Futures also have time-decay, right?

Quote from Pekelo:


The cause of the premium is the dividens that the stocks pay during the 3 months in the index. Less time left until expiration, less dividens to be collected, thus the linear decay...

That's true for shorts however, in the case of longs the cost of carry reflects the interest rate paid for the margin on the account holding the futures.


Quote from Wikipedia:

The cost of carry is the cost of "carrying" or holding a position. If long the cost of interest paid on a margin account, or if short the cost of paying dividends, or opportunity cost the cost of purchasing a particular security rather than an alternative. For most investments, the cost of carry generally refers to the risk-free interest rate that could be earned by investing currency in a theoretically safe investment vehicle such as a money market account minus any future cash-flows that are expected from holding an equivalent instrument with the same risk (generally expressed in percentage terms and called the convenience yield). Storage costs (generally expressed as a percentage of the spot price) should be added to the cost of carry for physical commodities such as corn, wheat, or gold.

The cost of carry model expresses the forward price (or, as an approximation, the futures price) as a function of the spot price and the cost of carry.

F = S e^{(r+s-c)t}\,

where F is the forward price, S is the spot price, e is the base of the natural logarithms, r is the risk-free interest rate, s is the storage cost, c is the convenience yield, and t is the time to delivery of the forward contract (expressed as a fraction of 1 year).

The same model in currency markets is known as interest rate parity.

More links in wiki...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Futures_contract#Pricing
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rational_pricing#Futures
 
Quote from eusdaiki:

That's true for shorts however, in the case of longs the cost of carry reflects the interest rate paid for the margin on the account holding the futures.

Hm, good info, thanks.

So in short for the OP: yes, there is timedecay and it is unlike for options linear in fashion....
 
Quote from Pekelo:



So in short for the OP: yes, there is timedecay and it is unlike for options linear in fashion....

Theta ( time decay ) is never linear, therefore it is not time decay. Cost of carry can be linear.
 
Quote from wenzi:

Theta ( time decay ) is never linear, therefore it is not time decay. Cost of carry can be linear.

Since when is decay prevented from being linear? If someone has tooth decay, should he be happy if told the rotting is linear, and therefore, cannot be decay?
 
Quote from increasenow:

yes, actual price may decrease but 1,502 vs. 1,495 example will still be $500 to daytrade hold at margin...that is the issue
so not time decay at ALL!!!..options are configured different than futures...your broker will ask for the same amount to hold on margin 1 contract whether it is dec 07 or dec 09...come on guys, back me up here!!!
 
Does anyone here know which broker has account for trading:
FX spot and Future in one account?

Please let me know the website.

Thanks ahead.
 
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