commodities

Analyze commodity markets including futures curve dynamics, roll yield mechanics, commodity index construction, and supply/demand fundamentals. This skill covers the unique return drivers of commodity investing and the critical distinction between spot returns and futures-based returns.

Safety Notice

This listing is imported from skills.sh public index metadata. Review upstream SKILL.md and repository scripts before running.

Copy this and send it to your AI assistant to learn

Install skill "commodities" with this command: npx skills add joellewis/finance_skills/joellewis-finance-skills-commodities

Commodities

Purpose

Analyze commodity markets including futures curve dynamics, roll yield mechanics, commodity index construction, and supply/demand fundamentals. This skill covers the unique return drivers of commodity investing and the critical distinction between spot returns and futures-based returns.

Layer

2 — Asset Classes

Direction

both

When to Use

  • User asks about commodity investing, commodity ETFs, or commodity futures

  • User asks about contango, backwardation, or futures curve shape

  • User asks about roll yield or the cost of rolling futures contracts

  • User asks about commodity indices (S&P GSCI, Bloomberg Commodity)

  • User asks about storage costs, convenience yield, or cost of carry

  • User asks about commodities as an inflation hedge

  • User asks about supply/demand fundamentals for specific commodity sectors

  • User asks about seasonality in commodity markets

Core Concepts

Spot vs Futures Pricing

The futures price is related to the spot price through the cost-of-carry model:

F = S × e^((r + u - y) × t)

where S = spot price, r = risk-free rate, u = storage cost, y = convenience yield, t = time to expiration. The convenience yield represents the benefit of holding the physical commodity (e.g., avoiding production shutdowns).

Contango

When F > S, the futures curve is upward-sloping. Storage costs and financing costs exceed the convenience yield. Contango creates negative roll yield because investors must sell cheaper expiring contracts and buy more expensive later contracts. Contango is common in well-supplied markets and for storable commodities like oil and natural gas.

Backwardation

When F < S, the futures curve is downward-sloping. The convenience yield exceeds storage and financing costs, often due to near-term supply scarcity. Backwardation creates positive roll yield because investors sell expensive expiring contracts and buy cheaper later contracts. Backwardation is common in tight supply environments.

Sources of Commodity Return

Total commodity return has three components:

  • Spot return: Change in the spot price of the commodity

  • Roll yield: Gain or loss from rolling expiring futures into the next contract

  • Collateral yield: Interest earned on the margin/collateral posted to hold futures positions

Total Return = Spot Return + Roll Yield + Collateral Yield

Roll Yield

The gain or loss realized when an expiring futures contract is replaced by a longer-dated contract. In contango (upward curve), roll yield is negative. In backwardation (downward curve), roll yield is positive. Roll yield can be a significant drag or boost to total returns — in deep contango, roll yield can eliminate or even exceed spot price gains.

Commodity Sectors

  • Energy: crude oil, natural gas, gasoline, heating oil — largest sector by production value

  • Precious metals: gold, silver, platinum, palladium — safe haven and industrial uses

  • Industrial metals: copper, aluminum, zinc, nickel — tied to global economic activity

  • Agriculture: corn, wheat, soybeans, coffee, sugar, cotton — weather and harvest dependent

  • Livestock: live cattle, lean hogs — demand-driven

Commodity Indices

  • S&P GSCI: production-weighted, heavily tilted toward energy (~60%+). Represents global commodity production.

  • Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOM): diversified with sector caps (33%) and single commodity caps (15%). More balanced exposure.

  • Index construction affects returns significantly — energy-heavy indices behave very differently from diversified indices.

Inflation Hedge Properties

Commodities tend to correlate positively with unexpected inflation, making them a potential hedge. The mechanism is direct: rising commodity prices are a component of inflation. However, the hedge is imperfect and works better for supply-driven inflation than demand-driven or monetary inflation.

Seasonality

Agricultural commodities show harvest-related patterns (supply increases at harvest, depressing prices). Energy shows heating/cooling demand patterns (natural gas peaks in winter, gasoline in summer driving season). Seasonality is well-known and partially priced in, but seasonal patterns can still affect futures curve shape.

Key Formulas

Formula Expression Use Case

Cost of Carry F = S × e^((r+u-y)×t) Theoretical futures price

Roll Yield (approx) (F_near - F_far) / F_near Return from contract rolling

Total Return Spot Return + Roll Yield + Collateral Yield Complete commodity return

Annualized Roll Yield ((F_near/F_far)^(365/days_between) - 1) Annualized roll impact

Convenience Yield y = r + u - (1/t) × ln(F/S) Implied convenience yield

Worked Examples

Example 1: Roll Yield in Contango

Given: Front month crude oil futures at $50, next month at $52 (contango), 1-month roll period Calculate: Annualized roll yield Solution: Monthly roll yield = (F_near - F_far) / F_near = ($50 - $52) / $50 = -4.0% This is a 1-month loss of 4.0%. Annualized roll yield ≈ -4.0% × 12 = -48% (simple annualization) More precisely: (50/52)^12 - 1 = (0.9615)^12 - 1 = -38.1%

This illustrates how severe contango can create enormous roll yield drag. In practice, front-to-second-month contango is rarely this steep, but the example shows why curve shape matters enormously for commodity investors.

Example 2: Total Return Decomposition for a Commodity ETF

Given: Over one year, spot crude oil rises from $70 to $77 (+10%). Roll yield = -6%. Collateral yield (T-bill rate) = 5%. Calculate: Total return of a futures-based commodity ETF Solution: Total Return = Spot Return + Roll Yield + Collateral Yield Total Return = 10% + (-6%) + 5% = 9%

Despite a 10% spot price increase, the futures-based investor earned only 9% due to 6% roll yield drag, partially offset by 5% collateral yield. A physical holder (no roll cost, no collateral yield) would have earned 10%.

Common Pitfalls

  • Confusing spot returns with futures-based returns — most investors access commodities through futures, where roll yield matters

  • Ignoring roll yield drag in contango markets — contango can erode returns substantially over time

  • Commodity ETFs track futures, not spot prices — ETF returns can diverge significantly from spot price movements

  • Storage costs matter for physical but not financial investors — financial investors face roll yield, not storage costs

Cross-References

  • historical-risk (wealth-management plugin, Layer 1a): return and risk measurement basics

  • real-assets (wealth-management plugin, Layer 2): physical commodity-related investments (gold, farmland)

  • currencies-and-fx (wealth-management plugin, Layer 2): commodity currency relationships

  • asset-allocation (wealth-management plugin, Layer 3): commodities as a portfolio diversifier

Reference Implementation

See scripts/commodities.py for computational helpers.

Source Transparency

This detail page is rendered from real SKILL.md content. Trust labels are metadata-based hints, not a safety guarantee.

Related Skills

Related by shared tags or category signals.

General

trade-execution

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review
General

asset-allocation

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review
General

market-data

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review
General

next-best-action

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review