Broker & Execution
Broker selection is part of my trading workflow.
I use different brokers for different requirements: futures and micro futures for exchange-traded commodity exposure, CFDs for flexible sizing and product coverage, TradingView-connected brokers for chart-based execution, and MT5 brokers for automation tests.
The goal is not to find one perfect broker for every trader or every market. The goal is to match the trading idea with the most practical execution route.
Transparency Notice
Some links on this page may be affiliate links. This means that I may receive compensation if you open an account through one of these links. This does not change the cost for you. More importantly, the broker structure shown here reflects my actual trading workflow: different brokers for different markets, products and execution needs.
Why Broker Selection Matters
On COT-Trader.com, my focus is on commodities, futures, seasonality, COT data, WASDE-related market events and selected index day trading setups. These markets differ significantly in contract size, margin requirements, liquidity, trading hours and product availability.
Because of that, broker selection is not just an administrative decision. It directly affects position sizing, risk management, execution quality and whether a specific trading idea can be implemented at all.
In my own workflow, I generally prefer to stay close to the real futures market whenever it makes sense. However, CFDs can be useful when futures contracts are too large, when micro contracts are not available, or when a specific market can only be traded in smaller size through a CFD broker.
Futures vs CFDs — Why I Use Both
For commodity traders, the analysis is often based on futures markets. But the actual execution may happen through full-size futures, micro futures or CFDs, depending on account size, risk and product availability.
Futures
Futures are my preferred reference market for commodity analysis. They provide standardized contracts, transparent expiration cycles and a clean structure for COT, seasonality and spread analysis.
- Best reference market for commodity analysis
- Useful for COT and seasonal research
- Micro futures can reduce position size
- Contract size and margin requirements must be respected
CFDs
CFDs can be useful for smaller position sizes, flexible execution and markets where a futures contract is too large for the account size. However, CFDs are broker products and may differ from the underlying futures market.
- Useful for smaller account sizes
- Flexible sizing in selected markets
- Good for TradingView or MT5 workflows
- Spreads, financing and product availability must be checked
Broker Mapping by Trading Requirement
The table below summarizes how I think about broker selection in practice. This is not a broker ranking. It is a use-case based execution map.
| Trading Requirement | Execution Route | Typical Broker Fit |
|---|---|---|
| Commodity seasonal trades | Futures, micro futures or CFDs depending on contract size | AvaFutures / Capital.com / Pepperstone |
| Index day trading | CFDs or micro futures | Pepperstone / AvaFutures |
| Small account commodity exposure | Micro futures or CFDs | AvaFutures / Capital.com |
| TradingView-based workflow | Chart analysis, alerts and connected execution | AvaFutures / Pepperstone / Capital.com |
| MT5 automation and EA testing | MetaTrader 5 execution | Pepperstone / ActivTrades |
| Long-term investing | Stocks, ETFs and broader portfolio access | Interactive Brokers / CapTrader |
Featured Brokers in My Workflow
The brokers below are listed based on their practical role in my own trading and research workflow. A broker may be useful for one specific purpose, but that does not mean it is the best choice for every trader or every market.
AvaFutures
AvaFutures is currently one of the most interesting brokers in my workflow for futures and micro futures. For commodity traders, this can be especially relevant when the goal is to stay closer to the real futures market instead of using a CFD substitute.
I see AvaFutures mainly as a candidate for futures-based seasonal trades, smaller futures positions and TradingView-oriented execution workflows.
- Interesting for futures and micro futures
- Useful for commodity traders who want exchange-traded products
- Potential fit for seasonal swing trades
- Product availability and margin requirements must always be checked
Affiliate link. Please verify current products, margins and conditions directly with the broker before trading.
Pepperstone
Pepperstone is relevant in my workflow mainly for index CFD trading and selected commodity markets such as gold, oil or natural gas, depending on availability. It can also be useful for TradingView and MetaTrader based execution workflows.
I would not describe Pepperstone as a complete commodity solution, because product availability can change and some agricultural or exotic markets may not always be tradable.
- Useful for index CFD trading
- Relevant for TradingView and MT5 workflows
- Selected commodities may be available
- Not necessarily a full replacement for futures or broader commodity CFD coverage
Partner link not available yet.
