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Futures, Indices, and Commodities · Futures Basics

Expiry vs perpetual — futures expire

Explain why futures contracts have expiration dates and how that differs from spot or crypto perpetuals.

3 min read+25 XPLesson 4 of 49
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Futures, Indices, and Commodities

Futures Basics

Lesson 4 of 498%
Lesson 4 of 49Futures, Indices, and CommoditiesFutures Basics

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Explain why futures contracts have expiration dates and how that differs from spot or crypto perpetuals.

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The clock that doesn't exist in spot

If you're coming to futures from spot stocks or crypto perpetuals, this is the biggest mental shift: every futures contract has an expiration date. Stocks can be held forever. Crypto perpetuals never expire by design. Futures contracts have a hard cutoff. After it, the contract literally stops existing.

Expiration dates aren't random — they follow a published cycle that depends on the asset class. Equity index futures (ES, NQ, RTY) use a quarterly cycle: March, June, September, December. The contract month is part of the ticker symbol — ESH26 is March 2026, ESM26 is June 2026, ESU26 is September, ESZ26 is December. (H, M, U, Z are the standard month codes — the third Friday of that month is typically the last trading day.) Energy and metals are more granular — crude oil has a contract for every month. Treasury bonds also run quarterly. Each contract has a specified 'last trading day' on the CME spec sheet.

Why expiration matters in practice: you cannot hold a futures position through expiration the way you can hold a stock through earnings. You either close before, settle at expiration (cash or physical, depending on the contract — covered in the next lesson), or 'roll' to the next contract month. Letting an index future expire while you're long means your position gets cash-settled at the final settlement price. Letting a physical commodity future expire could, in theory, mean a barrel of oil shows up. (It won't — your broker will force-close you days before that becomes a real risk. But the threat is what shapes the rules.)

Reading the ticker: 'ESH26' decodes as ES (E-mini S&P) + H (March) + 26 (year 2026). When traders say 'the front month,' they mean the contract closest to expiration that's actively trading. As it approaches expiry, volume migrates to the next month — and that migration is what we'll cover when we get to the roll period in lesson six.

Recap: futures expire on a published schedule. Equity index contracts are quarterly (Mar/Jun/Sep/Dec). The ticker tells you the month and year. You close before expiration, settle, or roll.

Knowledge check

Answer before moving on.

0 / 2 answered

1. What does 'ESM26' represent?

2. How is a futures contract different from a crypto perpetual?

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