The Complete Guide to Single Stock Futures

The Complete Guide to Single Stock Futures
Author: Russell R. Wasendorf
Publisher: McGraw Hill Professional
Total Pages: 383
Release: 2003-12-22
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0071442987

Single stock futures are quickly becoming among the market's most important trading vehicles, and Russell Wasendorf's Peregrine Financial Group accounts for 20 to 50 percent of daily U.S. trading volume! In The Complete Guide to Single Stock Futures, Wasendorf provides traders with: Analyses of the latest rules and regulations How to apply technical and fundamental analysis • Best exchanges for trading Essential valuation techniques • And much more

Single Stock Futures

Single Stock Futures
Author: Kennedy Mitchell
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2003
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780471267621

Everything you need to know about Single Stock Futures "Single stock futures are an incredibly important new financial instrument for managing risk. Kennedy Mitchell provides an outstanding and easy-to-read explanation of these new products for either an expert futures user or for someone learning about futures markets for the first time." –Peter Borish, Senior Managing Director, OneChicago Although single stock futures may be a relatively new phenomenon in the United States, this instrument has been successfully traded for years in various overseas markets–leaving you, the individual and professional investor, to play catch-up. Exactly what are single stock futures? They are futures contracts, within the futures universe, that have shares of listed public companies as their underlying asset. In Single Stock Futures: An Investor’s Guide, author Kennedy Mitchell introduces you to single stock futures, explains how they function, and demonstrates the various ways they can be traded. This comprehensive guide clearly illustrates how investors–both individual and professional–can utilize single stock futures independently or as an application to add new dimensions to an investment portfolio. Single stock futures have the potential to improve the performance of professionals, novices, investors, and traders. Take this opportunity to find out how with Single Stock Futures: An Investor’s Guide.

Single Stock Futures

Single Stock Futures
Author: Patrick Lafferty
Publisher: McGraw Hill Professional
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2002
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780071390897

Publisher Description

Single Stock Futures

Single Stock Futures
Author: Patrick L. Young
Publisher: Wiley
Total Pages: 166
Release: 2004-02-06
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0470869593

Single Stock Futures are regarded by many as the ultimate derivative. Having finally made their US trading debut in November 2002, the market is set for explosive global growth during 2003 and 2004. Written by experienced traders, this is the first practical guide to this exciting new product as increasingly traded throughout the world.

How to Trade the New Single Stock Futures

How to Trade the New Single Stock Futures
Author: Jacob Bernstein
Publisher: Kaplan
Total Pages: 189
Release: 2003
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780793157815

Introduces Single Stock Futures (SSF) trading strategies, systems, and methods. This book uses language to explain the advantages and disadvantages of trading the new investment product. It provides an introduction to a new era in investing, which is the era of the Single Stock Future.

Single Stock Futures

Single Stock Futures
Author: Steven A. Greenberg
Publisher: Wasendorf & Associates Incorporated
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2001
Genre: Futures
ISBN: 9780934380782

Single Stock Futures and Cross-Border Access for US Investors

Single Stock Futures and Cross-Border Access for US Investors
Author: Eric J. Pan
Publisher:
Total Pages: 49
Release: 2008
Genre:
ISBN:

In the face of growing demand by US investors for access to foreign markets and pressure to restore US capital markets competitiveness, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is gradually negotiating mutual recognition arrangements with select foreign markets - arrangements that will allow foreign exchanges and brokers to operate in the United States without direct SEC oversight. The SEC's willingness to even consider such arrangements marks a significant shift in SEC regulatory strategy because it means that the SEC now accepts that certain foreign regulatory standards are comparable or even superior to US standards - standards that the SEC frequently asserts are the highest in the world.The amount of regulatory energy being expended by the SEC to determine how to agree on comparable standards with foreign regulators is puzzling given the SEC's longstanding antipathy to financial innovation at home and its competitive attitude toward the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. This contradiction is no more apparent than in the case of single stock futures (SSFs).SSFs are futures contracts based on the shares of individual companies. By purchasing SSFs on foreign company shares, investors will be able to gain exposure to the price movements of a potentially unlimited number of foreign securities on a single exchange, under a single regulatory regime and without many of the costs of transacting in the underlying foreign securities themselves. As a result, SSFs address several of the SEC's concerns associated with mutual recognition: trading of SSFs takes place entirely within the United States on US-regulated exchanges and is handled by US-regulated brokers; contracts are governed by US law and approved by US regulators; and the clearance and settlement of the contracts take place within the United States. By eliminating the need for US investors to access foreign exchanges or place orders with foreign brokers, SSF trading makes it less necessary to seek convergence of foreign regulation with US regulation to permit cross-border access for US investors.This paper argues that the SEC should recognize the advantages of SSFs to crossborder investment and relinquish its opposition to SSF trading in the United States.

Single Stock Futures and Stock Options

Single Stock Futures and Stock Options
Author: Cuyler Strong
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2016
Genre:
ISBN:

Are single stock futures and stock options complement or substitute goods? In this study, I test this research question by examining option trading activity (option volume and open interest) surrounding an arguably exogenous introduction of single stock futures. This event study provides a natural experiment that allows us to make causal inferences about how the presence of single stock futures affects the options market. While it is commonly thought that single stock futures and options are substitute goods, my evidence instead suggests that they are complements. While I observe very little change in option volume surrounding the introduction of single stock futures, I find that total open interest increases by 9%, on average, after the introduction of single stock futures. The most plausible explanation is that the introduction of single stock futures makes it easier to hedge the risk of writing on option.