Commodities

Commodities – Precious Metals

  • Competitive pricing on Spot Gold (XAU/USD) and Silver (XAG/USD).
  • Take advantage of both directional trading on upward and downward price actions
  • Limited Risks – invest as little as USD 200.00
  • Zero Commissions charged
  • Up to 100x leverage
  • Tight Spread Protection during high volatility moments
  • Flexible choice of Trading account that suit your investment style

Commodities – Major Futures Market

  • Competitive pricing on Crude Light Oil, Brent Oil, Natural Gas, Aluminum, Copper, Lead, Nickel, Tin and Zinc, Wheat, Corn, Coco, Cotton, Coffee, Sugar and others
  • Take advantage of both directional trading on upward and downward price actions
  • Limited Risks – invest as little as USD 200.00
  • Zero Commissions charged
  • Up to 100x leverage
  • Tight Spread Protection during high volatility moments
  • Flexible choice of Trading account that suit your investment style
  • XAUUSD. – gold
  • XAGUSD. – silver
  • CL. – Light crude oil is traded on the CME Globex, CME ClearPort, (CME Group) and Open Outcry (New York) futures exchange venues and is quoted in U.S. dollars and cents per barrel. Its product symbol is "CL" and its contract size is 1,000 barrels (160 m3) with a minimum fluctuation of $0.01 per barrel.
  • NGAS. – Natural gas prices, as with other commodity prices, are mainly driven by supply and demand fundamentals. However, natural gas prices may also be linked to the price of crude oil and/or petroleum products, especially in continental Europe.
  • DAX. – The DAX (Deutscher Aktien IndeX, formerly Deutscher Aktien-Index (German stock index)) is a blue chip stock market index consisting of the 30 major German companies trading on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. Prices are taken from the electronic Xetra trading system. According to Deutsche Börse, the operator of Xetra, DAX measures the performance of the Prime Standard’s 30 largest German companies in terms of order book volume and market capitalization.
  • CAC. – (French: CAC quarante [kak kaʁɑ̃t]) is a benchmark French stock market index. The index represents a capitalization-weighted measure of the 40 most significant values among the 100 highest market caps on the Paris Bourse (now Euronext Paris). It is one of the main national indices of the pan-European stock exchange group Euronext alongside Brussels' BEL20, Lisbon's PSI-20 and Amsterdam's AEX.
  • FTSE. – The FTSE 100 Index, also called FTSE 100, FTSE, or, informally, the "footsie" is a share index of the stocks of the 100 companies listed on the London Stock Exchange with the highest market capitalization. It is one of the most widely used stock indices and is seen as a gauge of business prosperity. The index is maintained by the FTSE Group, an independent company jointly owned by the Financial Times and the London Stock Exchange. Its name derives from the acronym of its two parent companies, but has since been registered as a limited company in its own right.
  • DOW. – The Dow Jones Industrial Average, also called the Industrial Average, the Dow 30, or simply the Dow, is a stock market index, and one of several indices created by Wall Street Journal editor and Dow Jones & Company co-founder Charles Dow. It was founded on May 26, 1896, and is now owned by Dow Jones Indexes, which is majority owned by the CME Group. The average is named after Dow and one of his business associates, statistician Edward Jones. It is an index that shows how 30 large, publicly owned companies based in the United States have traded during a standard trading session in the stock market.[1] It is the second oldest U.S. market index after the Dow Jones Transportation Average, which was also created by Dow.
  • NSDQ. – The NASDAQ Stock Market is an American stock exchange. "NASDAQ" originally stood for "National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations". It is the second-largest stock exchange by market capitalization in the world, after the New York Stock Exchange. As of January 25, 2011, there are 2,711 listings, with a total capitalization of over $4.5 trillion. The NASDAQ has more trading volume than any other electronic stock exchange in the world. The exchange is owned by NASDAQ OMX Group, which also owns the OMX stock exchange network.
  • SP. – The S&P 500, or the Standard & Poor 500, is a stock market index based on the common stock prices of 500 top publicly traded American companies. It differs from other stock market indices like the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Nasdaq Composite because it tracks a different number of stocks and weights the stocks differently. It is one of the most commonly followed indices and many consider it the best representation of the market and a bellwether for the U.S. economy.[3] It is a free-float capitalization- weighted index.
  • CORN – corn
  • WHEAT –wheat
  • BRENT – The ICE Brent Oil Crude futures is a deliverable contract based on EFP delivery with an option to cash settle.
  • COFFEE – The Coffee contract is the world benchmark for Arabica coffee. The contract prices physical delivery of exchange-gradegreen beans, from one of 19 countries of origin in a licensed warehouse to one of several ports in the U.S and Europe, with stated premiums/discounts for ports and growths.
  • SUG 11 – The Sugar No. 11 contract is the world benchmark contract for raw sugar trading. The contract prices the physical delivery of raw cane sugar, free-on-board the receiver's vessel to a port within the country of origin of the sugar.
  • COPP – Copper, one of the oldest and easily mined commodities, is the world's third most widely used metal, after iron and aluminum. Copper today is primarily used in highly cyclical industries such as construction and industrial machinery manufacturing. Profitable extraction of the metal depends on cost-efficient high-volume mining techniques, and supply is sensitive to the political situation particularly in those countries where copper mining is a government-controlled enterprise.