Spot Markets vs. Forward Markets – Timing of Transaction
What They Are
A spot market is where goods, services, or assets are bought and sold for immediate delivery and immediate payment. A forward market is where participants agree today to buy or sell at a specified future date, at a price set today.
Spot Market Characteristics
In a spot market, the transaction and the exchange happen at nearly the same time. The price is called the spot price.
Common examples:
- Buying groceries at a supermarket
- Purchasing foreign currency at an airport exchange counter
- Buying crude oil for delivery in two weeks (physical spot market)
Observable features:
- Prices fluctuate with current supply and demand
- No long-term commitment between buyer and seller
- Transaction costs are typically low
- Participants bear the risk of price changes between now and when they need the product (unless they buy exactly when needed)
Forward Market Characteristics
In a forward market, the price is fixed today, but the physical exchange happens later. The agreement is a forward contract.
Common examples:
- A farmer agreeing in March to sell wheat to a miller in September at a price set in March
- An airline agreeing to buy jet fuel six months from now at today's price
- Custom manufacturing with deposit now and delivery in three months
Observable features:
- Prices reflect expectations about future supply and demand, not just current conditions
- Contracts may include terms about quality, delivery location, and penalties for non-performance
- Reduces price risk for both parties (certainty about future price)
- Introduces counterparty risk (the other party might not honor the agreement)
Relationship Between the Two
Spot and forward markets are linked. If forward prices are consistently higher than the expected future spot price, sellers would prefer to sell in the forward market. If forward prices are lower, buyers would prefer to buy forward. Arbitrage activity pushes forward prices toward the expected future spot price.
However, forward prices are not predictions. A high forward price may reflect:
- Expected future scarcity
- Storage costs (holding inventory until the future date)
- Interest costs (money tied up in inventory)
- Insurance and risk premiums
Practical Observation for Consultants
When describing any market, a consultant would note:
- Does most trading happen on the spot or forward basis?
- If forward exists, what typical contract lengths are observed?
- Are forward prices publicly visible or privately negotiated?
- Do participants use forward contracts to reduce risk or to speculate?
Spot and forward are not alternatives in the sense of "one is better." They serve different functions. Many markets operate both simultaneously, with different participants using each for different purposes.