Risk Warning: CFDs and spread bets are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage.
Approximately 80% of retail client accounts lose money when trading in CFDs and spread bets.
You should consider whether you understand how CFDs and spread bets work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

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Trade Commodities

Commodities are essential raw materials like gold, silver, and oil that respond to changes in supply and demand, geopolitical events, and economic conditions. Gold often serves as a safe haven during market uncertainty.

Introduction to Trading Commodities

Commodities represent the foundational building blocks of the global economy, precious metals like gold and silver, energy resources such as crude oil and natural gas, and agricultural products including wheat, coffee, and corn. Unlike stocks or currencies, commodity prices are driven by tangible factors: weather patterns affecting crop yields, OPEC production decisions influencing oil supply, mining output impacting metal availability, and geopolitical tensions disrupting trade routes. These real-world dynamics create unique trading opportunities for those who understand supply and demand fundamentals. Many traders turn to gold and silver as safe-haven assets during economic uncertainty, market volatility, or currency devaluation. Others focus on energy markets to capitalise on seasonal demand shifts or geopolitical developments. Agricultural commodities offer exposure to weather-dependent price swings and global food demand trends. Trading commodities via CFDs or spread bets gives you access to these markets without the complexities of physical ownership, storage, or delivery, allowing you to speculate on price movements with leverage and flexibility across global exchanges.

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Key Benefits of Trading Commodities

Portfolio Diversification Opportunities

Commodities often move independently from stocks and bonds, providing natural diversification that can help balance your portfolio during different market cycles.

Potential Hedge Against Inflation

When inflation rises, commodity prices, especially precious metals and energy, tend to increase, offering protection against the erosion of purchasing power.

Exposure to Global Supply and Demand Dynamics

Trade on tangible market forces: harvest seasons, production quotas, industrial demand, infrastructure projects, and emerging market consumption patterns.

Around-the-Clock Trading Availability

Major commodities like gold, silver, and crude oil trade nearly 24 hours across global exchanges, giving you flexibility to respond to breaking news and overnight developments.

Key risks of trading Commodities

High Price Volatility Due to Supply Disruptions

Unexpected events like hurricanes affecting oil refineries, droughts damaging crops, or mine closures, can trigger sharp price swings in commodity markets.

Susceptible to Geopolitical and Weather Events

Political instability in producing regions, trade sanctions, export restrictions, and extreme weather patterns can cause rapid, unpredictable price movements.

Storage and Transportation Costs Affect Pricing

While CFD traders don't physically hold commodities, underlying storage, insurance, and logistics costs are reflected in futures prices and can impact your positions.

Leverage Amplifies Both Gains and Losses

Commodity markets can move dramatically. While leverage magnifies profit potential, it equally increases loss exposure if the market moves against your position.

Popular Commodities You Can Trade

Access actively traded commodities across energy, precious metals, and soft commodity markets:

Energy Commodities
Crude Oil Brent

Global benchmark for oil pricing, sourced from North Sea production. Brent reflects international supply-demand dynamics, OPEC+ policy decisions, geopolitical tensions, and global economic growth expectations.

Crude Oil US (WTI)

West Texas Intermediate crude serves as the primary US oil benchmark. WTI prices respond to American production levels, inventory data, refinery capacity, and domestic energy policy.

Gasoil

European heating oil and diesel fuel benchmark. Gasoil prices fluctuate with seasonal heating demand, refinery output, crude oil costs, and industrial consumption patterns.

UK Natural Gas

British natural gas futures are sensitive to weather patterns, storage levels, LNG imports, and European energy market conditions. offers significant volatility during winter heating season.

Precious Metals
Gold Spot (XAU/USD)

Real-time gold pricing for immediate settlement. The ultimate safe haven asset attracting demand during economic uncertainty, currency weakness, inflation concerns, and geopolitical stress.

Gold Future

Standardised gold contracts for future delivery. Futures trading provides leverage and price discovery, widely used by institutional traders and hedgers managing long-term positions.

Silver Spot (XAG/USD)

Immediate settlement silver pricing. Both an industrial metal and monetary asset, silver exhibits higher volatility than gold while responding to manufacturing demand, solar panel production, and investment flows.

Silver Future

Forward-dated silver contracts offering leveraged exposure to price movements. Popular among traders seeking to capitalise on silver's dual role as industrial commodity and precious metal.

Soft Commodities
Orange Juice

Frozen concentrated orange juice futures tied to Florida and Brazil crop conditions. Highly sensitive to frost, hurricanes, disease outbreaks, and shifting consumer preferences.

Sugar Raw (Sugar #11)

Unrefined cane sugar benchmark driven by Brazilian production, Indian monsoons, ethanol policy, and global sweetener demand from food and beverage industries.

Sugar White (Sugar #5)

Refined white sugar futures reflecting European consumption patterns and premium processing costs over raw sugar equivalents.

US Cocoa

New York cocoa futures based on West African production (Ivory Coast, Ghana). Prices respond to weather, crop disease, political stability, and chocolate industry demand.

UK Cocoa

London-traded cocoa contracts with slight specification differences from US cocoa. Both markets track similar fundamental drivers but may exhibit price spreads based on regional factors.

Cotton

Natural fibre commodity influenced by planting acreage, weather in key growing regions (US, India, China), textile industry demand, and competition from synthetic alternatives.

Coffee Arabica

Premium coffee variety (60% of global production) grown at higher altitudes. Prices sensitive to Brazilian weather, Central American harvests, and specialty coffee consumption trends.

Coffee Robusta

Hardier, higher-caffeine coffee variety (40% of production) used primarily in instant coffee and espresso blends. Driven by Vietnamese and Indonesian supply, with different price dynamics than Arabica.

Start Trading Now

Start Trading Commodities Now

Open your Lunaro account today and diversify your portfolio with access to precious metals, energy, and agricultural markets.

Why Trade Commodities with Lunaro?

Access to Precious Metals, Energy, and Agricultural Markets
Trade gold, silver, crude oil, natural gas, and agricultural products from a single account.

Transparent Pricing and Competitive Spreads
Clear costs with tight spreads on major commodities. No hidden fees or surprise charges.