Energy CFDs
FXTRADING.com offers both crude oil and natural gas CFDs to meet the demands of clients who engage in energy trading. The most popular grades of crude oils for trading are Brent North Sea Crude (commonly known as Brent Crude) and West Texas Intermediate (commonly known as WTI). Along with natural gas, they have have become the most prevalent forms of energy CFDs on the market.
Trade bullish or bearish markets
Trade on margin
Highly volatile with more trading opportunities
Hedge physical commodities, sectors or ETFs
Everything a Trader Needs
- Over 10,000 Trading Instruments
- Cutting-edge Trading Analytics
- Top Shelf Trading Environment
- Multiple Funding Methods
- Fully Regulated and Licensed
Multi-Asset Platform
Trade over 10,000 instruments covering stocks, crypto, forex, commodities and more
Top Shelf Trading Environment
Enjoy top-shelf trading conditions, with costs that beat 80% of our peers
Veteran Expertise
FXT’s team consists of trading veterans with a deep, first-hand understanding of markets
Experience-Driven Innovation
FXT’s product developers aren’t just technical experts – they're traders who’ve been in the trenches themselves
Advanced Trading Tools
Cutting-edge trading tools developed by an in-house team to drive the success of traders at all levels
Fully Regulated Brokerage
We’re licensed and fully compliant across multiple jurisdictions to ensure the highest levels of integrity
Register
Verify
Fund
Trade
Which energy CFDs can I trade with FXTRADING.com?
Three energy CFDs currently on offer - Western Texas Intermediate (WTI), Brent Crude (BRENT) and Low Sulphur Gasoil (GASOIL).
What is the difference between WTI and Brent Crude oil?
WTI (Western Texas Intermediate) is usually sourced from US oil fields and is considered the benchmark for US-produced crude oil. At the same time, Brent is based on crude oil extracted from the North Sea and is considered an international standard.
What is Low Sulphur Gasoil (GASOIL)?
Also known as red diesel, low sulphur gasoil is widely used in off-road vehicles, tractors and horticulture machinery.
What currencies are WTI and Brent traded in?
Despite geographical differences, both WTI and Brent are priced in US dollars. Brent is mainly sourced from the North Sea, and WTI is pumped from North American oil fields.
Why are oil prices sensitive to geopolitical events?
Oil is used for energy and has a major input to the global economy. Any supply or demand threat, whether due to wars, production cuts, weather etc., can directly impact oil prices.