A detailed guide to gold futures from Cannon Trading, including Gold futures live along with the futures contract of stock futures, metal futures.
Gold holds an almost universal appeal due to its rarity, versatility, and beauty. Many individual investors physically buy gold coins and bullion as a way to avoid the uncertainties of inflation, and the volatility of other asset types. However, physically trading gold can pose many problems for investors, which makes trading in gold futures a much more viable option for individuals who wish to break into this market.
A gold futures contract is a commitment between traders to deliver, or take delivery of, a quantity of gold on a specific date at a specific price. As with other commodities, gold futures options contracts are also available, giving traders the right to deliver, or take delivery of the commodity without the obligation inherent in a futures contract.
An important advantage to trading in gold futures is the fact that because they are traded at centralized exchanges, futures contracts offer more financial leverage, flexibility, and financial integrity as opposed to physically trading this precious metal. Traders only need to put up a percentage of the contract cost, which means that a considerably smaller capital is required compared to a physical trade. Of course, this leverage means that there is the potential for higher risk and higher returns when trading in futures contracts.
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There is a substantial risk of loss in trading commodity futures, options and off-exchange foreign currency products. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Chart of Gold Futures Trading futures updated December 25th, 2023. Click the chart to enlarge. Press ESC to close.
Disclaimer: This material is of opinion only and does not guarantee any profits. These are risky markets and only risk capital should be used. Past performances are not necessarily indicative of future results.
Product Symbol | GC |
Contract Size | 100 troy ounces |
Price Quotation | U.S. Dollars and Cents per troy ounce |
Venue | CME Globex, CME ClearPort, Open Outcry (New York) |
CME Globex Hours (EST) | Sunday – Friday 6:00 p.m. – 5:15 p.m. (5:00 p.m. – 4:15 p.m. Chicago Time/CT) with a 45-minute break each day beginning at 5:15 p.m. (4:15 p.m. CT) |
CME ClearPort Hours (EST) | Sunday – Friday 6:00 p.m. – 5:15 p.m. (5:00 p.m. – 4:15 p.m. Chicago Time/CT) with a 45-minute break each day beginning at 5:15 p.m. (4:15 p.m. CT) |
Open Outcry | Monday – Friday 8:20 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. (7:20 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. CT) |
Minimum Fluctuation | $0.10 per troy ounce |
Termination of Trading | Trading terminates on the third last business day of the delivery month. |
Listed Contracts | Trading is conducted for delivery during the current calendar month; the next two calendar months; any February, April, August, and October falling within a 23-month period; and any June and December falling within a 60-month period beginning with the current month. |
Settlement Type | Physical |
Delivery Period | Delivery may take place on any business day beginning on the first business day of the delivery month or any subsequent business day of the delivery month, but not later than the last business day of the current delivery month. |
Grade and Quality Specifications | Gold delivered under this contract shall assay to a minimum of 995 fineness. |
Exchange Rule | These contracts are listed with, and subject to, the rules and regulations of COMEX. |
Perhaps no other market in the world has the universal appeal of the gold market. For centuries, gold has been coveted for its unique blend of rarity, beauty, and near indestructibility. Nations have embraced gold as a store of wealth and a medium of international exchange; individuals have sought to possess gold as insurance against the day-to-day uncertainties of paper money.
COMEX Division gold futures and options provide an important alternative to traditional means of investing in gold such as bullion, coins, and mining stocks.
Gold futures contracts are also valuable trading tools for commercial producers and users of the metal. Commercial concentrations of gold are found in widely distributed areas: in association with ores of copper and lead, in quartz veins, in the gravel of stream beds, and with pyrites (iron sulfide). Seawater contains astonishing quantities of gold, but its recovery is not economical.
The greatest early surge in gold refining followed the first voyage of Columbus. From 1492 to 1600, Central and South America and the Caribbean islands contributed significant quantities of gold to world commerce. Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Panama, and Hispaniola contributed 61% of the world's newfound gold during the 17th century. In the 18th century, they supplied 80%.
Following the California gold discovery of 1848, North America became the world's major gold supplier; from 1850 to 1875, more gold was discovered than in the previous 350 years. By 1890, the gold fields of Alaska and the Yukon were the principal sources of supply and, shortly afterwards, discoveries in the African Transvaal indicated deposits that exceeded even these. Today, the principal gold producing countries include South Africa, the United States, Australia, Canada, China, Indonesia, and Russia.
The United States first assigned a formal monetary role for gold in 1792, when Congress put the nation's currency on a bimetallic standard, backing it with gold and silver.
During the Great Depression of the 1930s, most nations were forced to sever their currency from gold in an attempt to stabilize their economies.
Gold formally reentered the world's monetary system in 1944, when the Bretton Woods agreement fixed all the world's paper currencies in relation to the U.S. dollar which in turn was tied to gold. The agreement was in force until 1971, when President Nixon effectively cancelled it by ending the convertibility of the dollar into gold.
Today, gold prices float freely in accordance with supply and demand, responding quickly to political and economic events.
Gold is a vital industrial commodity. It is an excellent conductor of electricity, is extremely resistant to corrosion, and is one of the most chemically stable of the elements, making it critically important in electronics and other high-tech applications.
A broad cross-section of companies in the gold industry, from mining companies to fabricators of finished products, can use the COMEX Division gold futures and options contracts to hedge their price risk. Furthermore, gold has traditionally had a role in investment strategies, and gold futures and options can be found in investors' portfolios.
Source: © 2006 New York Mercantile Exchange, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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