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  2. IMM dates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IMM_dates

    The IMM dates are the four quarterly dates of each year which certain money market and Foreign Exchange futures contracts and option contracts use as their scheduled maturity date or termination date. The dates are the third Wednesday of March, June, September and December (i.e., between the 15th and 21st, whichever such day is a Wednesday).

  3. What Traders Need To Know About Futures Rollover

    www.aol.com/news/traders-know-futures-rollover...

    One of the biggest periodic trading catalysts is futures rollover, which can create extreme volatility on or around futures expiration dates. Benzinga PreMarket Prep co-host Joel Elconin recently ...

  4. Calendar spread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calendar_spread

    If gold for August delivery is bid $1601.20 asking $1601.30, and gold for October delivery is bid $1603.20 asking $1603.30, then the calendar spread would be bid -$2.10 asking -$1.90 for August–October. Calendar spreads or switches are most often used in the futures markets to 'roll over' a position for delivery from one month into another month.

  5. Foreign exchange date conventions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_exchange_date...

    For a trade with a time to expiry of v days, the expiry date is the day v days ahead of the horizon date (unless it is a weekend or 1 January, in which case the date is rolled forward to a weekday) and for a trade with time to expiry of x weeks, the expiry date is the day 7x days ahead of the horizon date (with the same conditions as above).

  6. Triple witching hour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triple_witching_hour

    The simultaneous expirations generally increases the trading volume of options, futures, and their underlying stocks, occasionally increasing the volatility of prices of related securities. On those same days single-stock futures also expire, so that the final hour is sometimes referred to as the quadruple witching hour.

  7. Futures contract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Futures_contract

    While futures and forward contracts are both contracts to deliver an asset on a future date at a prearranged price, they are different in two main respects: Futures are exchange-traded, while forwards are traded over-the-counter. Thus futures are standardized and face an exchange, while forwards are customized and face a non-exchange counterparty.

  8. Delivery month - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delivery_month

    For futures contracts specifying physical delivery, the delivery month is the month in which the seller must deliver, and the buyer must accept and pay for, the underlying. [1] For contracts specifying cash settlement, the delivery month is the month of a final mark-to-market. The exact dates of acceptable delivery vary considerably and will be ...

  9. Spread trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spread_trade

    A common use of the calendar spread is to "roll over" an expiring position into the future. When a futures contract expires, its seller is nominally obliged to physically deliver some quantity of the underlying commodity to the purchaser. In practice, this is almost never done; it is far more convenient for both buyers and sellers to settle the ...