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The Role Of A CTA, C ...
The Role Of A CTA, Commodity Trading Advisor
Submitted by Dwayne on 2008-09-06 and viewed 18 times.
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Today's Commodity Trading Advisor is no longer to be thought of only as a Portfolio Manager. His role has expanded considerably as investment products become more complex.
Commodity Trading Advisor, Genuine Trading Solutions, a registered CTA
with the CFTC, says the responsibility today of a CTA is a constantly evolving
role in today's market place. Once upon a time a Commodity Trading Advisor was content to be known as
a Portfolio Manager trading commodities and futures for a managed futures
fund. There is no question today's
investor has become more sophisticated.
In response, today's selection of investment products has become ever
more complex and varied, the need for the CTA to understand the uses and
management of these products becomes even more acute. So what exactly is the role of today's Commodity Trading Advisor. Certainly trading of derivative products for
a managed futures fund continues to be as important as before. A CTA has also become more involved with
derivative analytics. This role is
essentially focused upon becoming an analyst to structure and analyze the more
multi-faceted requirements demanded by hedge funds, pension funds and
structured products. The use of derivative analytics to manage the adverse risk of an equity
or bond portfolio brought about by adverse market conditions is critical in
preserving asset growth. The uses of
hedging to prevent volatility has long been understood by the largest
institutions but is now available to the smaller sized company and to the
individual investor. No doubt as
products continue to evolve so too will the CTA evolve to meet the need of
today's professional money manager. Derivative products are no longer limited to exchange traded commodities
futures and options. There continues to
be an ever expanding list of over-the-counter derivative products. These are SWAPS. SWAPS and privately transacted products transacted without the
use of a recognized exchange. The
difficulty is the buyer and seller must find each other to undertake such an
arrangement, not always easy. The
second problem is no liquidity. There
is no one to sell this too should one of the parties wish to terminate the
transaction prior to the agreed upon date. Article Source: http://www.contentdiffusion.com/ |
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| About the Author | Dwayne Strocen is a registered Commodity Trading Advisor specializing in analyzing and hedging Market and Operational Risk using exchange traded and OTC derivatives. Website: http://www.genuineCTA.com. View more detailed information about Commodity Trading Advisor and understanding How to Trade Commodities. |
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