Agriculture fees
Libertex agriculture fees
Agricultural commodity CFDs on Libertex — 7 instruments covering coffee, sugar, wheat, corn, soybeans, cocoa and cotton. Flat 0.03% commission across all of them, multiplier up to 1:100 on six of the seven (cotton caps at 1:10). This page covers cost mechanics and the full agriculture instrument table.
Featured instruments
All agriculture instruments on Libertex
All 7 agricultural commodity CFDs offered on Libertex with their multiplier ceiling and 0.03% uniform commission. Six cap at 1:100; cotton at 1:10 reflecting thinner market. $10 minimum trade across the board.
| Instrument | Symbol | Max multiplier | Commission | Min trade |
|---|
Agricultural instruments link to underlying futures contracts on ICE (coffee, sugar, cocoa, cotton) and CBOT (wheat, corn, soybeans). All cash-settled; no physical delivery.
Cost mechanics
What you pay on an agriculture trade
Four mechanics on every agriculture CFD position. Spreads are wider than on metals or energy because agricultural softs trade in thinner markets — particularly during off-session hours and around seasonal weather events.
Spread wider than metals or energy
Per entryAgricultural softs trade in thinner markets than gold or oil — bid-ask spreads on coffee, cocoa and sugar are proportionally wider than on majors. Tightest during the underlying futures exchange's primary session (ICE for softs, CBOT for grains).
0.03% opening commission
Per tradeUniform per-trade fee on multiplied position size. On a $10,000 wheat notional ($100 margin × 1:100): 0.03% = $3 commission. Visible on the ticket.
Overnight financing and seasonal risk
Per night heldPer-night charge on leveraged positions. Agricultural prices are heavily seasonal — weather events (drought, frost, hurricane disruption to ports) can produce double-digit percent moves overnight. Multi-day agriculture plays carry meaningful financing plus weather-gap risk.
Cotton multiplier capped at 1:10
AlwaysSix of seven agricultural softs cap at 1:100 (coffee, sugar, wheat, corn, soybeans, cocoa). Cotton is the exception at 1:10 — thinner market, larger intraday moves and limited hedging capacity. The lower multiplier bounds exposure to cotton's higher-variance pricing.
Related
Where to read next
Three pages cover surrounding context — fees hub, leverage mechanics, and the demo where agricultural CFDs can be tested.
Fees hub
Cross-category cost overview — agriculture sits in the 0.03% commission band alongside other commodities, stocks, indices, ETFs and bonds.
Fees hubLeverage explained
Why 6 of 7 agricultural commodities cap at 1:100 but cotton at 1:10. Liquidity-and-volatility framing for multiplier caps.
LeverageDemo account
$50,000 virtual, real-time agricultural pricing. Test wheat or coffee CFD execution and overnight financing impact on the order ticket.
Demo
FAQ
Agriculture fee questions
Trading in financial instruments is a risky activity and can bring not only profits, but also losses. The amount of possible losses is limited by the amount of the deposit.