BTL 880 - Commodity Market
The Banking Tutor’s Lessons
BTL 880 18-03-2026
Commodity Market
A Commodity Market is a marketplace for buying and selling
raw materials or primary products like gold, oil, wheat, and coffee, traded
physically or via derivatives (futures, options, ETFs) on exchanges like MCX
and NCDEX, allowing investors to diversify and hedge against inflation and
risk.
These markets facilitate price discovery and risk management
for essential goods, with categories including energy, metals, agriculture, and
livestock.
Key Aspects
What's Traded: Physical goods (crude oil, gold, natural gas,
grains, spices) and their derivatives (futures, options).
Categories: Energy (crude oil, natural gas), Metals (gold,
silver, copper), Agriculture (wheat, corn, sugar, cotton), Livestock &
Meat.
How to Invest: Directly buying the commodity, trading
futures/options contracts, or buying commodity-focused Exchange Traded Funds
(ETFs) or stocks.
Purpose: Portfolio diversification, hedging against
inflation, managing price volatility, and speculation.
Major Exchanges (India): MCX (Multi Commodity Exchange) for
metals, energy, etc., and NCDEX (National Commodity & Derivatives Exchange)
for agricultural commodities.
Working of Commodity Market
Standardization: Commodities are standardized (e.g., specific
grade of gold, weight of wheat) for easy trading.
Exchanges: Trades happen on regulated exchanges (like MCX,
NCDEX).
Contracts: Futures contracts lock in a price for future
delivery, crucial for producers and consumers.
Participants: Producers, consumers (hedgers), speculators,
and investors.
Benefits for Investors
Inflation Hedge: Commodities often perform well during
inflationary periods.
Diversification: Reduces overall portfolio risk.
Global Exposure: Access to international markets and
geopolitical events.
Investment & Hedging: It offers a way for investors to
diversify their portfolios and provides a potential hedge against high
inflation.
Volatility: Commodity markets are generally considered more
volatile and riskier than stock markets due to price swings heavily influenced
by supply and demand, geopolitical situations, and weather conditions.
Trading Instruments: The most popular and convenient way to
invest in commodities is through futures contracts, which obligate parties to
trade a commodity at a predetermined price and date.
Sekhar Pariti
+91 9440641014

