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Published on 25.06.2026 / Modified on 25.06.2025

How to trade gold

Find out how to trade gold and why it remains one of the most sought-after markets for traders across Europe, the UK, the Middle East and beyond. Gold has fascinated investors for centuries, but today's traders approach it with sharper tools, tighter spreads, and real-time data. Whether you're just getting started or looking to sharpen your edge, understanding the gold market is essential before putting any capital on the line.

This is your complete guide to gold trading, covering everything from how gold prices move to the instruments you can use to get exposure. We'll walk you through the key factors that drive price action and the instruments available, giving you the foundation to develop a solid trading strategy that suits your style and risk appetite.

What is gold trading?

Gold trading involves buying and selling gold or taking a position on the price of gold across a range of instruments from futures to CFDs and ETFs. At FxPro, we offer access to the underlying gold market through derivative instruments like CFDs, allowing you to speculate on price movements with flexibility and precision. It's a market that runs almost around the clock, five days a week.

Why trade gold?

The value of gold is influenced by a wide range of factors, from central bank decisions and inflation data to geopolitical tensions and currency fluctuations. Unlike stocks, gold isn't tied to a single company's performance, which makes gold trading a distinct and often complementary part of a broader market approach. There are plenty of reasons why the gold market attracts traders of all levels. Here are five worth knowing:

  • Safe-haven demand during instability: When markets turn volatile and economic uncertainty creeps in, traders and investors alike turn to gold as a store of value. It has a long-standing reputation for holding its worth when other assets struggle.
  • Portfolio diversification: Gold tends to move independently of equities and bonds, making it an effective way to diversify your portfolio and reduce overall exposure to any single asset class.
  • Hedging opportunities: Many traders use gold as a hedge against inflation or currency weakness, particularly when the US dollar comes under pressure.
  • Flexibility through trading CFDs on gold: Trading CFDs means you can go long or short on gold without owning the physical asset, giving you greater flexibility across different market conditions.
  • Broad market exposure: Gold is connected to everything from the gold industry to gold mining stocks and ETFs. Understanding it gives you a window into the precious metal sector as a whole.

Factors that move the gold price

Gold is a commodity whose price is determined by supply and demand, but several forces shape that balance. Here are six key drivers:

  • US Dollar strength: Gold is priced in dollars, so when the dollar weakens, gold becomes cheaper for international buyers using other currencies. This boosts international demand and, as a result, the price of gold rises.
  • Inflation and interest rates: When real interest rates are low or negative, gold becomes more attractive as it holds its purchasing power better than cash.
  • Geopolitical tensions: Gold is widely seen as a safe-haven during periods of conflict or political uncertainty, driving sharp price spikes.
  • Central bank activity: Central banks hold significant gold reserves and their buying or selling directly influences prices.
  • The supply of gold: Mining output, production costs, and reserve discoveries all affect how much gold enters the market.
  • Consumer and industrial demand for gold: Jewellery, technology, and investment products all compete for available supply, adding consistent pressure to prices.

The main ways of trading gold

There's no single way to get exposure to gold; the market offers several instruments, each with its own mechanics, costs, and risk profile. Whether you're after short-term price action or longer-term exposure, understanding your options is the first step. Here's a breakdown of the main ways to trade this commodity and what makes each one worth considering.

Gold bullion

For those who want to invest in gold in its most traditional form, bullion is the starting point. Physical gold — whether bars or coins — is bought and held as a tangible asset. Its value tracks the gold price directly, with no counterparty risk attached to a broker or exchange.

That said, bullion comes with practical challenges. Storage, insurance, and liquidity all add friction and cost. For active traders, it's rarely the most efficient route. Bullion suits those seeking long-term wealth preservation rather than short-term market participation. It's less a trading instrument and more a foundational store of value.

Gold spot

The gold spot price reflects what gold is worth right now, the live, real-time price at which it can be bought or sold in the market. It's the benchmark that most other gold instruments reference, and it's where the majority of short-term gold price discovery happens.

Trading gold at spot gives you direct exposure to the asset without the expiry dates attached to futures. It's particularly popular with active traders who want clean, straightforward access to price movements. At FxPro, spot gold is available with tight spreads and rapid execution, making it a practical choice for day traders and swing traders alike.

Gold options

Options give you the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell gold at a predetermined price before a set expiry date. This makes them a flexible instrument that you can use to speculate on direction or to protect an existing position.

