Commodities CFDs
Trade the most popular CFDs on commodities from around the globe, including energies, agriculture, and metals. Oscar Markets delivers tight pricing and flexible conditions, offering you a powerful trading experience.
Oscar Markets provides a flexible and convenient way to access some of the world’s most popular CFDs on commodities, including energies and metals, all within your MetaTrader 5 trading platform.
Commodity markets attract speculators due to their susceptibility to dramatic shifts in supply and demand.
Commodities CFDs
Facts
- Over 22 CFDs on Commodities to trade
- Energy, Agriculture and Metals
- Spot and Futures CFDs
- Leverage up to 1:1000
- Spreads as low as 0.01 pips
- Deep liquidity
Energies
Oscar Markets enables you to trade spot energy contracts, including Crude Oil, Brent, and Natural Gas, directly from your preferred trading platform against the US Dollar.
Trading energy contracts as spot instruments offers significant advantages for investors focused solely on price speculation.
Precious Metals
Oscar Markets enables you to trade spot prices for metals, including Gold and Silver against the US Dollar or Euro, and Platinum or Palladium against the US Dollar as currency pairs, with leverage up to 1:1000.
Precious Metals
At Oscar Markets, we offer more than just energy and metal contracts. You can trade a variety of soft commodities, including corn, soybeans, sugar, cocoa, coffee, and wheat, as CFDs—all with low spreads and leverage up to 1:100.
How does CFDs on Commodities trading work?
CFDs on commodities encompass energy, agriculture, and metals, all of which are traded in futures markets and derive their value from supply and demand dynamics.
Supply factors include weather conditions for agriculture and extraction costs for mining and energy products. Demand for CFDs on commodities is influenced by broader factors such as economic cycles and population growth. These CFDs can be traded either as standalone products or in pairs.
Metals and energy commodities are typically traded against major currencies, while agriculture futures contracts are traded as standalone contracts.
Commodity trading example
The gross profit on your trade is calculated as follows:
Opening Price
$435.25 * 100 contracts * 4 = USD $174,100
Closing Price
$460 * 100 contracts * 4 = USD $184,000
Gross Profit on Trade
USD $184,000 – $174,100 = $9,900
Opening the Position
You buy 100 contracts of Wheat (4 bushels per contract) at 435.25 which equals USD $174,100 (435.25 * 100 * 4).(4 bushels per contract) at 435.25 which equals USD $174,100 (435.25 * 100 * 4).
Closing the Position
Your research surrounding weather conditions turns out to be correct. Lower crop yields this year have caused Wheat prices to increase to 460.00/462.15. You exit your position by selling your contracts at 460.