Capital.com
Capital.com can be useful when looking for commodity CFD coverage, especially if a specific agricultural or soft commodity is not available at another broker. For smaller account sizes, CFDs may provide more flexible position sizing than full-size futures contracts.
However, CFDs should always be compared carefully against the underlying futures market, especially in terms of spread, financing, trading hours and price behavior.
- Interesting for commodity CFD coverage
- Useful for smaller position sizing
- Can complement futures-based analysis
- CFD terms and tradable markets must be verified directly in the platform
Partner link not available yet.
Interactive Brokers / CapTrader
Interactive Brokers and CapTrader are relevant for broader market access, stocks, ETFs, long-term investing and more advanced market workflows. They are not the simplest solution for every trader, but they can be very powerful for investors and traders who need broad product access.
- Strong for long-term investing
- Broad market access
- Useful for stocks, ETFs and advanced products
- More complex than many CFD-focused brokers
No partner link.
ActivTrades
ActivTrades is mainly relevant in my workflow for MetaTrader-based trading, CFD execution and EA testing. For traders who work with automated strategies, MT5 broker conditions can be an important part of the overall execution setup.
- Relevant for MT5-based workflows
- Useful for EA testing and CFD execution
- Can complement TradingView-based research
- Demo and live execution conditions should always be compared
No partner link.
Commodity Execution Notes
Commodity trading often requires an additional execution decision. The analysis may be based on the futures market, but the actual trade can be executed through a full-size futures contract, a micro futures contract or a CFD substitute.
This is especially important for seasonal commodity trades, where the trading idea may be attractive from a COT or seasonality perspective, but the futures contract size or margin requirement may not fit the account.
| Market Type | Typical Futures Reference | Possible Execution Route | Key Question |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grains | ZC, ZW, ZS | Futures / Micro Futures / CFDs | Is the contract size suitable for the account? |
| Soft Commodities | KC, SB, CT, CC, OJ | Futures / CFDs depending on availability | Is the market available at the broker? |
| Metals | GC, SI, HG, PL | Futures / Micro Futures / CFDs | Does the broker product track the underlying market closely enough? |
| Energy | CL, NG, RB | Futures / Micro Futures / CFDs | Are spread, volatility and margin acceptable? |
| Indices | ES, NQ, YM, FDAX | Futures / Micro Futures / CFDs | Is the setup designed for day trading or swing trading? |
My Broker Selection Checklist
Before choosing a broker or execution product for a trading idea, I usually check the following points.
1. Product Availability
Is the market actually tradable at the broker? This is especially important for agricultural and soft commodities.
2. Contract Size
Does the product size fit the account and the intended risk per trade? Full-size futures can be too large for some setups.
3. Margin Requirement
Is the required margin reasonable for the account size and the expected holding period?
4. Spread & Costs
Are spreads, commissions and overnight financing acceptable for the expected trade duration?
5. Platform Fit
Does the broker fit the workflow — TradingView execution, MT5 automation, long-term investing or manual order placement?
6. Price Tracking
If I use a CFD substitute, does it track the underlying futures market closely enough for the strategy?
Important Risk Notes
Trading futures, CFDs and leveraged products involves significant risk and can result in substantial losses. Broker selection does not remove trading risk.
- Always check margin requirements before entering a trade.
- Compare futures prices with CFD prices before using a substitute product.
- Be aware of spreads, commissions, overnight financing and contract expiration.
- Use position sizing that fits your account size and risk limits.
- Do not choose a broker only because of an affiliate link or promotion.
Affiliate Disclosure
COT-Trader.com may receive compensation from selected partners if you use certain links on this page. I only list brokers and platforms that are relevant to my own research, trading workflow or execution analysis. An affiliate relationship does not mean that a broker is suitable for every trader.
Please do your own due diligence and make sure that the broker, product type, margin requirements, costs and regulatory conditions fit your personal situation.
Related Resources
If you want to understand how broker selection fits into my broader trading process, the following resources may be useful:
Trading Strategies
Seasonal strategies, VWAP setups and structured trading workflows.
View StrategiesTradingView Tools
Tools and scripts for COT, seasonality, WASDE dates and market structure.
View ToolsCOT Data Explained
Learn how Commitment of Traders data can support commodity market analysis.
Learn COT DataCommodity Seasonality
Understand seasonal patterns and how they can support trading research.
Learn Seasonality