Your assumptions are pretty accurate. The decline in the premium is attributable to several factors. You already touched on the interest rates (cost of carry). Another very big factor is the actual price of the indices themselves. As the prices decrease, the premium will be less just because anticipated moves tend to be smaller in hard numbers (not percentage). A third factor is dividends. This part of the equation is not as clear to me without looking it up. I don't know if the dividends from the S&P 500 have actually decreased. So I can't state for sure this is a factor. But the plain vanilla real factors have decreased.Originally posted by vulture
Think for a minute about an arb executed as contracts rolled over in 1998-2000 when you had a 15-25pt premium in the futures to the cash that would eventually erode to 0 over three months. Now that same spread is somewhere in the vicinity of 2-3 points for the same duration...
I have noticed that decline in the PREM over the past 3 years and am just drawing my own conclusions and assumptions. Someone might have some better information about the implications of this decline...
Just like in options, the value of futures is based on time X cost of carry, and dividends. And of course the wildcard is volatility. Seems like we have plenty of that. But we have for quite a while.
But still, I too wonder why the decrease is so substantial. We still have a way to go until Sept. expiration, and the fair value does seem inordinately small even given the above mentioned factors. I will find out however and keep you posted. Also, anyone looking at CNBC's fair value on their tape; their values are just wrong! Pay no attention to those numbers. I saw them showing a negative number this past week as "fair value"....wish I could trade against THEM
