Competitive Spreads
Spreads from 0.007 on Natural Gas
Transparent Pricing
No hidden fees for opening or closing trades
Average Execution Time Under 0.004
With bandwidth capable of over 100,000 trades per second.
Funds' Protection
All client deposits are insured and held in segregated accounts
Award-Winning Support
Our support professionals have earned a 95%+ client satisfaction rate
Best-in-class execution
Over 93.6% of orders filled at requested price or better
Trade Commodities Markets Your Way
Trade commodities on our exclusive next-generation trading platform
Start Trading Now
Diversify Your Portfolio
With 1000+ Instruments Across 7 Asset Classes
Frequently Asked Questions
Find quick answers to common questions about our services
What commodities does DigitalProfits24 offer?
DigitalProfits24 clients can take advantage of a wide variety of market scenarios and outcomes.
DigitalProfits24 currently offers CFDs on five types of spot commodities, as well as 14 highly tradable commodity futures, allowing you to express a commodity view, both long and short, in a more targeted and sophisticated way.
DigitalProfits24 Hard Commodity Markets:
Brent crude futures, Brent crude (spot), copper futures, gold (spot), platinum (spot), silver (spot), diesel futures, gasoline futures, light crude futures (WTI), Light Crude (WTI spot), and natural gas futures.
DigitalProfits24 Soft Commodity Markets:
Cocoa futures, coffee futures, cotton futures, orange juice futures, corn futures, soybean futures, sugar futures, and wheat futures.
As you can see, DigitalProfits24 customers have the ability to be more precise in their commodities positioning due to the wide range of tradable assets. This flexibility has benefitted our traders during the pandemic and beyond, as supply chain disruptions have created opportunities on both the long and short side of commodity markets.
What’s the difference between Brent Crude and Light Crude?
Global markets require that the commodities they list are standardized so that any unit is interchangeable and of equal quality with any other.
In the case of crude oil, the sulfur, wax, and metal content of one type of crude oil can vary greatly from another. This makes it harder and more expensive to refine certain crude oils into the gasoline used to power consumer vehicles.
A region’s crude oil can be measured for quality and compared to that of another region, and over the years, different benchmark grades have developed.
The most popular of these grades is West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil, also known as "light sweet crude." It is less dense, less viscous, and contains lower sulfur and heavy metal contaminants than "heavy crudes."
The second most popular premium-grade crude oil is Brent crude, which is considered a light crude despite being slightly heavier than WTI.
WTI (LCRUDE) is extracted from the North American Permian Basin, while Brent crude is extracted from over a dozen wells in the North Sea off the coast of England. These offshore wells are harder and more expensive to mine, causing Brent crude to trade at a slight premium compared to WTI.