COMMODITY
About Commodity
Welcome to our Commodity Trading educational page, designed for traders who want to understand how commodities work, how global supply & demand affects prices, and how futures and intraday opportunities are created in energy, metal and agricultural markets. Commodity market is one of the oldest trading markets in the world and still remains one of the most profitable and high-volatility segments for modern traders.
Commodity prices move based on demand, supply, production data, global economic cycles, geopolitical events, dollar index, international trade and natural resources availability. Because of strong volatility and institutional participation, commodities create powerful directional trends and opportunities across multiple timeframes.
What is Commodity Trading?
Commodity trading is the buying and selling of natural resources like Gold, Silver, Crude Oil, Natural Gas, Copper, and Agricultural products. Unlike stock trading where you invest in a company, here you trade real-world physical assets that are important for the global economy.
Commodities are divided into multiple categories:
Metals
Energy
Agriculture
Soft commodities
Each category reacts differently to global market conditions.
Types of Commodities
1️⃣ Precious Metals
Includes:
Gold
Silver
Prices depend on inflation, currency value and global uncertainty.
2️⃣ Energy
Includes:
Crude Oil
Natural Gas
Price reacts to production, consumption and geopolitical tension.
3️⃣ Base Metals
Includes:
Copper
Zinc
Aluminum
Nickel
Prices depend on industrial demand and manufacturing data.
4️⃣ Agriculture
Includes:
Wheat
Corn
Soybean
Sugar
Cotton
Prices depend on climate, supply chains and government policy.
Commodity Futures
Most traders do commodity trading through Futures Contracts which allow leverage-based trading without taking physical delivery.
Advantages:
Leverage
High profit potential
No ownership required
Two-side trading
Fast movement
High liquidity in major commodities
Professional traders prefer futures due to volatility and trend opportunities.
Commodity Trading Exchanges
Commodity trading takes place on:
MCX (India)
NCDEX (India)
CME
NYMEX
LME
MCX (Multi Commodity Exchange) is the most active commodity market in India.
Why Commodity Trading is Popular
Because commodities offer:
High volatility
Institutional movement
Global influence
Long trends
Daily opportunities
Clear price behaviour
Commodities are influenced by global supply chain, therefore volatility stays consistent.
How Commodity Prices Move
Commodity price movement depends on:
demand
supply
scarcity
production rate
global trade
geopolitical news
natural climate
banking policies
dollar index
inflation
oil politics
Risk in Commodity Trading
Commodity trading requires discipline because volatility is aggressive.
Important risk controls:
Strict Stop loss
Small position size
Avoid revenge trading
Avoid news trading
Control emotions
No over leverage
Commodity traders must focus on discipline first and profit later.
Technical Analysis in Commodities
Common tools used:
Support and Resistance
Price action
Trendlines
Supply & Demand zones
Volume analysis
Moving averages
RSI
MACD
Market structure
Breakout strategy
Commodity charts respect technical levels strongly due to institutional orders.
Commodity Intraday Trading
Commodity intraday is extremely popular due to strong trends and active movement. Most traders focus on:
Gold intraday
Silver intraday
Crude oil
Natural gas
These instruments move aggressively and create multiple entry opportunities during volatile sessions.
Global Market Influence
Commodity price reacts to:
US market
European market
Middle East tensions
USD Index
OPEC decisions
Russia-Ukraine politics
Inflation reports
Commodity traders must follow global news carefully.
Fundamental Factors
Key economic indicators:
CPI inflation
Interest rates
PPI
FOMC decisions
Manufacturing data
Storage report
Inventory report
Fundamentals drive long term direction while technicals guide entries and exits.
Beginners Guide
Beginners should
learn basics
practice demo
understand volatility
learn price action
backtest strategy
follow risk management
avoid big lots
start with major commodities only
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can we trade commodities with small capital?
Yes through margin based futures contracts.
Q: Which commodity is best for beginners?
Gold and Crude Oil are most traded but require discipline.
Q: Is commodity trading risky?
Risk depends on knowledge and discipline.
Disclaimer
This Commodity Trading page is only for educational purpose. We do not provide any trading tips, investment advice, buy or sell recommendations. All trades are subject to market risk and must be done based on personal understanding and research.