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Goldman Sachs: If Inflation Does Not Ease, The Federal Reserve Is Expected To Raise Interest Rates As Early As September
The Main Egg Futures Contract Fell 100.00 Yuan During The Day, Currently Trading At 4577.00 Yuan/500 Kg, A Decrease Of 2.14%
Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara: We Will Closely Monitor Market Dynamics And Guide Economic And Fiscal Policies As Appropriate
Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara: The Impact Of The Weak Yen Must Be Fully Considered
Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara: A Weak Yen Helps Improve Corporate Profits, But It Increases The Burden On Households
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Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara: We Are Always Prepared To Take Necessary Actions In The Foreign Exchange Market
Chinese Embassy In The Netherlands: Urges The Dutch Side To Cease Spreading False Information About China And Hyping Up The So‑called "China Threat" Narrative
The Main Palladium Futures Contract Fell 2.00% During The Day, Currently Trading At 312.20 Yuan/gram
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The Main Lithium Carbonate Futures Contract Fell By 2.00% During The Day, Currently Trading At 168,260 Yuan/ton
China's Central Bank (PBOC) Announced Today That It Conducted 248 Billion Yuan Of 7-day Reverse Repurchase Operations, With Both The Bid And Winning Bids Amounting To 248 Billion Yuan. The Operating Rate Was 1.40%, Unchanged From The Previous Rate
Liao Min Meets Christopher Haynes, Chairman Of The Policy And Resources Committee Of The City Of London
Bridgewater Associates Founder Ray Dalio: Despite The Large Amount Of Government Debt That Needs To Be Financed, Market Demand For This Debt Is Declining. This Decline In Demand Stems From Both Standard Supply And Demand Factors And Debt Holders' Concerns About Potential Sanctions

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Master the complexities of energy futures. Our guide details how to navigate crude oil contract months, manage rollovers, and mitigate physical delivery risks.
Navigating the petroleum futures market requires a precise understanding of crude oil contract months and their expiration cycles. Because physical commodities demand complex logistical coordination, exchanges mandate strict timelines for trading, settling, and delivering these assets. This guide breaks down the mechanics of crude oil futures, explaining how to interpret contract codes, manage rollover execution, and handle the critical window between the last trading day and final expiration.

Crude oil contract months dictate the specific timeline for the physical delivery or final financial settlement of a petroleum futures position. Major global benchmarks—including NYMEX West Texas Intermediate (WTI) and ICE Brent—list crude oil futures contract months for all 12 calendar months, with listings extending up to nine years into the future to accommodate long-term hedging by producers and refiners.
Because crude is continuously extracted and consumed, the market relies on rolling monthly contracts rather than the quarterly expiration cycles typical of equity index futures. Market participants identify these expiration periods using a standardized single-letter code appended to the commodity ticker and the year. For example, CLZ6 represents WTI Crude Oil (CL) for December (Z) 2026 (6).
Standard Futures Contract Month Codes
| Month | Code | Month | Code | Month | Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | F | May | K | September | U |
| February | G | June | M | October | V |
| March | H | July | N | November | X |
| April | J | August | Q | December | Z |
Tracking these exact months and their associated expiration dates is not just administrative; it drives the fundamental pricing and risk management of commodity trading. The sequence of these months matters for three primary reasons:
Crude oil futures contracts operate on a continuous monthly cycle, with trading terminating between the middle and end of the month preceding—or two months preceding—the named delivery month. Because crude oil requires physical logistical coordination for delivery (pipeline scheduling, terminal storage), exchange rules force financial participants out of the market well before the actual delivery period begins.
Understanding the exact schedule for crude oil contract months is critical to avoiding forced physical delivery or holding an illiquid instrument during the highly volatile expiration window.
As noted previously, NYMEX West Texas Intermediate (WTI, ticker: CL) crude oil futures contract months expire on the third business day prior to the 25th calendar day of the month preceding the delivery month.
Because WTI is a physically delivered contract settling at Cushing, Oklahoma, this timeline provides physical hedgers and producers sufficient time to secure pipeline space for the upcoming month.
The exact expiration rule follows a strict if/then logic set by the CME Group:
For a November WTI contract, the expiration calculation takes place in late October. Traders holding positions past this deadline without physical delivery capabilities face severe exchange penalties and forced liquidation.
ICE Brent Crude (ticker: B, often quoted as CO) follows an earlier expiration schedule than WTI. Brent crude oil contract dates dictate that trading ceases on the last business day of the second month preceding the relevant contract month.
For example, an October Brent contract will expire on the last business day of August.
This structural difference exists because Brent operates primarily in the seaborne market (North Sea) and relies heavily on the cash-settled ICE Brent Index and Exchange for Physical (EFP) mechanisms, rather than a single physical chokepoint like Cushing. The earlier expiration accommodates the longer lead times required for scheduling international waterborne cargoes.
The current front-month contract is the nearest unexpired delivery month holding the highest volume and open interest. Identifying it requires matching the exchange month code to the calendar and verifying liquidity metrics.
