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Futures Curve: Contango and Backwardation Explained
Read futures curve shapes — contango and backwardation — and trade the roll yield, with examples from oil, gold, and VIX futures showing how curve structure drives returns.
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Futures Curve: Contango and Backwardation Explained
A futures curve plots the price of a commodity's contracts across expiration months. Its shape — contango or backwardation — is not a forecast. It is a snapshot of storage costs, interest rates, and supply/demand balance, and it creates a hidden return called roll yield that dominates long-run commodity returns.
Contango (upward sloping)
Later contracts trade higher than near contracts. Normal for storable commodities: the later price equals spot plus storage, insurance, and financing costs.
- Roll yield is negative. A long-only holder sells the expiring contract and buys the next one at a higher price, paying the spread each roll. This is the contango drag.
- Where it bites hardest: VIX futures in calm markets (the VIX futures curve is almost always in contango, eroding long-VIX ETFs like VXX by 5–15% per month in low-vol regimes), and oil in oversupply.
Backwardation (downward sloping)
Near contracts trade higher than later contracts. Signals scarcity — buyers will pay a premium for immediate delivery.
- Roll yield is positive. A long holder rolls from the expensive near contract into the cheaper next one, capturing the spread. Backwardation is why long-only commodity exposure can outperform spot.
- Where it appears: oil in supply shocks, grains after crop failures, and any market where physical demand exceeds immediate supply.
The roll-yield math
If front-month crude is $80 and the next month is $82 (contango, +2.5% monthly), a long holder loses ~2.5% per roll just from the curve, before spot moves. Over a year of rolls that compounds severely. Conversely, in backwardation ($82 front, $80 next), the long holder gains ~2.5% per roll.
How to trade it
- Never hold long-only commodity or VIX ETFs in persistent contango unless you have a strong directional view that exceeds the roll drag. The structure leaks capital monthly.
- Curve-aware entries: for long commodity exposure, prefer periods of backwardation — the roll yield adds to your return. In contango, demand a strong spot catalyst or stand aside.
- Calendar spreads: trade the shape directly. Long front / short back in backwardation (betting the scarcity tightens); long back / short front in contango (betting the curve flattens as supply eases). Defined risk, no spot exposure.
- Roll-down trades: in steep backwardation, buying the front and letting it roll down the curve toward the back captures roll yield if the curve holds.
The key takeaway
Spot price gets the headlines; roll yield drives the returns. A commodity ETF in steep contango can lose money over a year even when spot is flat. Before any commodity or volatility position, look at the curve shape — it tells you whether the structure is paying you or taxing you to hold it.
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