Cash Price

Cash Price

The cash price is the actual amount of money that is exchanged when commodities are bought and sold in the real world. For example, a one-month futures contract for oil, which will expire next month, could have a very different price than the cash price for oil (which is what oil costs to purchase today). In other words, when a futures contract expires, the price of the futures contract at expiry is nearly the same as the cash spot price. The price of a commodity with a futures contract can be very different from the cash price of the same commodity on any given day. If prices are notably different, there is an arbitrage opportunity between the futures price and the cash price at expiration.

What Is the Cash Price?

The cash price is the actual amount of money that is exchanged when commodities are bought and sold in the real world. The cash price might include other costs, such as fees incurred for transportation or storage of a commodity.

Rather than buying and selling actual commodities, investors often trade commodity futures to profit from anticipated changes in commodity prices. However, commodity cash prices are actually separate from futures prices. The futures contracts reflect anticipated cash prices at a later time.

Understanding Cash Prices

Cash prices are published by a number of different financial information service providers and are not the same as the futures price. These prices reflect buying and selling of a variety of actual or "physical" commodities in the marketplace. On the other hand, the futures prices come from prices on the futures exchanges and reflect what the commodity might be worth in later months.

The cash price is the amount paid for commodities on the spot market, where large manufacturers commonly purchase the commodities they need for production in their factories. Commodities are physical products that are generally indistinguishable, no matter which company brings them to the marketplace. Examples include corn, crude oil, gasoline, gold, cotton, beef, and sugar.

When paying cash prices, manufacturers are not speculating on the price of the commodities they need. Speculation is more common in the futures rather than the cash market. Instead, manufacturing companies are physically purchasing the raw materials they need for their manufacturing activities.

Cash Price vs. Futures Price

The price of a commodity with a futures contract can be very different from the cash price of the same commodity on any given day. For example, a one-month futures contract for oil, which will expire next month, could have a very different price than the cash price for oil (which is what oil costs to purchase today).

The cash price is also the price at which every futures contract expires. In other words, when a futures contract expires, the price of the futures contract at expiry is nearly the same as the cash spot price. The fact that the futures price tends toward the cash price into the expiration or delivery date is known as convergence. If prices are notably different, there is an arbitrage opportunity between the futures price and the cash price at expiration.

Related terms:

Arbitrage

Arbitrage is the simultaneous purchase and sale of the same asset in different markets in order to profit from a difference in its price. read more

Commodity Market

A commodity market is a physical or virtual marketplace for buying, selling, and trading commodities. Discover how investors profit from the commodity market.  read more

Commodity

A commodity is a basic good used in commerce that is interchangeable with other goods of the same type. read more

Futures

Futures are financial contracts obligating the buyer to purchase an asset or the seller to sell an asset at a predetermined future date and price. read more

Futures Exchange

A futures exchange is a central marketplace, physical or electronic, where futures contracts and options on futures contracts are traded.  read more

Physical Delivery Defined

Physical delivery is a term in an options or futures contract which requires the actual underlying asset to be delivered on a specified delivery date. read more

Short the Basis

Short the basis refers to the simultaneous buying of a futures contract and selling the underlying asset to hedge against future price appreciation. read more

Spot Market

The spot market is where financial instruments, such as commodities, currencies, and securities, are traded for immediate delivery.  read more

Wide Basis

A wide basis is a condition found in the futures market whereby the spot price of a commodity is relatively far from its futures price. read more