Exchanges use a standardized single-letter code to denote crude oil futures contract months. These are appended to the ticker and the two-digit year (e.g., CLZ26 for December 2026 WTI).
| Delivery Month | Exchange Code | Delivery Month | Exchange Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | F | July | N |
| February | G | August | Q |
| March | H | September | U |
| April | J | October | V |
| May | K | November | X |
| June | M | December | Z |
While the calendar dictates the technical front month, institutional traders rely on order book data to determine the functional front month.
During the crude oil contract rollover period—typically 5 to 8 days prior to official expiration—trading volume shifts aggressively from the expiring month to the next consecutive month. By the time the actual expiration date arrives, the expiring contract is largely abandoned by speculators. To find the true front month during this rollover window, track daily trading volume; the contract month with the highest daily volume, regardless of its calendar proximity, is the active front month.
An open crude oil futures position held through expiration converts into either a strict legal obligation to handle physical barrels of oil or a final cash payout, dictated entirely by the exchange specifications of that specific contract. Holding a contract to termination removes the ability to exit the trade via the open market, transferring the resolution process to the clearinghouse.
The settlement mechanism depends on the exact crude benchmark and ticker you are trading. NYMEX West Texas Intermediate (CL) mandates the actual transfer of 1,000 barrels of oil per contract, whereas ICE Brent (B) and smaller retail contracts resolve purely through cash adjustments based on an index price.
| Benchmark Contract | Ticker (Exchange) | Settlement Mechanism | End-of-Contract Obligation |
|---|---|---|---|
| WTI Crude | CL (CME/NYMEX) | Physical Delivery | Transfer of 1,000 barrels at Cushing, Oklahoma. |
| Brent Crude | B (ICE) | Cash Settlement | Cash adjustment based on the ICE Brent Index. |
| Micro WTI Crude | MCL (CME/NYMEX) | Cash Settlement | Cash adjustment against the final CL settlement price. |
| E-mini Crude | QM (CME/NYMEX) | Cash Settlement | Cash adjustment against the final CL settlement price. |
Physical delivery presents severe logistical risks for non-commercial participants. The April 20, 2020 market event, where the WTI May contract settled at -$37.63 per barrel, occurred directly because of this physical delivery mechanism. Financial speculators holding long positions lacked pipeline access and storage capacity at the Cushing delivery point. As the contract expired, they were forced to pay counterparties to take the contracts off their books rather than default on the delivery obligation.
If you hold a cash-settled contract like ICE Brent through expiration, the exchange simply credits or debits your account based on the difference between your entry price and the final settlement index. No physical logistics are involved.
The last trading day dictates the final market session where you can actively buy or sell the contract to close your position, while the expiration date marks the formal administrative closure of the contract at the clearinghouse. For crude oil futures, these two dates are often treated as functionally identical by traders, but the mechanical timeline requires strict attention.
As outlined earlier, the NYMEX WTI crude oil contract months follow a rigid termination formula: trading ceases on the third business day prior to the 25th calendar day of the month preceding the delivery month. If the 25th falls on a weekend or holiday, trading terminates on the third business day prior to the last business day preceding the 25th.
To prevent logistical failures, retail and non-commercial institutional brokerages do not wait for the exchange's official last trading day. Most clearing firms implement a "First Notice" cutoff, automatically force-liquidating open physical crude positions 24 to 72 hours prior to the exchange's termination deadline. If you plan to carry exposure into the subsequent month, you must execute a crude oil contract rollover before your broker's internal cutoff date.
Rolling a crude oil contract involves closing an open position in an expiring month and simultaneously opening the identical position in a deferred month to maintain continuous market exposure. Because physical delivery mandates require the transfer of actual barrels at specific hubs—such as Cushing, Oklahoma for West Texas Intermediate (WTI)—financial speculators must exit their positions before the contract expires. This transaction is typically executed as a single calendar spread order, which guarantees both legs of the trade are filled simultaneously, eliminating the price risk of exiting the old contract and entering the new one sequentially.
Speculators generally roll their positions five to eight business days before the official contract expiration. Because trading for WTI futures (ticker: CL) on the CME NYMEX ceases on the third business day prior to the 25th calendar day of the month preceding the delivery month, waiting until the final 48 hours exposes traders to severe liquidity drops and widening bid-ask spreads.
Market participants track the migration of Open Interest (OI) to time their rolls. Institutional capital typically shifts to the next active crude oil contract month roughly two weeks prior to expiration. Once the deferred month's daily volume and open interest surpass the expiring month, the deferred contract becomes the new highly liquid "front month," making it the optimal time for remaining retail and speculative traders to execute their calendar spreads.
The shape of the crude oil futures curve determines whether a trader incurs a structural drag or collects a premium when shifting to a deferred month. This dynamic generates what is known as roll yield.
Retail brokers and institutional funds automate the rollover process using predefined, rules-based schedules to mitigate human error and expiration risks.
Major retail brokerages offer auto-roll configurations where users set a time-based trigger—typically three to five days before First Notice Day or expiration. Once triggered, the broker's execution algorithm automatically routes a market-on-close or limit calendar spread order to shift the position forward.
