A Derivative is a financial contract between two or more parties whose value is derived from an Underlying Asset or group of assets. Think of it less as a tangible thing you own and more as a side-bet on the future price of something else. This “something else” can be almost anything with a fluctuating value: a Stock, a Bond, a barrel of oil (Commodity), the exchange rate between the Euro and the Dollar (Foreign Exchange), or even the direction of a major market index like the S&P 500. Instead of buying the asset itself, you're buying a contract that pays off based on how that asset's price behaves. The world of derivatives is vast and varied, but the most common types are Futures Contract, Forward Contract, Option, and Swap. While they can be powerful tools for managing risk, they are also famous for their complexity and potential for explosive losses, making them a subject of great caution for many investors.
Imagine a farmer who grows wheat and a baker who needs wheat to make bread. The farmer is worried the price of wheat will fall by harvest time, crushing his profits. The baker is worried the price of wheat will skyrocket, crushing her profits. To solve this, they make a deal. They sign a contract today agreeing that in six months, the farmer will sell the baker 1,000 bushels of wheat for a fixed price of €5 per bushel, regardless of the market price at that time. This contract is a derivative! Its value is derived from the price of wheat. They have used it for Hedging—a fancy word for managing risk. The farmer is protected from falling prices, and the baker is protected from rising prices. They've both sacrificed the chance for a windfall gain in exchange for certainty. This simple agreement is the core idea behind many complex derivatives traded today.
While the farmer-baker deal is a simple example, derivatives come in several standardized forms. Here are the big ones:
Both are contracts that obligate the buyer to purchase an asset and the seller to sell that asset at a specific price on a future date. They are the direct descendants of our farmer-baker deal.
An Option is a contract that gives its owner the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell an underlying asset at a set price on or before a specific date. This is a crucial difference from futures—you have a choice! For this privilege, the buyer pays a fee called a Premium.
If you don't use the option by its expiration date, it simply expires worthless, and the only money you've lost is the premium you paid.
Swap contracts are a bit more exotic. In essence, they are agreements where two parties agree to “swap” cash flows or liabilities from two different financial instruments. The most common type is an Interest Rate Swap. For example, a company with a variable-rate loan might worry about interest rates rising. It could “swap” its variable payment with another company that has a fixed-rate loan and prefers a variable rate. They don't swap the loans themselves, just the interest payment streams.
Derivatives serve three main purposes, ranging from the prudent to the wildly speculative.
The legendary investor Warren Buffett famously called derivatives “financial weapons of mass destruction.” This sentiment captures the deep skepticism that most Value Investing practitioners have towards these instruments. For the ordinary investor, the reasons to be wary are clear:
While derivatives have legitimate uses in corporate finance, for most individual investors, they are a distraction from the real task: finding great companies at fair prices. It's usually better to leave the financial WMDs to the experts and focus on what you can understand.