European Commodities Prices - Barchart.com (2024)

The Futures Commodity Groupings page lists the lead contracts of the major North American and European Futures Markets.

Broken down into different commodity groups, you will see new price data appear on the page as indicated by a "flash". Futures prices are delayed 10 minutes, per exchange rules, and are listed in CT.

Time Frames

Choose from one of two time-frames from the drop-down list found in the data table's toolbar:

Intraday - Intraday prices by commodity will always show prices from the latest session of the market. The 's' after the last price indicates the price has settled for the day.

End-of-Day - End-of-day prices by commodity are updated by 7pm CT each evening, and include the previous session's Volume and Open Interest information.

Data Updates

For pages showing Intraday views, we use the current session's data with new price data appear on the page as indicated by a "flash". Stocks: 15 minute delay (Cboe BZX data for U.S. equities is real-time), ET. Volume reflects consolidated markets. Futures and Forex: 10 or 15 minute delay, CT.

The list of symbols included on the page is updated every 10 minutes throughout the trading day. However, new stocks are not automatically added to or re-ranked on the page until the site performs its 10-minute update.

For reference, we include the date and timestamp of when the list was last updated at the top right of the page.

Page Sort

Pages are initially sorted in a specific order (depending on the data presented). You can re-sort the page by clicking on any of the column headings in the table.

Views

Most data tables can be analyzed using "Views." A View simply presents the symbols on the page with a different set of columns. Site members can also display the page using Custom Views.

Each View has a "Links" column on the far right to access a symbol's Quote Overview, Chart, Options Quotes (when available), Barchart Opinion, and Technical Analysis page. Standard Views found throughout the site include:

  • Main View: Symbol, Name, Last Price, Change, Percent Change, High, Low, Volume, and Time of Last Trade.
  • Technical View: Symbol, Name, Last Price, Today's Opinion, 20-Day Relative Strength, 20-Day Historic Volatility, 20-Day Average Volume, 52-Week High and 52-Week Low.
  • Performance View: Symbol, Name, Last Price, Weighted Alpha, YTD Percent Change, 1-Month, 3-Month and 1-Year Percent Change.
  • Fundamental View: Available only on equity pages, shows Symbol, Name, Market Cap, P/E Ratio (trailing 12 months). Earnings Per Share (trailing 12 months), Net Income, Beta, Annual Dividend, and Dividend Yield.
    Note
    : For all markets except U.S. equities, fundamental data is not licensed for downloading. Your .csv file will show "N/L" for "not licensed" when downloading from a Canadian, UK, Australian, or European stocks page.
  • Mini-Chart View: Available for Barchart Plus and Premier Members, this view displays 12 small charts per page for the symbols shown in the data table. You may change the bar type and time frame for the Mini-Charts as you scroll through the page. The default settings for Mini-Charts are found in your Site Preferences, under "Overview Charts".
  • Pre-Post Market Data: Available for Barchart Plus and Premier Members, this view will show any pre- or post-market price activity for U.S. equities only.
View Symbol More Data (+)

Unique to Barchart.com, data tables contain an option that allows you to see more data for the symbol without leaving the page. Click the "+" icon in the first column (on the left) to view more data for the selected symbol. Scroll through widgets of the different content available for the symbol. Click on any of the widgets to go to the full page. The "More Data" widgets are also available from the Links column of the right side of the data table.

Horizontal Scroll on Wide Tables

Especially when using a custom view, you may find that the number of columns chosen exceeds the available space to show all the data. In this case, the table must be horizontally scrolled (left to right) to view all of the information. To do this, you can either scroll to the bottom of the table and use the table's scrollbar, or you can scroll the table using your browser's built-in scroll:

  • Left-click with your mouse anywhere on the table.
  • Use your keyboard's left and right arrows to scroll the table.
  • Repeat this anywhere as you move through the table to enable horizontal scrolling.
Flipcharts

Also unique to Barchart, Flipcharts allow you to scroll through all the symbols on the table in a chart view. While viewing Flipcharts, you can apply a custom chart template, further customizing the way you can analyze the symbols. Flipcharts are a free tool available to Site Members.

Note: Flipcharts, unlike the full-page chart or Dashboard, does not stream updated data to the chart.

Download

Download is a free tool available to Site Members. This tool will download a .csv file for the View being displayed. For dynamically-generated tables (such as a Stock or ETF Screener) where you see more than 1000 rows of data, the download will be limited to only the first 1000 records on the table. For other static pages (such as the Russell 3000 Components list) all rows will be downloaded.

Free members are limited to 1 site download per day. Barchart Plus Members have 10 downloads per day, while Barchart Premier Members may download up to 250 .csv files per day.

Note: Due to licensing restrictions, Canadian fundamental data cannot be downloaded from Barchart.com. You will see "N/L" in a downloaded column when this is the case.

Should you require more than 250 downloads per day, please contact Barchart Sales at 866-333-7587 or email solutions@barchart.com for more information or additional options about historical market data.

European Commodities Prices - Barchart.com (2024)

FAQs

What is the price bar chart? ›

A bar chart visually depicts the opening, high, low, and closing prices of an asset or security over a specified period of time. The vertical line on a price bar represents the high and low prices for the period. The left and right horizontal lines on each price bar represent the opening and closing prices.

