What Is Commodity CFD Trading

Commodity CFDs (Contracts for Difference) allow traders to profit from price fluctuations in commodities like crude oil, natural gas, and agricultural products—without physically owning or storing them. Here's how it works:

Core Concepts
  • No Physical Delivery – You're speculating on price movements, not taking possession of actual oil, wheat, or other goods.
  • Two-Way Trading – Go long (buy) or short (sell) depending on your market outlook.
  • Leverage – Control large positions with a small margin. (e.g., 1:10 leverage allows you to trade $10,000 worth of crude oil with just $1,000.)
Key Tradable Commodities
Category Examples Codes Price Drivers
Energy Crude Oil (WTI/Brent) CL / USOIL Geopolitical tensions, OPEC decisions, inventory levels
Metals Copper, Aluminum COPPER / ALUMINUM Industrial demand, global economic cycles
Agriculture Soybeans, Wheat SOYBEAN / WHEAT Weather, crop reports, export policies
Soft Commodities Coffee, Cotton COFFEE / COTTON Seasonality, supply chain disruptions
Trading Process

Choose a Commodity

For Liquidity: WTI Crude (CL) and Gold (XAU) typically offer the tightest spreads.

For Volatility: Natural Gas (NGAS) often swings more than 5% in a single day.

Choose a Direction

Buy (Long): If you expect prices to rise (e.g., winter surge in natural gas demand).

Sell (Short): If you expect prices to drop (e.g., rising crude oil inventories).

Set Your Trade Parameters

Contract Size:1 standard lot of crude = 1,000 barrels (~$80,000 value; margin at 1:10 = $8,000).

Mini lots (0.1) and micro lots (0.01) also available.

Leverage: Typically ranges from 1:5 to 1:50, depending on regulation.

Stop Loss / Take Profit: Set predefined exit levels to manage extreme swings (e.g., oil price surges during war).

Managing the Position

Profit/Loss Calculation:

Long P/L = (Close – Open) × point value × lots

Short P/L = (Open – Close) × point value × lots

Example: Crude oil moves $2 with $1 per point and 1 lot = $2,000 profit

Overnight Fees:

Long positions pay financing costs; short positions may earn interest, depending on rates.

Key Rules & Costs
  • Leverage – Magnifies both profits and losses (e.g., 1:10 leverage, 10% move = 100% gain or loss).
  • Spreads – The bid-ask difference (e.g., WTI spread = $0.03 per barrel).
  • Rollover Costs – Contracts automatically roll before expiry; may incur rollover costs (contango/backwardation).
  • Margin Call / Stop-Out – Positions are auto-closed if margin falls below a set threshold (e.g., 20%).
Advantages & Risks

Advantages

Inflation Hedge: Commodities often rise with inflation—helping offset currency depreciation.

24-Hour Access: Popular commodities like oil and gold trade nearly around the clock.

Event-Driven Opportunities: Sudden events (e.g., war, hurricanes) can trigger high-volatility profit windows.

Risks

Extreme Volatility: In 2020, oil futures briefly went negative—causing major losses for long positions.

Rollover Drag: Contango (higher future prices) increases holding costs over time.

Liquidity Risk: Niche agricultural CFDs may have wider spreads and lower trading volumes.