Ultimate Guide to Currency Hedging in South Africa

Futures vs Options: What’s the Difference?

Futures and options are two of the most widely used derivative instruments in financial markets. Both are listed on regulated exchanges such as the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE), and both are used to manage risk or structure exposure.

Although they are often grouped together, futures and options function differently and carry distinct risk characteristics.

Understanding the difference is essential before implementing either within a financial risk management framework.

Like different instruments in an aircraft cockpit, each serves a specific purpose. Choosing the wrong one for the wrong situation introduces unnecessary risk.

What Is a Futures Contract?

A futures contract is a standardised agreement to buy or sell an underlying asset at a predetermined price on a specified future date.

Key characteristics:

  • Standardised contract size
  • Exchange-traded
  • Daily mark-to-market settlement
  • Creates an obligation to transact

If held to expiry, the contract must be settled according to exchange rules.

How Futures Are Used

Futures are commonly used to:

  • Hedge foreign currency exposure
  • Hedge equity portfolios
  • Lock in pricing certainty
  • Implement structured exposure strategies

Because they create a binding obligation, they are often appropriate when exposure is certain.

What Is an Options Contract?

An options contract gives the holder the right — but not the obligation — to buy or sell an underlying asset at a defined price before or at expiry.

There are two types:

  • Call options (right to buy)
  • Put options (right to sell)

Unlike futures, option buyers are not obligated to exercise the contract.

Flexibility comes at a cost: the option premium.

The Core Difference: Obligation vs Right

The structural distinction is critical:

  • Futures = obligation
  • Options = right

This difference affects:

  • Risk profile
  • Cash flow impact
  • Strategic flexibility
  • Cost structure

In disciplined risk management, instrument selection must align to exposure certainty and risk tolerance.

Risk Characteristics Compared

Futures

  • Linear payoff profile
  • Margin required
  • Gains and losses move directly with the underlying
  • No upfront premium

Options

  • Non-linear payoff
  • Premium paid upfront
  • Time value decay
  • Potential for limited downside (for buyers)

Options offer flexibility; futures offer simplicity and cost efficiency.

When Might Futures Be More Appropriate?

  • Exposure is known and fixed
  • Cost certainty is prioritised
  • Budget discipline is essential
  • Premium cost avoidance is preferred

When Might Options Be More Appropriate?

  • Exposure timing is uncertain
  • Downside protection is required
  • Participation in favourable moves is desired
  • Strategic flexibility is important

Governance Matters

Neither instrument is inherently superior.

Suitability depends on:

  • Exposure characteristics
  • Risk tolerance
  • Governance framework
  • Financial objectives

Clarity precedes implementation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are futures riskier than options?

Not necessarily. Risk depends on structure and alignment to exposure.

Do options eliminate risk?

No. They alter the risk profile and introduce premium cost.

Which is better for hedging?

The answer depends entirely on exposure and objectives.

Final Thoughts

Both futures and options are structured instruments.

The appropriate question is not which is more powerful — but which is appropriate.

Disciplined selection maintains control when markets shift.

If you would like to explore structured derivative strategies aligned to your objectives, speak to a specialist.

Speak to a specialist if you would like to discuss how structured derivatives may apply to your situation.