Where can I download commodity prices? ›

Commodity Price History and Forecast Database

One of the sources is the world bank data base that records and updates commodity prices called for some reason pink data. On this World Bank web site you can download monthly nominal prices since 1960 for more than 100 commodity price series.

What are European futures? ›

European Futures is Scotland's academic blog on Europe, from the Edinburgh Europa Institute. For information on contributing to the blog, see our Editorial Policies and Guide to Contributing.

How to check future prices? ›

It is a mathematical representation of how futures price change if any of the market variable change.
  1. Futures Price = Spot price *(1+ rf – d) ...
  2. Futures Price = Spot price * [1+ rf*(x/365) – d] ...
  3. Mid-month calculation. ...
  4. Far-month calculation. ...
  5. Buying vs.

How do you read a commodity price chart? ›

In the case of a daily chart, the top of the line would be the day's high traded price, the bottom corresponds with the day's low price, and the tick on the right side of the line is the closing price. On some charts, there is also a tick on the left side of each vertical line denoting the opening price for the period.

What is the barchart website? ›

Barchart.com Inc. provides provides fixed financial data solutions for websites. The Company offers data and information to the financial, media, agricultural and energy industries.

What are today's commodity prices? ›

Commodity Prices
EnergyPrice%
Heating Oil64.720.41%
Coal108.004.85%
RBOB Gasoline2.600.26%
Uranium92.250.54%
4 more rows

What is the best commodity platform? ›

Best Commodity Trading Apps 2024
  • tastytrade: Best for low-cost futures.
  • Interactive Brokers: Best for global trading.
  • Tradeworks: Best research strategy database.
  • NinjaTrader: Best for trading tools.
  • E*TRADE: Best for margin traders and IRAs.
  • Goldco: Best for buying gold.
  • Charles Schwab: Best for education and expert research.
5 days ago

What is the best app to track ag commodity prices? ›

Markets
  • Sunrise 360 for Apple and Android.
  • Growers Edge for Apple and Android.
  • Cattle Market Mobile for Apple and Android.
  • cmdtyView by barchart for Apple and Android.
  • Farm Logs by Bushel Farms for Apple and Android.
Apr 8, 2024

What is the difference between American and European futures? ›

In terms of riskiness, the European Options have a lower risk since the expiration date is fixed, and the loss or profit can be estimated. American options have a higher risk since the option holder of an American option can be exercised at any time.

What is the difference between American futures and European futures? ›

European Option gives the option holder the right to exercise the Option only at the pre-agreed future date and price. On the other hand, the American Option gives the option holder the right to exercise the Option at any date before the expiration date at the pre-agreed price. This applies to calls and puts.

Are European options the same as futures? ›

They are actually terms used to describe two different types of option exercise. European Style Options: can be exercised only at expiration. American Style Options: can be exercised at any time prior to expiration. The majority of CME Group options on futures are European style and can be exercised only at expiration.

Why is futures price more than spot? ›

It indicates that demand is higher than supply in the short term, causing futures prices to rise. Futures prices rise above spot prices because investors become comfortable paying more for the future assets.

Do you get dividends on futures? ›

You will gain if the futures discount is lower than the dividend amount. A long futures position will not entitle you to dividends on the underlying stock unless you could take delivery of the stock under the futures contract when the ex-dividend date is after contract expiry.

What drives futures prices? ›

Interest rates are one of the most important factors that affect futures prices; however, other factors, such as the underlying price, interest (dividend) income, storage costs, the risk-free rate, and convenience yield, play an important role in determining futures prices as well.

What does a price chart show? ›

A price chart displays the price of a particular stock over a time series. The Y-axis represents the price of the stock, and the X-axis the time scale. A charting tool plots the prices of the stock from left to right across the X-axis, with the most recent being plotted at the furthest right.

How to explain a bar chart? ›

A bar chart (aka bar graph, column chart) plots numeric values for levels of a categorical feature as bars. Levels are plotted on one chart axis, and values are plotted on the other axis. Each categorical value claims one bar, and the length of each bar corresponds to the bar's value.

How do you use a price chart? ›

Bar charts help a trader see the price range of each period. Bars may increase or decrease in size from one bar to the next, or over a range of bars. The bottom of the vertical bar indicates the lowest traded price for that time period, while the top of the bar indicates the highest price paid.

What is the definition of a bar chart? ›

A bar chart is a graphical representation used to display and compare discrete categories of data through rectangular bars, where the length or height of each bar is proportional to the frequency or value of the corresponding category.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Chrissy Homenick

Last Updated:

Views: 6103

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (54 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Chrissy Homenick

Birthday: 2001-10-22

Address: 611 Kuhn Oval, Feltonbury, NY 02783-3818

Phone: +96619177651654

Job: Mining Representative

Hobby: amateur radio, Sculling, Knife making, Gardening, Watching movies, Gunsmithing, Video gaming

Introduction: My name is Chrissy Homenick, I am a tender, funny, determined, tender, glorious, fancy, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.