--- type: "Learn" title: "Exchange of Futures for Physical (EFP) Guide | TTM Basics" locale: "zh-HK" url: "https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/learn/exchange-of-futures-for-physical--102072.md" parent: "https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/learn.md" datetime: "2026-03-26T11:12:56.725Z" locales: - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/learn/exchange-of-futures-for-physical--102072.md) - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/learn/exchange-of-futures-for-physical--102072.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/learn/exchange-of-futures-for-physical--102072.md) --- # Exchange of Futures for Physical (EFP) Guide | TTM Basics
Exchange of Futures for Physical (EFP) is a market transaction mechanism that allows two parties to simultaneously exchange a futures contract for a physical commodity (or tangible asset) in a single transaction. EFP transactions enable parties to hedge or settle between the spot market and the futures market. EFP transactions are common in commodity markets, particularly in energy, metals, and agricultural products.
Key characteristics include:
Example application of Exchange of Futures for Physical: Suppose a grain producer and a food processing company agree to an EFP transaction. The producer wants to hedge price risk, so they sell grain futures contracts and buy physical grain from the food processing company. The food processing company, on the other hand, wants to secure supply, so they sell physical grain and buy futures contracts. Through this EFP transaction, both parties achieve risk hedging and physical delivery.
## Core Description - Exchange Of Futures For Physical (EFP) is a negotiated two-leg deal that swaps a futures position and a matching physical commodity position at the same time. - It is mainly used to connect futures hedges with real-world delivery needs by agreeing a futures price and an EFP basis that reflects logistics and quality. - EFP can improve hedge alignment, but it adds bilateral physical settlement, documentation, and operational risks that must be managed. * * * ## Definition and Background ### What is Exchange Of Futures For Physical (EFP)? Exchange Of Futures For Physical means two counterparties agree one coordinated transaction with two linked legs: a **futures leg** (exchange-cleared) and a **physical leg** (a commercial spot or forward trade, or a title transfer). One party reduces or transfers futures exposure while receiving physical supply. The other delivers physical while taking the futures exposure. ### Why EFP exists Standard futures delivery is rule-based and standardized, but physical commodity flows are not. Grade, loading window, port or warehouse, pipeline nomination, and payment terms often differ from the futures contract specification. Exchange Of Futures For Physical developed as a practical bridge: keep the benchmark futures price, and negotiate the physical details that matter for real supply chains. ### Where it is most common EFP is widely used in **energy, metals, and agriculture** because deliverable is more than a number on a screen. It involves certificates, warehouses, inspection, transport, and scheduling. The more complex the logistics and the more important local differentials are, the more useful an Exchange Of Futures For Physical structure can be. * * * ## Calculation Methods and Applications ### The pricing idea: Futures plus or minus EFP basis Most Exchange Of Futures For Physical negotiations start from a benchmark futures month and then agree an **EFP basis** (premium or discount). A simplified relationship is: - **Physical Price (effective)** = **Futures Price** ± **EFP basis** The basis is not a hidden edge. It typically reflects measurable commercial drivers such as: - location differential (port, warehouse, or region) - quality premium or discount (grade, brand, sulfur content, moisture, etc.) - timing and carry (storage, financing, availability) - freight, handling, insurance, and terminal fees ### Matching the two legs (economic equivalence) A key calculation is ensuring the physical volume is economically equivalent to the futures exposure: - Futures notional = (contract size) × (number of lots) - Physical notional should closely match in the same unit system (barrels, tons, or bushels), allowing only pre-agreed tolerances. If quantities do not match, an Exchange Of Futures For Physical can leave residual price risk (an unintended mini bet on spot, futures, or basis). ### How different industries apply EFP ### Energy Refiners and producers use Exchange Of Futures For Physical to align benchmark futures (such as Brent-related or WTI-related exposure) with a specific cargo grade and loading window. For example, a refiner that is long crude futures may prefer to EFP into a prompt cargo rather than rely on standardized delivery channels. This can reduce scheduling uncertainty and limit basis surprises driven by terminal constraints. ### Metals In base metals, the physical