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As crude rallies to $63, we take a look at the effects of backwardation and
contango on the commodity markets such as crude oil. Knowing and allowing for
these in future price trends can make the difference between profits and losses
even if you get the market right on price direction.
Firstly, what are backwardation and contango?
Backwardation is is where the cost of a commodity in the future is
less than it is nearer to the present. backwardation is not normal, and suggests
that supply side insufficiency. Contango is how the markets operate
normally, where the price of a commodity in the future is higher than the price
of that commodity nearer the present, though the degree to contango varies
significantly due to speculation.
Up until quite recently crude oil had been at or near backwardation ! Which
meant those long of crude oil, i.e. expecting crude to rise, benefited as the
future price of crude oil was close to or lower than the spot price, so you
had two effects, you had the up trend in crude oil, and you had the effect
of backwardation resulting in a gain as the future delivery month moved closer
to expiry.
But now crude oil future prices have widened significantly into contango,
where future prices are much higher than the near month, i.e. January Nymex
futures are currently at $63, whereas someone going long of say Aug 07 crude
oil, would pay a price of $69 , what this means is that crude oil would have
to rise to $69 just to break even, if the contract was rolled forward into
August 07.
The effect this has on the market is to drive up inventories for refiners
and producers, as the stock would be worth more at a future date. So producers
can can sell their current stock say worth $63 for August delivery for $69,
locking in a profit of $6 in some 8 months.
So even as we expect crude oil to rise towards $70 by August 2007, given the
switch in the market to contango, this is no longer as profitable a trade as
it was during the run up to $80, when the market was in backwardation. As traders
buying and rolling the near months forward on expiry will pay the price for
contango in the difference between the closure of one months price and the
opening of the next months contract price, which at $6 amounts to some 10%
on the price of crude oil. So crude oil would need to rise by more than 10%
for a trader / investor to break-even.
What does this mean for crude oil during 2007?
It means that the continuing build up in inventories of crude oil for future
delivery, rather than being rolled over, will at some point be delivered,
and as and when that happens (probably sooner rather than later), it will
lead to a sharp sell off in crude oil prices! Even if the decline is temporary.
So the opportunity brewing for traders are not on the longside but on the
short side sometime during mid 2007. As and when the inventories lead to crude
oil being dumped on the market when the contango starts to contract significantly,
which will further drive spot AND futures prices lower, leading to speculators
such as hedge funds also dumping their positions, it is not inconceivable that
crude oil could fall as low as $40, in a state of backwardation (higher spot,
lower futures). Which would once more set the stage for long positions in crude
oil. Until then being long of crude oil is definitely not as profitable as
it looks on face value! This possibly also holds true for other commodities
that are in contango i.e. such as Gold where Dec 06 is at $644, but Dec 06
is at $682, therefore producers can sell current gold for a 6% profit, as they
hold on to and build inventories.
In summary the key point I am making is - Look for a markets in contango to
short, and look for markets in backwardation to go long on. To take advantage
of contango, look to invest in the producer rather than the commodity itself
i.e. an oil company or a gold miner.
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