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Open an account with us to start trading commodities – including metals, energies and agricultural markets.

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★★★★★

All: ▲ 33.3%

80%

Average

+ $2,473,000.65

Performance

Quarter 🔻

Commodities
$123,456

Stocks
$654,321

Profit
+ $530,865

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Helping you meet your investment goals

We recognize the challenges that come with larger, more complex portfolios. Your Wealth Management team will work with you to identify what products and services will meet your needs. And we’ll do it in a way that works best for you.

Find an option to suit you

Leverage with financial instruments like underlying index, forex, stocks, commodities options, crypto or CFDs

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Get the leverage you want by choosing your strike and trade size ,
Speculate based on rising, falling or neutral prices with your strategies in the ever-changing market

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Develop simple or complex options strategies for your bought position despite market fluctuations, as options can become profitable until expiry

Limited risk

Cap your maximum risk when you buy daily options – you’ll never lose more than the margin you pay to open

Supply and demand shocks

Strategic Portfolios
with commodities

When constructing portfolios that include
commodities, the goal is to find the optimal asset
allocation among equities, bonds, and other financial instruments that produces the best
risk-return trade-off.

★★★★★

While commodities offer protection against inflation, over the long run they have a lower risk premium than equities. Replacing equities with
commodities in a strategic portfolio may result in underperformance compared to a market-
capitalized portfolio.

★★★★★

Incorporating commodities may improve investors’ outcomes and add more resilience to a portfolio. For inflation-hedging portfolios that require exposure to assets with high sensitivity to inflation, commodities can effectively help mitigate
inflation risk.

★★★★★

Commodities can play an important role in a goals-based inflation beta target strategy, an approach that immunizes a strategic portfolio to inflation with a specified inflation beta. For investors who target wealth growth, nonstatic, time-varying portfolios can vary the optimal level of commodities based on the economy and inflation.

★★★★★

The benefits of having diversification and positive real return expectations can make commodity investing an attractive component of strategic asset allocation. The historically strong relationship between commodities and inflation makes this asset class even more compelling for goals-based investing, specifically for unexpected inflation hedging.

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Instant payouts

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Instant payouts

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User collaboration

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The market is often seen as a whole, but each product has distinct behavior, so it’s crucial to study them carefully

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FAQs

Frequently asked questions

What are commodities?

Commodities are raw materials or primary goods used in commerce. They are generally categorized into:

  • Hard commodities: natural resources like oil, gold, and copper.
  • Soft commodities: agricultural products like wheat, coffee, and cotton.

They are traded in standardized contracts on commodities exchanges worldwide.

How are commodities traded?

Commodities are traded in several ways:

Stocks of commodity producers (e.g., mining or energy companies)

Futures contracts (agreements to buy/sell at a future date and price)

Spot markets (immediate delivery)

Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and mutual funds (track commodity prices)

Why do investors buy commodities?

Commodities are often used for:

Hedging: Producers (like farmers or oil companies) lock in prices to reduce risk.

Diversification: They usually have low correlation with stocks and bonds.

Inflation hedge: Hard assets like gold and oil often hold value during inflationary times.

Speculation: Traders profit from price movements.

What affects commodity prices?

Commodity prices are influenced by:

Global economic growth (affects demand for energy and metals)

Supply & demand dynamics

Geopolitical events (wars, sanctions, trade policies)

Weather conditions (especially for agriculture)

Currency fluctuations (since most commodities are priced in USD)

What are the risks of investing in commodities?

High volatility (prices can swing sharply)

Leverage risk (in futures, small price moves lead to big gains or losses)

Political and environmental risks (supply chain disruptions, regulations, droughts)

No income stream (unlike stocks or bonds, commodities don’t pay dividends or interest)

How can beginners invest in commodities?

Commodity ETFs/ETNs: Easy access without handling futures directly.

Mutual funds: Professionally managed baskets of commodity-related assets.

Stocks of commodity producers: Indirect exposure through companies in mining, oil, or agriculture.

Physical ownership: Buying gold, silver, or other precious metals in physical form.

What is the difference between direct and indirect commodity investment?

Direct: Buying futures contracts or physical commodities.

Indirect: Buying ETFs, mutual funds, or stocks tied to commodities.
Direct investing is riskier and requires expertise, while indirect investing is more beginner-friendly.

Are commodities good for long-term investment?

Commodities can protect against inflation and provide diversification, but they are highly cyclical. They are best used as a small allocation (5–15%) in a diversified portfolio, rather than as a primary long-term investment.

What are some popular commodities to invest in?

Precious metals: Gold, silver, platinum

Energy: Crude oil, natural gas

Industrial metals: Copper, aluminum, nickel

Agriculture: Wheat, corn, soybeans, coffee

Each has unique risk and demand drivers.

How do professionals use commodities in portfolio strategy?

Hedging: Protecting against inflation or currency depreciation.

Diversification: Reducing overall portfolio volatility.

Tactical trading: Exploiting short-term price movements through futures or options.
Institutional investors often allocate commodities during inflationary or supply-constrained periods.

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