leg may be warehouse title that meets specific brand and location rules. Exchange Of Futures For Physical can convert futures exposure into metal that is usable for manufacturing or financing. It is especially relevant when warehouse queues, eligible brands, or regional premiums are important to the all-in cost. ### Agriculture Grain elevators and processors use Exchange Of Futures For Physical to connect cash grain pricing (with local basis and quality discounts) to standardized futures hedges. It can help lock merchandising margins and coordinate shipment windows while keeping a clear benchmark reference. * * * ## Comparison, Advantages, and Common Misconceptions ### EFP vs similar structures (quick comparison) Structure What you swap Cleared? Physical involved? Typical goal Exchange Of Futures For Physical (EFP) Futures ↔ Physical or title Futures: yes Yes Convert hedge into real supply (or monetize inventory) Exchange for Swap (EFS) Futures ↔ OTC swap Futures: yes No Keep futures liquidity but receive swap cash flows Block trade Large futures or options trade Yes No Reduce market impact for size execution OTC forward Forward contract No (usually) Often Fix a future purchase or sale without a futures position Standard futures delivery Exchange delivery process Yes Yes Settle expiring futures via contract rules ### Advantages of Exchange Of Futures For Physical - **Hedging efficiency:** One coordinated package can reduce slippage versus executing physical and futures separately. - **Customization:** Delivery point, grade, timing, and documentation can better match the commercial need than standardized delivery. - **Lower market impact:** Privately negotiated execution may reduce signaling risk for large hedges. - **Inventory and delivery alignment:** Helps convert paper exposure into operationally usable supply or title. ### Disadvantages and risk areas - **Counterparty and credit risk:** The physical leg is bilateral and may not benefit from clearinghouse protections. - **Operational complexity:** Inspection, warehouse receipts, shipping documents, nomination deadlines, and title transfer can fail even if the hedge is correct. - **Compliance and reporting risk:** Exchanges typically require timely reporting and proof of a bona fide physical transaction. - **Basis risk remains:** EFP can reduce some uncertainty, but a poorly negotiated basis can still damage outcomes. ### Common misconceptions (and the correct view) ### "EFP is just physical delivery" No. Exchange Of Futures For Physical is a negotiated swap that can support physical settlement goals, but it is not the standardized delivery procedure of the futures contract. ### "EFP guarantees a better price" No. The potential benefit is tighter alignment of hedging and logistics. The final economics depend on whether the EFP basis fairly reflects current physical market conditions and costs. ### "Once agreed, EFP eliminates risk" No. Futures price risk may be reduced, but basis, documentation, operational performance, and counterparty behavior still matter. ### "Physical leg always means immediate shipment" Not necessarily. In many commodities, physical can mean an eligible title transfer (for example, warehouse warrants or receipts) with later load-out, as long as it is genuine and documentable. * * * ## Practical Guide ### When Exchange Of Futures For Physical is commonly considered Exchange Of Futures For Physical is typically considered when a firm has **both**: - a real physical need (buy, sell, or transfer inventory), and - an existing or desired futures position that should be transferred or offset without breaking the hedge logic. It is often discussed around operational deadlines (shipping windows and storage constraints) and around futures calendar points (such as approaching delivery periods) when aligning paper and physical becomes more urgent. ### A practical checklist for disciplined EFP thinking (not step-by-step trading) - Confirm the **commercial objective**: secure supply, monetize inventory, or realign a hedge book. - Validate **economic equivalence**: volumes, units, tolerances, and timing alignment between the physical leg and the futures month. - Decompose the **EFP basis**: location, quality, freight, storage, financing, and handling. Document what is included. - Stress-test operational feasibility: inspection, documentation, warehouse or terminal capacity, and deadlines. - Confirm governance: eligibility, reporting, internal approvals, and audit trail for an Exchange Of Futures For Physical. ### Case study (illustrative, fictional; not investment advice) A mid-sized European refinery plans to run a specific crude grade next month. It already holds a long position in a benchmark crude futures contract as a price hedge. A trading counterparty owns prompt physical barrels that match the refinery's required sulfur content and loading window. They negotiate an Exchange Of Futures For Physical: - The **futures leg** transfers the refinery's futures exposure to the counterparty, so