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Contango vs. Normal Backwardation: What's the Difference?

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David R. Harper
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David Harper is the CEO and founder of Bionic Turtle. He is also a published author with a popular YouTube channel on expert finance topics.
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Updated November 24, 2024
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Gordon Scott
Reviewed by Gordon Scott
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Gordon Scott has been an active investor and technical analyst or 20+ years. He is a Chartered Market Technician (CMT).

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Contango vs. Normal Backwardation: An Overview

The shape of the futures curve is important to commodity hedgers and speculators. Both care about whether commodity futures markets are contango markets or normal backwardation markets. However, these two curves are often confused for one another.

Contango and normal backwardation refer to the pattern of prices over time, specifically if the price of the contract is rising or falling.

In 1993, the German company Metallgesellschaft famously lost more than 1ドル billion, mostly because management deployed a hedging system that profited from normal backwardation markets but did not anticipate a shift to contango markets. In this article, we'll lay out the differences between contango and backwardation and show you how to avoid serious losses.

Key Takeaways

  • Contango is when the futures price is above the expected future spot price. A contango market is often confused with a normal futures curve.
  • Normal backwardation is when the futures price is below the expected future spot price. A normal backwardation market is often confused with an inverted futures curve.
  • A futures market is normal if futures prices are higher at longer maturities and inverted if futures prices are lower at distant maturities.

Contango

A contango market is often confused with a normal futures curve.

Normal Backwardation

A normal backwardation market—sometimes called simply backwardation—is confused with an inverted futures curve.

Special Considerations

To better understand the difference between the two, start with a static picture of a futures curve. A static picture of the futures curve plots futures prices (y-axis) against contract maturities (i.e., terms to maturity). This is analogous to a plot of the term structure of interest rates. We are looking at prices for many different maturities as they extend into the horizon. The chart below plots a normal market in green and an inverted market in red:

Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2020

In the chart above, the spot price is 60ドル. In the normal (green line) market, a one-year futures contract is priced at 90ドル. Therefore, if you take a long position in the one-year contract, you promise to purchase one contract for 90ドル in one year. Your long position is not an option in the future, it is an obligation in the future.

The red line in Figure 1, on the other hand, depicts an inverted market. In an inverted market, the futures price for faraway deliveries is less than the spot price. Why would a futures curve invert? A few fundamental factors such as the cost to carry a physical asset or finance a financial asset will inform the supply/demand for the commodity. This supply/demand interplay ultimately determines the shape of the futures curve.

If we really want to be precise, we could say fundamentals like storage cost, financing the cost—the cost of carry—and convenience yield inform supply and demand. Supply meets demand where market participants are willing to agree about the expected future spot price. Their consensus view sets the futures price. And that's why a futures price changes over time: Market participants update their views about the future expected spot price.

The traditional crude oil futures curve, for example, is typically humped: it is normal in the short-term but gives way to an inverted market for longer maturities.

In the case of a physical asset, there may be some benefit to owning the asset called the convenience yield. In the case of a financial asset, ownership may confer a dividend to the owner. At times it may be profitable to hold the tangible commodity rather than holding derivative products in the asset.

Key Differences

A futures market is normal if futures prices are higher at longer maturities and inverted if futures prices are lower at distant maturities.

This is where the concept gets a little tricky, so we'll start with two key ideas:

  • As we approach contract maturity—we might be long or short the futures contract—the futures price must move or converge toward the spot price. The difference between the two is the basis. That's because, on the maturity date, the futures price must equal the spot price. If they don't converge on maturity, anybody could make free money with an easy arbitrage.
  • The most rational futures price is the expected future spot price. For example, using your crystal ball, if you and your counterparty could both foresee the spot price in crude oil would be 80ドル in one year, you would rationally settle on an 80ドル futures price. Anything above or below would represent a loss for one of the trading contract pairs.

Now we can define contango and normal backwardation. The difference is normal/inverted refers to the shape of the curve as we take a snapshot in time.

Suppose we entered into a December 2023 futures contract today for 100ドル. Now go forward for one month. The same December 2023 futures contract could still be 100,ドル but it also might have increased to 110ドル (this implies normal backwardation) or it might have decreased to 90ドル (implies contango). The definitions are as follows:

Contango is when the futures price is above the expected future spot price. Because the futures price must converge on the expected future spot price, contango implies futures prices are falling over time as new information brings them into line with the expected future spot price.

Normal backwardation is when the futures price is below the expected future spot price. This is desirable for speculators who are net long in their positions: they want the futures price to increase. So, normal backwardation is when the futures prices are increasing.

Consider a futures contract we purchase today, due in exactly one year. Assume the expected future spot price is 60ドル (the blue flat line in Figure 2 below). If today's cost for the one-year futures contract is 90ドル (the red line), the futures price is above the expected future spot price. This is a contango scenario. Unless the expected future spot price changes, the contract price must drop. If we go forward in time one month, we will be referring to an 11-month contract; in six months, it will be a six-month contract.

Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2020

What Causes the Market To Go From Contango to Backwardation?

A shift from contango to backwardation usually occurs after an unexpected market shift that causes a sharp change in the spot price of an asset. For example, if an unexpected crisis causes a global shortage of a commodity, the spot price of that commodity will increase, potentially shifting a contango market to backwardation.

What Are the Risks of a Contango Market?

Investors who buy futures contracts typically hope to lock in a price that will be lower than the spot price on the date that the contract matures. However, in a contango market, spot prices are below the futures price, meaning that the investor may have lost money over the term of the contract.

How Do You Determine if the Market Is in Contango or Backwardation?

You can determine if a futures market is in contango or backwardation by graphing the curve of the futures price, in comparison with the expected spot price. If the price of a futures contract is above the spot price and declining over time, the market is in contango. If the futures contract price is below the spot price, the market is in normal backwardation.

The Bottom Line

Knowing the difference between contango and backwardation will help you avoid losses in the futures market.

Article Sources
Investopedia requires writers to use primary sources to support their work. These include white papers, government data, original reporting, and interviews with industry experts. We also reference original research from other reputable publishers where appropriate. You can learn more about the standards we follow in producing accurate, unbiased content in our editorial policy.
  1. Robert J. Schwartz and Clifford W. Smith. "Derivatives Handbook: Risk Management and Control." Page 608. John Wiley & Sons, 1997.

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