mflugher wrote:I understand 1 and 2... those are easy, 3 however uses vocabulary which I am unaware of. I read wikipedia article on backwardation and understand a basic idea of what it is, does anyone have a cogent layperson explanation of what #3 is trying to get across?
what is the average compensation for counterparty risk on a PM futures contract? 1%? 5%? how does that compare to say a more traditional futures contract like an agricultural product? (I would assume it should be higher)
can you suggest some reading on backwardation and futures that might help me (without investing more time than say a 500 pg book?) and if you have said book how much would you charge me for it in silver dimes lol?
Thank you for your time.
so the comex is an exchange, like the stock exchange except for futures contracts. its relevant beause historically the volume has been so high that prices for physical were set there. Now you could contract with someone like you neighbor to deliver silver in the future, and that would be a futures contract. what the exchange does is it standardizes those contracts in terms of size and expiration dates to provide a better sense of what the market it. the exchange also stands in between traders in an attempt to mitigate counterparty risk.
if you own a bunch of gold, you can store it an exchange-approved warehouse. if it never leaves the warehouse, its ready to be sold on the exchange, although really you are selling a contract that is tied to the physical metal.
now the exchange allows serious margin, something like only 5% down. so the volume of contracts traded is say 20 times the gold that exists on the exchange that is available for delivery.
since 2008, gold owners have been moving their gold out of the warehouses tied to the comex. there is roughly half the gold and silver tied to the exchange as there was 3 years ago. ed steer's newsletter occassionally publishes a chart showing this.
the relevance of the declining metal on the exchange is the fact that the volume of futures contracts has not declined. so its increasingly a precarious situation. its like a bank that continues to make loans even though people are withdrawing their deposits from the vault. now, i'm not saying their is a pm-run on the comex, at least not an overnight one like a bank run, but if you look at the trend in the amount of metal backing those contracts it looks like a slow motion bank (or pm) run on the comex.
what that means is its like musical chairs and the record is slowing down. if there are 20 contracts for each unit of metal, 19 folks are not going to get their metal. this is because short sellers sold naked without having the metal in the comex warehouse, and it just doesn't exist. So if the music stops 19 buyers are going to be left s.o.l. this is counterparty risk - the risk that the guy on the other side of your contract will not or is unable to perform.
here is how it ties to backwardation. think about what is the price of gold. you probably thought of one number. its actually a lot of numbers. if i ask you what the price of money is, the answer would depend on when i repaid you. if i repay you tomorrow, its one price, a year from now another price, etc. a chart showing the different prices at different times is called the yield curve. normally, it slopes upward from short maturity to long maturity to compensate for the time value of money.
similarly, commodities and preciouls metals have multiple prices depending on when they are to be delivered. its a little more complicated with commodities because you have to store them, and for the ag commodities there are seasonal factors that affect supply and demand (harvest, etc.), they are perishable, weather, etc., but you get the idea. The "yield curve" for gold typically slopes up, like money.
backwardation is when the front months - spot delivery and near term delivery - are more expensive than future delivery. it is believed this occurs when market participants become concerned about counterparty risk. they place a premium in having their metal delivered asap. so as the metals move into backwardation, and the degree of that backwardation, it suggests that the market is concerned about the integrity of the exchange.
now, here is how it ties to shorts. recall that there are many more contracts than there is metal. so you can fix the problems on the comex by either adding more metal (as a practical matter, this cannot happen in any meaningful amount) or you reduce the number of contracts. so the backwardation in effect puts pressure on the shorts to cover their shorts - buy offsetting contracts to net out their short position. this reduces the number of outstanding contracts, which reduces the riskiness of the situation. of course, this requires the shorts to realilze losses on their positions and also creates buying pressure. so that is a long winded explanation of why the backwardation suggests we could have another short-covering rally soon.