading. Not all of your trades will be
winners, you need to account for losers as well. Since the losers
will cause drawdowns in your equity, you need to have some cushion
to withstand them. Twice the margin is, in my opinion, the absolute
starting minimum, three times is even better, particularly if you
are a total beginner. In order to be allowed to trade, your equity
must never fall below the margin level per contract. If it does, you
need to reduce the number of contracts you trade and if this is not
possible, you need to stop trading until you raise enough capital
again.
You can find more information about eminis and how to trade them on
the author's website at: http://www.eminimethods.com/emini_basics.html
Waldemar Puszkarz, Ph.D., is a web veteran with 15 years of web
surfing under his belt. By training, he is a theoretical physicist,
but his interests are much broader than science and include trading
financial markets, sports betting, poker, and researching online
business opportunities. He is also an avid book reader and sports
afficionado. Currently he is making his living mostly as a day
trader. He has been in the trading trenches for almost a decade
during which he has traded a variety of financial instruments.
He is the owner and webmaster of Eminimethods.com (http://www.eminimethods.com)
which provides free common sense trading education and simple
trading systems for e-mini and stock markets as well as reviews of
honest online business opportunities in Meet HOBO (http://www.eminimethods.com/HOBO.html)
section of his site.
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