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February 4, 2015 18:40
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## Content of the Traders in Financial Futures (TFF) Report | |
## http://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/@commitmentsoftraders/documents/file/tfmexplanatorynotes.pdf | |
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# Dealer/Intermediary | |
# These participants are what are typically described as the "sell side” of the market. Though they | |
# may not predominately sell futures, they do design and sell various financial assets to clients. | |
# They tend to have matched books or offset their risk across markets and clients. Futures | |
# contracts are part of the pricing and balancing of risk associated with the products they sell and | |
# their activities. These include large banks (U.S. and non-U.S.) and dealers in securities, swaps | |
# and other derivatives. | |
# The rest of the market comprises the "buy-side,” which is divided into three separate categories: | |
# | |
# Asset Manager/Institutional. | |
# These are institutional investors, including pension funds, | |
# endowments, insurance companies, mutual funds and those portfolio/investment managers | |
# whose clients are predominantly institutional. | |
# | |
# Leveraged Funds. | |
# These are typically hedge funds and various types of money managers, | |
# including registered commodity trading advisors (CTAs); registered commodity pool operators | |
# (CPOs) or unregistered funds identified by CFTC.3 | |
# The strategies may involve taking outright | |
# positions or arbitrage within and across markets. The traders may be engaged in managing and | |
# conducting proprietary futures trading and trading on behalf of speculative clients. | |
# Other Reportables | |
# Reportable traders that are not placed into one of the first three categories are placed into the | |
# "other reportables” category. The traders in this category mostly are using markets to hedge | |
# business risk, whether that risk is related to foreign exchange, equities or interest rates. This | |
# category includes corporate treasuries, central banks, smaller banks, mortgage originators, credit | |
# unions and any other reportable traders not assigned to the other three categories. | |
# | |
# Spreading | |
# The TFF sets out open interest by long, short, and spreading for all four categories of traders. | |
# "Spreading” is a computed amount equal to offsetting long and short positions held by a trader. | |
# The computed amount of spreading is calculated as the amount of offsetting futures in different | |
# calendar months or offsetting futures and options in the same or different calendar months. Any | |
# residual long or short position is reported in the long or short column. Inter-market spreads are | |
# not considered. | |
# | |
# Numbers of Traders | |
# The sum of the numbers of traders in each separate category typically exceeds the total number | |
# of reportable traders. This results from the fact that "spreading” can be a partial activity, so the | |
# same trader can fall into either the outright "long” or "short” trader count as well as into the | |
# "spreading” count. | |
# In order to preserve the confidentiality of traders, for any given commodity where a specific | |
# category has fewer than four active traders, the size of the relevant positions will be provided but | |
# the trader count will not be (specifically, a "·” will appear for trader counts of fewer than four | |
# traders). | |
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