the refinery no longer holds the futures position. - The **physical leg** transfers title to a cargo scheduled for the refinery's needed load dates. - The agreed **EFP basis** reflects freight to the relevant port, the grade differential versus the benchmark, and terminal handling costs. Outcome: The refinery converts paper barrels into operational barrels with a benchmark-linked effective price. The main remaining risks are operational (delays, quality disputes, and demurrage) and counterparty performance on the physical leg. These risks should be addressed through the physical sales contract terms and internal controls. ### Notes for individual investors Many retail investors access futures through brokers and may not be eligible for physical settlement workflows or Exchange Of Futures For Physical arrangements. If you use a broker such as Longbridge ( 长桥证券 ) for futures exposure, focus on understanding contract specifications, delivery-related deadlines, and whether your product setup is cash-settled or delivery-capable before holding positions into delivery-sensitive periods. Futures and commodity derivatives involve material risks, including the risk of loss. * * * ## Resources for Learning and Improvement ### Exchange rulebooks and delivery procedures Start with the exchange's contract specification, delivery points, eligible grades, notice timelines, and documentation requirements. This is the foundation for understanding what equivalent physical means in an Exchange Of Futures For Physical context. ### Clearing and margin materials Clearinghouse calendars and margin notes help explain why liquidity and costs can change near delivery periods, and how futures positions are managed when an EFP is reported and accepted. ### Regulators and enforcement examples Regulatory publications and enforcement actions can clarify boundaries around recordkeeping, reporting, and conduct. They are useful for understanding why an Exchange Of Futures For Physical must be a bona fide transaction rather than a disguised position transfer. ### Industry conventions for physical contracts Incoterms references, standard commodity sale agreements, and inspection or assay standards help investors and operators understand where real-world costs, and disputes, come from. These factors often drive EFP basis levels. ### Broker education Broker learning centers may explain delivery risk disclosures and operational timelines. If reading broker materials, use them to understand responsibilities and constraints rather than as trading instructions. Longbridge ( 长桥证券 ) educational content can be a starting point for platform-specific rules. * * * ## FAQs ### **What problem does Exchange Of Futures For Physical solve?** It connects a futures hedge to a real physical purchase or sale by swapping the futures position and physical commodity exposure in one coordinated deal. This can reduce mismatch between standardized futures delivery terms and actual logistics needs. ### **Is an EFP always off-exchange?** The negotiation is often bilateral, but the futures leg is typically reported and cleared under exchange rules. The physical leg remains a commercial contract between the parties. ### **What is basis in an Exchange Of Futures For Physical?** It is the premium or discount applied to the chosen futures reference to reflect physical specifics such as location, grade, timing, freight, storage, financing, and handling. Basis can materially affect outcomes and should be assessed against current physical market conditions. ### **Does Exchange Of Futures For Physical remove delivery risk?** It can reduce reliance on standardized exchange delivery, but it does not remove operational risk. The physical leg still requires correct documentation, quality compliance, and on-time performance. ### **Which commodities use EFP most often?** Energy, metals, and agricultural products commonly use Exchange Of Futures For Physical because physical constraints such as storage, shipping, warehouse eligibility, and quality differentials are central to pricing and fulfillment. ### **What is the biggest mistake beginners make when reading about EFP?** Treating EFP as a guaranteed price improvement or as just delivery. The key is whether the EFP basis and the physical contract terms match the hedge objective and are operationally workable. * * * ## Conclusion Exchange Of Futures For Physical (EFP) is a pricing and delivery bridge between futures markets and real commodities. By combining a futures transfer with a physical transaction, it can tighten hedge alignment, reduce execution friction, and tailor terms to real logistics. The trade-off is added complexity. Basis negotiation, documentation discipline, counterparty management, and operational performance can be as important as the benchmark futures price. > 支持的語言: [English](https://longbridge.com/en/learn/exchange-of-futures-for-physical--102072.md) | [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/learn/exchange-of-futures-for-physical--102072.md)