The appeal of options lies in their asymmetric risk profile. Your maximum loss is limited to the premium paid, while the potential upside remains open. However, options pricing involves the complexities of time decay, volatility, and strike selection all play a role. They're best suited to traders who already have a solid grasp of the precious metal market and want more nuanced tools at their disposal.

Gold futures

A futures contract is an agreement to buy or sell gold at a specific price on a specific future date. Gold futures trade on regulated exchanges like COMEX and are widely used by institutional traders, miners, and speculators alike.

Futures offer high liquidity and transparent pricing, but they come with expiry dates that require active management. You'll need to roll your position or close it before settlement. They're also leveraged instruments, meaning both gains and losses are amplified. For retail traders, futures can be accessed through brokers, though spread betting or CFD trading often provides a more accessible alternative with similar exposure.

Gold ETFs

A gold ETF, short for exchange-traded fund, allows you to gain exposure to gold through a fund that tracks the gold price or holds physical gold on your behalf. Gold stocks and ETFs are bought and sold on stock exchanges just like shares, making them straightforward to access through most brokerage accounts.

ETFs are popular because they remove the complexity of storing physical gold while still tracking its price closely. Gold demand from institutional investors often flows through ETF products, which can, in turn, influence the spot price. They're a solid choice for traders who want a regulated, transparent vehicle without the mechanics of futures or CFDs.

Gold CFDs

Spread bets and CFDs are among the most popular ways for retail traders globally to access gold. A CFD, contract for difference, lets you speculate on gold price movements without ever taking ownership of the physical metal. You trade the difference between your entry and exit price.

CFDs allow you to buy gold, go long, if you expect prices to rise, or sell gold, go short, if you anticipate a fall in price. Leverage is available, which increases both potential returns and risk. This is where how to trade gold becomes genuinely flexible. At FxPro, our CFD offering covers gold across multiple timeframes and trading styles, with no expiry dates to manage.

Gold stocks

Rather than trading gold directly, some traders prefer exposure through gold shares — equities in companies involved in the gold industry, such as mining and production. Names like Barrick Mining Corp. (formerly Barrick Gold Corp.) are among the major gold producers whose share prices tend to correlate with the gold price, though not perfectly.

Gold traders who opt for stocks are also taking on company-specific risk — management decisions, production costs, and geopolitical exposure all affect share price independently of gold itself. That said, mining stocks can amplify moves in the gold price, offering leveraged-style exposure without using derivatives. They trade on standard stock exchanges and fit naturally into an equity-focused portfolio.

How to trade gold online

The price of gold continues to move with global events, economic shifts, and market sentiment, giving traders consistent opportunities across different conditions. Now that you learned the basics of how to trade gold, the next step is to choose a broker you can trust.

At FxPro, we give you direct access to this commodity through tight spreads, fast execution, and a range of platforms built for serious traders. Whether you're looking to capitalise on short-term moves or position yourself within the gold market for the medium term, we've got the tools to support your approach.

Open your FxPro account today and start trading gold on your terms.

Start trading gold with FxPro

  1. Open your account: Sign up and verify your FxPro account in minutes.
  2. Fund your account: Deposit using your preferred payment method to get started.
  3. Find your gold market: Locate gold on our trading platform.
  4. Analyse the market: Study charts, news, and key levels before you decide to trade.
  5. Check trading prices: Review spreads and current market price before entering.
  6. Go long or buy gold: If you expect prices to rise, open a long position, taking advantage of upward volatility.
  7. Or go short (sell gold): If you anticipate a drop, sell to profit from falling prices.
  8. Manage your risk: Set stop-losses and take-profit levels to protect your position against this commodity's sharp moves.

How to trade gold FAQs

What is gold's symbol?

Gold's trading symbol is XAU, most commonly paired with the US dollar as XAU/USD. At FxPro we also offer Gold against the Euro (XAUEUR).

Where can I trade gold?

You can trade gold right here with FxPro, through our platforms via CFDs on spot gold, with tight spreads and fast execution.

Is gold trading risky?

Like trading any commodity, gold trading carries risk. Prices can move sharply and quickly, so managing your exposure with proper risk management tools is essential.

Please note this is educational material, and should not be considered as a recommendation or trading advice.

Trade Responsibly. CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 76% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

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