The following is a list of commodities available for futures trading:
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Agricultural: grains, oils, livestock, wood, textiles, food products
Metallurgical: metals, petroleum, chemicals
Interest Bearing Assets: T-bills, bonds, notes
Stock Indices
Currencies
Other Ways to Trade Commodities
Investors can receive advice in the futures market from Commodity Trading Advisors. These advisors make specific recommendations about buying and selling futures contracts after considering the circumstances of the investor.
Managed futures accounts result from giving power of attorney to trade futures to an account manager. Even though the investor is no longer making trades, he is responsible for margin calls, and gains and losses appear as credits or debits respectively in the managed account.
Commodities pools are analogous to mutual funds in that many investors pool their assets to gain the power to make trades that they could not make individually. Additional benefits include bypassing margin requirements and limiting risk to the amount invested in the pool.
In all of these circumstances, investors must receive risk disclosure documents. The document should be read carefully to determine if futures trading is a viable investment option for the investor. Commodity pools also distribute disclosure documents that address the details, management and risks of the pool arrangement.
Investing with the help of an advisor, manager or pool may have its advantages, but it certainly does not eliminate risk or guarantee any degree of success, and we do not recommend commodities or future trading, with or without expert assistance, for any investors who aren't very experienced."
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