Futures Shock
It Takes Crude to Contango
04/26/05 - 10:00 AM EDT
One of the real problems involved with rules of thumb is the tendency of thumbs to show up in the most unexpected places. As David Merkel noted in a Columnist Conversation post on Friday, many observers link the price of commodities with their forward curve. The rule of thumb for crude oil has been that rising prices are accompanied by backwardation, or the price of distant futures below those of near-term futures, and falling prices are accompanied by contango, or near-term futures below those of distant months. Actually, to be precise in our definitions, let's stipulate that a forward curve wherein prices rise over time is a "carry" curve, one in which the buyer pays the seller all or part of the storage costs associated with carrying an inventory forward over time. Contango is a subset of carry; it exists when there is a glut of present supply and when the price of a distant futures contract exceeds the full-carry price. (If I may be permitted a shameless plug, I discuss backwardation and contango in the fourth chapter of my book, The Dynamic Option Selection System.) These supposed linkages between price and the forward curve were supported by two decades of data in the crude oil futures market. If we measure backwardation as [Month 1 - Month 2] / Month 2, we readily can see how price and backwardation were correlated between 1986 and May 2003, the accomplishment date of the U.S.' mission in Iraq. The relationship broke, and broke by 180 degrees, thereafter. On first blush, this is contrary to financial theory: Crude oil, like all commodities whose deliveries are constrained logistically -- think of the capacities of field production, tankers, pipelines, loading jetties, etc. -- should see its front-month price rise more in a bull market. When you need it, you need it now, not six months from now. And producers looking to lock in the current high prices cannot sell futures for immediate delivery in excess of their production capacity, so they have to sell the back months. The combination of buyers buying now and sellers selling later creates backwardation.
| After the Mission Was Accomplished |
| Source: Bloomberg |
What Changed?
| Money Chases Performance |
| Source: The Barclay Group |
| CFTC Commitment Data |
| Source: Bloomberg |
All Trading Is Local
As a matter of fact, the opportunistic traders must have been having such a good time at the funds' expense that they went and told their friends. Let's see how the price-forward curve relationship has changed on a daily basis since the end of 2004. Each ribbon in the chart below represents a forward curve beginning with the front month and ending with the December 2005 contract. The near months are on the left of the ribbon; the far months are on the right of the ribbon. As time goes forward and as price rises, the switch from a backwardated structure -- front months over the back -- switches to a deeper and deeper carry and a bona fide contango.| Forward Curve Shifts In Crude Oil |
| Source: Bloomberg |
Impact on Inventories
The phrase "bona fide contango" means an operator should be able to buy front-month crude, take delivery, pay associated storage charges and hedge the inventory by selling the second-month future. Let's run some numbers from April 22, 2005:- Go long June crude oil at $55.39;
- Go short July crude oil at $56.54;
- Take delivery of June crude on May 24:
a. Pay $55,390 for 1,000 barrels;
b. Incur interest of three-month repurchase, 2.80%, for one month, or approximately 13 cents per barrel;
c. Incur storage and pumping charges of approximately 60 cents per barrel; - Deliver the stored crude oil on June 23, the July expiration date, and receive $56,540.
| Contango Permits Inventory Building |
| Source: Bloomberg |
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