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Futures, Indices, and Commodities · Futures Basics

The roll period and its mechanics

Define the roll period for futures contracts and explain how to roll a position from front month to next month.

3 min read+25 XPLesson 6 of 49
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Futures, Indices, and Commodities

Futures Basics

Lesson 6 of 4912%
Lesson 6 of 49Futures, Indices, and CommoditiesFutures Basics

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Define the roll period for futures contracts and explain how to roll a position from front month to next month.

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Moving from one contract month to the next

We established in lesson four that futures expire. So how do traders maintain ongoing exposure to something like the S&P 500 across years? Simple answer: they roll. Rolling means closing your position in the contract that's about to expire and immediately opening the same position in the next contract month. It's a two-leg trade that traders do on purpose, usually as one combined order called a calendar spread.

The roll period is the window when most market participants make this switch. For equity index futures, it's typically the two weeks before expiration — and the heaviest volume migration day is called 'roll Thursday' (the second Thursday before expiration, eight days before the third Friday). On that day, daily volume in the expiring contract collapses and daily volume in the next month surges. By the day before expiration, the expiring contract is a ghost town and the next month is the new front month.

How to actually roll: most brokers have a 'roll' button or a calendar-spread order ticket. Mechanically, it's two trades — close ESH26, open ESM26 — done as a single 'spread' transaction so you don't risk one leg filling without the other. The price you pay is the spread between the two contracts, not their absolute prices. For equity index futures, this spread is small (a few points) and reflects the cost of carry — interest rates minus dividends. For commodity futures, the spread can be larger and is a meaningful component of returns over time (this is what 'contango' and 'backwardation' refer to in commodity-fund prospectuses).

Practical checks before rolling: look at volume in both contracts. Roll when next-month volume is high enough that you'll get a tight spread — usually starting a few days into the official roll period. If you roll too early, the next month is illiquid. If you roll too late, the expiring contract is illiquid. The middle of the roll window is the sweet spot. Brokers and exchange educational resources publish the recommended roll date each cycle. Most retail platforms will alert you.

Recap: rolling = closing the expiring contract and opening the next month. Equity index roll window is roughly two weeks before expiration, with heaviest volume on roll Thursday. Use a spread order so both legs fill together.

Knowledge check

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0 / 2 answered

1. What does 'rolling' a futures position mean?

2. Why is liquidity a key consideration when timing your roll?

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