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Linking ContraCts for Long-term Chart anaLysis
December coffee falls 5 cents/lb to 133.50—a 3.6 percent drop. A nearest futures price series will
show the following closing levels on these two successive days: 132.50 cents, 133.50 cents. In other
words, the nearest futures contract would show a one-cent (0.75 percent) gain on a day on which longs
would actually have experienced a huge loss. This example is by no means artificial. Such distortions—
and indeed more extreme ones—are quite common at contract rollovers in nearest futures charts.
The vulnerability of nearest futures charts to distortions at contract rollover points makes it desir-
able to derive alternative methods of constructing linked-contract price charts. One such approach
is detailed in the next section.
Continuous (Spread-adjusted) price Series
The spread-adjusted price series known as “continuous futures” is constructed by adding the cumulative dif-
ference between the old and new contracts at rollover points to the new contract series.
1 An example should
help clarify this method. Assume we are constructing a spread-adjusted continuous price series for gold
using the June and December contracts.
2 If the price series begins at the start of the calendar year, initially the
values in the series will be identical to the prices of the June contract expiring in that year. Assume that on the
rollover date (which need not necessarily be the last trading day) June gold closes at $1,200 and December
gold closes at $1,205. In this case, all subsequent prices based on the December contract would be adjusted
downward by $5—the difference between the December and June contracts on the rollover date.
Assume that at the next rollover date December gold is trading at $1,350 and the subsequent June
contract is trading at $1,354. The December contract price of $1,350 implies that the spread-adjusted
continuous price is $1,345. Thus, on this second rollover date, the June contract is trading $9 above the
adjusted series. Consequently, all subsequent prices based on the second June contract would be adjusted
downward by $9. This procedure would continue, with the adjustment for each contract dependent on the
cumulative total of the present and prior transition point price differences. The resulting price series would
be free of the distortions due to spread differences that exist at the rollover points between contracts.
The construction of a continuous futures series can be thought of as the mathematical equivalent
of taking a nearest futures chart, cutting out each individual contract series contained in the chart,
and pasting the ends together (assuming a continuous series employing all contracts and using the
same rollover dates as the nearest futures chart). Typically, as a last step, it is convenient to shift the
scale of the entire series by the cumulative adjustment factor, a step that will set the current price
of the series equal to the price of the current contract without changing the shape of the series. The
construction of a continuous futures chart is discussed in greater detail in Chapter 18.
1 T o avoid confusion, readers should note that some data services use the term continuous futures to refer to linking
together contracts of the same month (e.g., linking from March 2015 corn when it expires to March 2016 corn,
and so on). Such charts are really only a variation of nearest futures charts—one in which only a single contract
month is used—and will be as prone to wide price gaps at rollovers as nearest futures charts, if not more so.
These types of charts have absolutely nothing in common with the spread-adjusted continuous futures series
described in this section—that is, nothing but the name. It is unfortunate that some data services have decided
to use this same term to describe an entirely different price series than the original meaning described here.
2 The choice of a combination of contracts is arbitrary. One can use any combination of actively traded months
in the given market.