Commodity Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) manage rollovers on a massive scale and must spread their trades out to avoid market distortion. The United States Oil Fund (USO), for example, historically rolled its benchmark crude oil futures contract months over a four-day period starting two weeks before expiration. Following the unprecedented market volatility of 2020, major oil ETFs restructured their methodologies. Rather than dumping their entire allocation into the next immediate month, funds like USO now hold a blend of contracts distributed further out across the curve (e.g., blending months 1, 2, 6, and 12). This structural change dampens the extreme volatility and contango drag associated with pure front-month rollovers.
As seen throughout this guide, crude oil futures use a standardized alphanumeric ticker system combining the commodity symbol, a single letter denoting the expiration month, and a digit representing the year. This format allows traders and algorithms to instantly parse delivery timelines across major exchanges like CME Globex and ICE without ambiguity.
A complete crude oil contract ticker is constructed using three components: the underlying product code (such as CL for NYMEX WTI or B for ICE Brent), a standardized month letter, and the expiration year. The futures industry assigns a specific, non-sequential letter to each of the 12 calendar months to eliminate visual confusion between similar characters on trading screens.
| Delivery Month | CME/ICE Month Code | WTI Example (2026) | Brent Example (2026) |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | F | CLF6 | BF6 |
| February | G | CLG6 | BG6 |
| March | H | CLH6 | BH6 |
| April | J | CLJ6 | BJ6 |
| May | K | CLK6 | BK6 |
| June | M | CLM6 | BM6 |
| July | N | CLN6 | BN6 |
| August | Q | CLQ6 | BQ6 |
| September | U | CLU6 | BU6 |
| October | V | CLV6 | BV6 |
| November | X | CLX6 | BX6 |
| December | Z | CLZ6 | BZ6 |
The year is typically represented by its final digit (e.g., "6" for 2026) or the last two digits ("26"), depending on the brokerage platform's display settings. Under this system, a ticker reading "CLZ6" designates WTI crude oil scheduled for December 2026 physical delivery. Traders referencing long-tail trends or pricing out deferred hedging will use these codes to map the entire futures curve.
As of mid-May 2026, the active crude oil contract is the July 2026 (CLN6) expiration, capturing the majority of daily trading volume and open interest. The active contract—commonly called the front-month—rarely aligns with the current calendar month because futures contracts require lead time to organize physical delivery logistics.
To apply this to the physical calendar, recall that NYMEX WTI crude oil futures expire three business days before the 25th calendar day of the month preceding the contract month (or the last business day prior to the 25th if it falls on a weekend or holiday).
For example, the June 2026 WTI contract (CLM6) schedules delivery for June but expires in late May. Because May 25, 2026, is Memorial Day, the anchor day shifts to Friday, May 22. Counting back three business days places expiration on Tuesday, May 19.
In the 48 to 72 hours preceding that expiration date, institutional volume rapidly migrates out of the expiring June contract and into July. Retail traders holding the front-month must execute a crude oil contract rollover—selling the expiring month and buying the deferred month—to maintain price exposure. Failing to close an expiring WTI contract triggers a physical delivery obligation of 1,000 barrels at Cushing, Oklahoma, a scenario retail brokerages prevent by aggressively liquidating client positions prior to the final trading bell.
Crude oil futures, such as West Texas Intermediate (WTI) and Brent crude, operate on a monthly expiration cycle. For example, standard WTI futures contracts generally expire on the third business day prior to the 25th calendar day of the month preceding the delivery month. Because these contracts expire every month, traders must either close their positions, take delivery, or roll their contracts forward to the next expiration cycle.
Forecasts for 2026 oil prices are currently mixed among analysts and financial institutions. In the short term, some analysts have raised price targets due to geopolitical risks, such as military conflicts and shipping disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz. Conversely, longer-term full-year outlooks, including those from the World Bank, project that prices could decline to an average of around $60 per barrel due to an ongoing global supply surplus and an economic slowdown.
Historically, crude oil prices and average returns are at their lowest during the winter months, particularly in November and December. This seasonal dip generally occurs because the demand for refined fuels, such as gasoline, drops significantly once the busy summer travel season ends. After the winter slump, prices consistently tend to rise and peak between March and the late summer months.
A front-month contract is the futures contract with the closest expiration date, which typically makes it the most actively traded and highly liquid contract on the market. Back-month contracts are all the subsequent futures contracts with delivery dates that are further out in the future. Comparing the prices of front-month and back-month contracts allows traders to identify arbitrage opportunities and gauge market expectations regarding future supply, demand, and storage costs.
Successfully trading crude oil futures demands continuous attention to the calendar and exchange specifications. Whether executing physical delivery for WTI or relying on cash settlement for Brent, understanding the mechanics of expiration dates and contract codes is essential to maintaining intended market exposure. By tracking open interest and managing calendar spreads before broker cutoff dates, investors can effectively navigate contango or backwardation without facing forced liquidation.
The risk of loss in trading financial instruments such as stocks, FX, commodities, futures, bonds, ETFs and crypto can be substantial. You may sustain a total loss of the funds that you deposit with your broker. Therefore, you should carefully consider whether such trading is suitable for you in light of your circumstances and financial resources.
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