Back in 1972, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange launched something that would reshape how businesses and traders handle foreign currency risk. Currency futures arrived on the scene, and they've been gaining ground ever since—particularly among companies that need predictable exchange rates and traders who want the structure of exchange-traded products.
If you're sizing up hedging options for cross-border business dealings or considering leveraged bets on currency moves, you'll want to understand how these contracts actually work—and where they diverge from the spot forex market most retail traders know.
Think of currency futures as binding agreements where you commit to exchanging a fixed amount of one currency for another on a specific future date, at a price you lock in today. Everything about these contracts—their size, when they expire, how prices move—stays identical across all market participants because the exchange mandates it.
CME Group runs the show for US currency futures. They list contracts on major pairs (EUR/USD, GBP/USD, JPY/USD) plus emerging-market currencies like the Mexican peso and Brazilian real. Contract sizes stay fixed: one euro contract controls €125,000, while a British pound contract covers £62,500. You can't customize these amounts. The uniformity creates deep liquidity pools since everyone trades the same thing.
Price movements happen in standardized increments called ticks. On the euro futures, one tick re...