Futures get a fresh look: An introduction to Spot-Quoted futures

In This Article:

Spot-Quoted futures (SQFs) offer a new way to access the futures market. Historically, some investors considering a futures position on an underlying index or cryptocurrency have had questions on the all-in cost of a futures contract, due to the difference between the futures’ quoted price and the spot price of the underlying at any point in time. SQFs solve this problem by explicitly showing how the spot price is affected by financing adjustments, as opposed to traditional futures contracts which include this component in the quoted price.

With SQFs, traders can enter a futures position at the current spot price. When closing the position, the final profit or loss might differ slightly due to financing adjustments made during the clearing process.

A few key benefits include:

  • Smaller notionally sized futures contracts compared to other Equity Index and Cryptocurrency futures

  • Longer-dated contracts, removing the need to roll on a monthly or quarterly basis

  • Trading on a CFTC-regulated market  that provides near-24 hour liquidity across major benchmark products

  • Initial margins as low as $100 (subject to change)

How Spot-Quoted futures work

When a trader negotiates an SQF trade, it will be priced at the spot price, or index, level. This means the price that traders see on-screen (CNBC, Yahoo, etc.) is the index level that will be quoted – and ultimately traded – in Spot-Quoted futures.

Given the product is a futures contract, a total financing component is required. In SQFs, this is known as the total financing adjustment.

How to price a Spot-Quoted futures contract

The combination of these two components becomes the cleared futures price:

Spot-equivalent Price + Total Financing Adjustment = Cleared SQF Position Price

It's important to note:

  • If a trader holds their position overnight (or more than one clearing cycle), the change in the total financing adjustment will impact profit and loss (PnL)

  • For traders who trade in and out of their position within a single trading day, the difference in spot prices executed will be the total PnL

Trading examples

In the following  examples, we look at two scenarios: 1) where a trader enters and exits their position within a single day and 2) where the trader holds their position overnight.

Example 1

Participants will trade in and out of their Spot-Quoted S&P 500 futures (QSPX) position in the same trading day.

Activity 1) Trader A buys 1 QSPX at 5840.00 (spot-equivalent price) at 9:30 a.m. CT on Jan. 14,  2025
Activity 2) Trader A sells 1 QSPX at 5855.00 (spot-equivalent price) at 12:00 p.m. CT on Jan. 14, 2025