Chapter 1

What Is a Commodity

While this book covers a multitude of issues, it is designed to answer one central question: What is a commodity? This may seem like a difficult question to some people, but it's really quite simple. If you can touch it, see it, feel it, or eat it, it's a commodity. If you are driving through Texas and you see an oil field, there's a commodity being pumped out: oil. If you are cruising through miles of wheat fields in Kansas, then you are passing an agricultural commodity: wheat. If you are vacationing in Florida, you're sure to see fields filled with orange groves; once again, you are looking at a commodity: orange juice. Even when you find yourself in a jewelry store eyeing a beautiful gold chain, you are checking out a traded commodity: gold. Commodities are all around you, but not all commodities are traded.

Smart Trader Tip images

The process of trading a commodity is done typically in a trading pit located at one of the major commodity exchanges or by computerized trading, one of the predominant means to trade commodities today. A trade occurs when a buyer of the commodity and the seller of the commodity agree on a price for that commodity based upon a standardized unit for the commodity being bought or sold.

Lumber, wheat, crude oil, heating oil, natural gas, corn, copper, gold, sugar, and coffee are just a few of the commodities you may come across ...

Get Getting Started in Commodities now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.