When the world gets crazier, basic food staples (e.g., wheat, coffee, soy beans, orange juice) could easily become scarce and expensive. And the same could also go for other essential, but non-food, commodities - such as steel, copper, silver, cotton, timber, rubber, oil and natural gas.
Looking at at the newspaper's business section, I see I can buy commodities futures for most if not all of the above, with delivery dates far off into the future. So I'm thinking, as a hedge, I should buy that stuff now, for delivery later.
Of course, I'd never need to actually exercise any of my futures contracts - however, if orange juice five years from now goes to $10 a tin, then the profitable sale of my frozen orange juice contract will most certainly allow me to purchase my customary share of frozen orange juice from the grocery store.
This plan seems so good and simple, but I fear an economic meltdown could destroy the commodity exchanges where I hold my contracts, thus leaving me holding worthless paper.
If I buy futures for protection against my worst fears, how do I make sure I stay protected almost no matter what happens?






