How Traders Really Pick Markets: Let the Curve Be Your Guide

Sun Jun 21 2026
Many traders assume that if one market looks good on paper, similar chances will show up elsewhere. But recent data on over 31, 000 commodity spreads proves this wrong. When researchers mapped each spread against its forward curve—the way prices stretch out over future months—they found no single setup works everywhere. Lean Hogs and Natural Gas do best when their curves lean sharply downward, a sign called backwardation. Prices drop fast for nearby months but stay high later, giving spreads room to profit. Soybean Oil, though, prefers the opposite: smooth upward slopes, known as contango. Feeder Cattle also likes contango, creating another mismatch. This shows that each market dances to its own rhythm and no curve shape wins everywhere.
Instead of waiting for a spread to pop up, think ahead. The forward curve can act like a weather report for markets. It tells traders which sectors currently sit in historically friendly zones before they start scanning for specific trades. Right now, Crude Oil and Lean Hogs are flashing green lights, while Feeder Cattle and Soybean Oil look less promising. But a green light isn’t a golden ticket. Even in favorable markets, most spreads underperform. That’s why smart traders layer extra filters on top. Historical win rates, average weekly gains, and risk-adjusted returns help separate real chances from duds. For example, both Crude Oil and Lean Hogs passed the first test, yet only two quality spreads emerged in Crude Oil when deeper checks ran. The lesson? Use the curve to narrow your targets, then let hard numbers pick the actual trades. Combining both steps keeps focus sharp and surprises low.
https://localnews.ai/article/how-traders-really-pick-markets-let-the-curve-be-your-guide-62153842

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