User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- the situation in a futures market where prices for future delivery are lower than prices
for immediate (or
nearer) delivery. Generally arising from a near-term shortage of a commodity.
- 1991: gold has never gone into backwardation in any currency — Reginald H. Howe, The Golden Sextant http://www.goldensextant.com/goldensextant.html
Related terms
Extensive Definition
Backwardation (sometimes incorrectly referred to
as "backwardization") is a futures
market term: it means a downward sloping forward curve (as in
an inverted yield curve):
one says that the forward curve is "in backwardation" (or
sometimes: "backwardated").
Formally, backwardation is the situation in
which, and the amount by which, the price of a commodity for future
delivery is lower than the spot price, or
a far future delivery price lower than a nearer future delivery. In
fact backwardation is a situation where the cash price of a
commodity is pregnant with a premium a buyer is willing to pay, for
having the immediate delivery of the commodity.
The opposite market condition to backwardation is
known as contango.
Different from a contango situation, the backwardation spread, the
difference between the cash price and the future price is
unlimited. There have been situations in metal markets in the last
30 years where there was a contango in nearby quotes and a
backwardation in two different futures quotes. Backwardation very
seldom, if ever, arises in money commodities like gold or silver,
except one situation in the early 80's when there was a one day
backwardation in silver because some metal was physically moved
from Comex to CBOT warehouses . Technically a backwardation starts
when the difference between the future price and the cash price is
less than the cost of
carry.
More generally, the term is sometimes applied to
forward
prices other than those of futures contracts, when analogous
price patterns arise. For example, if it costs more to lease
silver for 30 days than
for 60 days, it might be said that the silver lease rates are "in
backwardation."
Occurrence
This is the case of a convenience yield that is greater than the risk free rate.Some argue that backwardation is an abnormal
situation, and is suggestive of supply insufficiencies in the
corresponding (physical) spot market. This is empirically false:
many commodities markets are frequently in backwardation, specially
when the seasonal aspect is taking into consideration, eg.,
perishable and/or soft commodities.
In Treatise on Money (1930, chapter 29),
economist John
Maynard Keynes argued that in commodity
markets, backwardation is not an abnormal market situation, but
rather arises naturally as "normal backwardation" from the fact
that producers of commodities are more prone to hedge their price
risk than consumers. The academic dispute on the subject continues
to this day.
Backwardation is a normal market situation in a
"sellers" market.
Examples
Notable examples of backwardation include,- Copper circa 1990, apparently arising from market manipulation by Yasuo Hamanaka of Sumitomo Corporation.
- FX: The Australian dollar, priced in Japanese yen terms (AUD/JPY), in 2006: the backwardation occurs simply because Australian dollar bonds pay so much more interest at every point in the yield curve than Japanese yen bonds do. Any high-yield foreign currency contract will show backwardation in its pricing.
Origin of term: London Stock Exchange
Like contango, the term originated in mid-19th century England, and it clearly comes from "backward".In the past on the London
Stock Exchange, backwardation was a fee paid by a seller
wishing to defer delivering stock they had sold. This fee was paid
either to the buyer, or to a third party who lent stock to the
seller.
The purpose was normally speculative, allowing
short
selling. Settlement days were on a fixed schedule (such as
fortnightly) and a short seller did not have to deliver stock until
the following settlement day, and on that day could "carry over"
their position to the next by paying a backwardation fee. This
practice was common before 1930, but came to be
used less and less, particularly since options were reintroduced in
1958.
The fee here did not indicate a near-term
shortage of stock the way backwardation means today, it was more
like a "lease rate", the cost of borrowing a stock or commodity for
a period of time.
In more recent years, a backwardation in equities
quoted on the London Stock Exchange, has come to signify the
unusual occurrence of an individual equities quote whereby the bid
appears to be higher than the offer. This (of course) can not occur
for electronically traded stocks via SETS or SETS MM but only for
quote driven stocks ( SEAQ)
London Metal Exchange
The London
Metal Exchange market rules allow it to set a limit on
backwardation in contracts traded there. At present times, all base
metal contracts (excluding LME Minis) are subject to "lending
guidance". Therefore, the exchange controls neither the absolute
price level directly nor the trading positions held by exchange
members. It rather limits the price differential between trades
that go into delivery the next day ("tom position") and the day
after ("cash position").
Calendar spreads are known in LME jargon as
"carries". Buying a carry is referred to as "borrow" and selling a
carry as "lending". Thus, if a metal is subject to lending
guidance, dominant position holders may be required to lend
tom-next, that is sell a tom-position and buy a cash-position,
should the backwardation for that period exceed a certain
exchange-set percentage. The price differential and number of
contracts to be lent is determined by LME regulation.
The LME uses backwardation limits in emergency
situations, such as in 2005 following
Hurricane
Katrina when Zinc warrants in
New
Orleans were suspended until the warehouses were checked, or to
act against possible or suspected market manipulation, such
tightness in particular prompts for Aluminium in
early 1999.
References
- Encyclopædia Britannica, eleventh edition (1911) and fifteenth edition (1974), articles Contango and Backwardation and Stock Market.
- Modern Market Manipulation, Mike Riess, 2003, paper at the International Precious Metals Institute 27th Annual Conference
- LME launches and investigation in primary aluminium trading, London Metal Exchange advice to members 15 January 1999, reproduced at aluNET International
- investopedia Website, Articles on Contango and Backwardation and Stock Market''.
backwardation in German: Backwardation
backwardation in Russian:
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