Futures Trading – Resources & Products from IBKR

Products section hero

Products

Trade Futures Worldwide with Professional Tools and Platforms

What Are Futures

What Are Futures?

A futures contract is a standardized agreement between a buyer and a seller covering a fixed amount of a specific physical product of an agreed upon quality and quantity. A futures market enables buyers and sellers to reach an agreement on the price of something today for a product or commodity that will be available at a later date.


Due to deep liquidity across exchanges and convenient around-the-clock trading, futures markets are often accessed by investors for both hedging and speculation in and outside of market hours.


Futures contracts were originally designed to enable farmers to lock into prices today for crops that were not yet planted.


For financial futures, the contract covers a specific number of shares or cash value of an agreed upon underlying index or financial asset. Futures generally trade upon a futures exchange, which creates, designs and lists each contract.


The exchange attracts willing buyers and sellers who together ensure liquidity for each product. Integral to any exchange is a clearing house whose role is to guarantee the contract and so eliminate the risk of any market participant from failing to fulfill their obligations.

What Are Futures

Other Aspects of Futures

  • Futures contracts are so-called since they are an agreement to fulfill a specific obligation by a certain point in time, as laid down in the contract. This feature enables buyers and sellers to agree a price today for something that may not yet be made, or may only become available at some later point in time.
  • Futures markets include corn, wheat and soybeans whose prices vary substantially according to the weather during the growing season. Energy futures contracts include crude oil, natural gas and electricity, where power plants can lock-in demand in the coming months at prices displayed today.
  • Equity index futures and government bond futures markets have also become critically engrained in institutional and retail investors’ behavior with good reason. Due to deep liquidity across exchanges and convenient around-the-clock trading, futures markets are often accessed by investors for both hedging and speculation in and outside of market hours.

Benefits of Trading Futures

Futures trading offers investors a seamless way to hedge, speculate and gain exposure to multiple asset classes. Each exchange offers a unique set of products enabling the investor to get precisely the right exposure to specific commodity prices or financial assets.

Around-the-Clock Trading Opportunities

Around-the-Clock
Trading Opportunities

Most exchanges enable investors to trade continuously across different time zones and have extensive trading hours throughout the week. This allows traders and investors the ability to react quickly to unexpected changes in market conditions or global news events outside of regular trading hours.


Direct Market Exposure

Direct Market Exposure

  • Futures as an asset class are important because the underlying commodity or product generally act as a barometer for the health of the macro economy. Prices tend to change based upon rising demand or shrinking supplies of specific goods.
  • Traders use commodity markets tied to goods that are used in manufacturing, building and to power economies. Many traders tend to buy and sell commodity futures aiming to capitalize on advantageous price movements in response to changing news about the global economy.
  • As the global economy picks up steam, commodity prices tend to rise offering speculators direct exposure to a physical commodity without ever having to own it. Through the economic value chain, changes in commodity prices can have immediate impact on stock indices, foreign exchange rates, interest rates and food items. To this extent, futures markets are unrivaled.
Capital Efficiency

Capital Efficiency

  • Futures trading occurs in a margin account. A commodities broker freezes an amount per contract set by the exchange in a client’s account in order to maintain a position in the futures market.
  • As the price of the future fluctuates, changes in the value of the futures contract are credited to or debited from the client’s account. The amount of margin frozen by the broker is used to protect it and the exchange from excessive losses should the price of the contract move adversely.
  • Margin accounts are typically associated with the idea of leverage, which means that a smaller amount of capital maybe used to control a larger underlying investment. The associated leverage in the futures market depends upon how volatile each commodity or financial asset has been over its recent history.
  • Generally speaking, futures contracts may allow leverage of four-to-one, which means that $25,000 in margin will allow control over $100,000 worth of an underlying asset. This makes futures markets capital efficient.

The risk of loss in online trading futures can be substantial. Before trading security futures, read the Security Futures Risk Disclosure Statement.

Smart Investors Never Stop Learning

Level up your market knowledge and learn about investing with over 65 free online courses on Trading, Stocks, Options, Futures, Technical Analysis and much more.

Visit Traders' Academy

Additional Resources on Futures Trading:

IBKR Support Documentation

US Futures Order Handling Rules

Why Trade Futures through Interactive Brokers?

Low Commissions

From USD 0.25 to 0.85 per contract1

View Futures Commissions

Global Market Access

Trade commodity futures globally on 30+ market centers

Access to Global Markets

Advanced Platforms and Tools

  • Utilize powerful tools like Trader Workstation (TWS) and ComboTrader for seamless futures trading.
  • Leverage 90+ order types, algorithms, and tools like the Index Arbitrage Meter for advanced strategies.

Free Resources via IBKR Campus

  • Extensive futures trading courses and educational resources are available on IBKR Campus. Here you can learn about trading, financial markets and Interactive Brokers trading tools.
Futures Products

Find Opportunity Across Markets and Asset Classes

Engage in global futures trading across more than 30 market centers to safeguard against price variations in commodities, currencies, or interest rates. You can also speculate on price changes in the underlying asset, amplify your position, or broaden your investment portfolio.

View Market Centers

Available asset classes include

  • Agriculture
  • Currencies
  • Energy
  • Equity Indices
  • Fixed Income
  • Interest Rates
  • Metals
  • Softs
  • Volatility Indices
Professional trading platforms

Professional Trading Platforms to Help You Succeed

Our award-winning platforms* offer powerful trading features and streamline solutions for all traders. IBKR offers desktop, mobile and online trading platforms with no platform fees.

Find Your Trading Platform

Professional trading platforms
Futures trading tools

Execute Your Futures Strategy with the Help of Powerful Trading Tools

Our trading platforms include powerful futures trading tools to help you implement your unique trading strategy.

Order Types and Algos

Over 90 order types, ranging from limit orders to intricate algorithmic trading, assist you in implementing any trading approach.

ComboTrader

Create proprietary combination order strategies or choose from multiple templates with pre-defined programs to execute futures trades.

SpreadTrader

Seamlessly integrated into Trader Workstation (TWS), SpreadTrader is the single-screen command center for managing futures positions.

Index Arbitrage Meter

Evaluate index arbitrage tactics using our Index Arbitrage Meter, a tool that demonstrates the disparity between futures contracts and their corresponding spot prices.

* For more information see our awards page.

Futures trading at IBKR

Start trading like a professional today!

Already an IBKR Client?

Disclosures

Lower investment costs will increase your overall return on investment, but lower costs do not guarantee that your investment will be profitable.

  1. Plus exchange, regulatory and carrying fees.
  2. See tiered futures commissions here.