Questions tagged [backwardation]

DEFINITION of 'Backwardation'

A theory developed in respect to the price of a futures contract and the contract's time to expire. Backwardation says that as the contract approaches expiration, the futures contract will trade at a higher price compared to when the contract was further away from expiration. This is said to occur due to the convenience yield being higher than the prevailing risk free rate.

DEFINITION of 'Backwardation'

A theory developed in respect to the price of a futures contract and the contract's time to expire. Backwardation says that as the contract approaches expiration, the futures contract will trade at a higher price compared to when the contract was further away from expiration. This is said to occur due to the convenience yield being higher than the prevailing risk free rate.

When backwardation does occur in a futures market it has been suggested that an individual in the short position would benefit the most by delivering as late as possible.

Backwardation in futures contracts was called "normal backwardation" by economist John Maynard Keynes. This is because he believed that a price movement like the one suggested by backwardation was not random but consistent with the prevailing market conditions.

Backwardation is the opposite of contango.

2 questions
2
votes
1 answer

What is a "spread" in commodities futures?

I was reading an article and it states Tightness has returned to the London Metal Exchange (LME) aluminium spreads. The focus point this time around is the December-January spread (CMALZ4-F5), which flared into $25 per tonne backwardation late last…
Richard
  • 33
  • 1
  • 4
1
vote
2 answers

Is contango a contradiction?

If a market is in contango the futures curve slopes upward as forward prices are higher than today. It is also true that prices must fall as they converge toward the spot price at the time of maturity for a market to be in contango. Is this not a…
rainhamtown
  • 213
  • 1
  • 3
  • 7