Backwardation
A futures curve where near-dated contracts price higher than later ones — the signature of scarcity, and a tailwind for long roll strategies.
What is Backwardation?
Backwardation is the inverted curve: the nearest contract commands the highest price, with later expirations progressively cheaper. It means the market values the commodity now more than later — the classic footprint of physical scarcity, supply disruption, or urgent demand.
How Backwardation works
For position traders the roll math flips friendly: exiting the expensive front month and entering a cheaper back month harvests the spread (“roll yield”) each cycle. As a signal, the front spread is one of the most-watched supply gauges in energy — deepening backwardation in CL reads as inventories draining.
Worked example
During a supply disruption, front CL trades at $88 with next month at $86.50. A long roller sells 88 and rebuys at 86.50 — pocketing $1,500 per contract of roll yield while maintaining the position. The same mechanics that tax longs in contango pay them here.
Backwardation vs related concepts
Side-by-side comparison of Backwardation against the most commonly confused alternatives.
| Concept | Definition | Category |
|---|---|---|
| Backwardation this term | A futures curve where near-dated contracts price higher than later ones — the signature of scarcity, and a tailwind for long roll strategies. | Futures Mechanics |
| Contango | A futures curve where later-dated contracts price higher than near-dated ones — the normal state for markets with storage costs, and a headwind for long roll strategies. | Futures Mechanics |
| Contract Rollover | The process of closing a near-expiration futures contract and opening an equivalent position in the next contract month — required to maintain exposure beyond a single contract's lifecycle. | Futures Mechanics |
| Front Month | The nearest-to-expiration futures contract month with active trading — typically the most liquid contract, where the vast majority of volume and open interest concentrates. | Futures Mechanics |
Why traders fail Backwardation
Treating backwardation as a sell signal because “later is cheaper.” The lower back months reflect expected normalization, not a bearish forecast for the front — backwardation typically accompanies bullish spot conditions. Forgetting per-product context: equity index futures’ curve is about dividends and rates, not scarcity; the contango/backwardation supply logic belongs to commodities.
Frequently asked questions about Backwardation
What is backwardation in futures?
An inverted curve where near contracts price above later ones — buyers paying a premium for immediate availability, typically signaling tight supply.
Is backwardation bullish or bearish?
It usually accompanies bullish, supply-tight spot conditions. The cheaper back months express expected normalization, not a prediction that price must fall.