Roll Yield is the return an investor generates from a futures contract position as it moves closer to its expiration date. It's a crucial, and often misunderstood, source of profit or loss in commodities and other markets where futures are traded. In essence, it's the gain or loss you make from “rolling over” your investment—that is, selling a contract that's about to expire and buying a new one with a later expiration date to maintain your exposure to the asset. The outcome of this roll depends entirely on the shape of the futures curve. If the market is in backwardation (future prices are lower than near-term prices), you can generate a positive roll yield. Conversely, if the market is in contango (future prices are higher than near-term prices), you'll face a negative roll yield. For many commodity investors, especially those using Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs), the roll yield can have a far greater impact on their total return than the actual movement of the commodity's spot price.
Think of a futures contract like a pre-paid coupon for a product with an expiry date. If you want to keep your claim on that product beyond the expiry date, you can't just hold the coupon forever. You have to sell your old, expiring coupon and buy a new one for a future date. This process is called rolling over. The profit or loss you make from this transaction—the difference between the price of the expiring contract you're selling and the new, longer-dated contract you're buying—is the roll yield.
The direction of your roll yield, positive or negative, is determined by the market's structure. There are two key scenarios:
While roll yield is a term born from the world of futures trading, its effects ripple out, offering valuable clues for the discerning value investor.
Many businesses are heavily exposed to commodity prices—think of an airline and jet fuel, or a cereal company and wheat. These companies use futures to hedge their input costs.
Many investors get exposure to commodities through ETFs. However, most of these ETFs don't physically hold the commodity; they hold futures contracts. This means their performance is directly impacted by roll yield.
The state of the futures market is a powerful economic indicator.
Understanding roll yield allows a value investor to look beyond a company's balance sheet and gain a more nuanced view of the economic forces shaping its industry and its future.