What Is a Commodity Quote?
A commodity quote is a real-time snapshot of a commodity's current market price along with key trading data such as daily price change, trading volume, day range, 52-week range, and moving averages. Commodity quotes cover raw materials and primary goods traded on futures exchanges worldwide — including precious metals like gold and silver, energy products like crude oil and natural gas, industrial metals like copper, and agricultural commodities like corn, wheat, and soybeans. Traders, investors, and analysts use commodity quotes to monitor price movements, identify trends, and make informed trading decisions.
How to Use This Commodities Quote Tool
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Enter a Commodity Symbol
Type a commodity ticker symbol into the search box — for example, GCUSD for Gold Futures, CLUSD for Crude Oil, or SIUSD for Silver. You can also click any of the popular symbol shortcuts below the search bar.
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View Quote Details
Click "Get Quote" to retrieve the latest pricing data. The tool displays the current price, price change, percentage change, open, previous close, day range, 52-week range, volume, 50-day and 200-day moving averages, and market cap.
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Refresh & Export
Click Refresh to get the latest price at any time. Use Export CSV to download the quote data for offline analysis in Excel or Google Sheets.
Why Use Our Commodities Quote Tool?
Comprehensive Data
Get 15+ data points per commodity including price, change, volume, day range, 52-week range, and moving averages — all in one view.
Real-Time Prices
Prices are fetched directly from financial data providers. Click Refresh at any time to get the most current market snapshot.
100% Free
No subscription, no hidden fees. Access professional-grade commodity quote data completely free with CSV export — no sign-up required.
Understanding Commodity Quote Data
Price & Change
The current trading price and how much it has moved from the previous close. A positive change (green) indicates the commodity has gained value, while a negative change (red) means it has declined.
Day Range & 52-Week Range
The day range shows the lowest and highest prices during the current trading session. The 52-week range shows the lowest and highest prices over the past year, helping you gauge where the current price sits relative to its annual extremes.
Moving Averages (50-Day & 200-Day)
The 50-day and 200-day simple moving averages smooth out price fluctuations and reveal underlying trends. When the price is above both averages, it generally signals an uptrend; below both suggests a downtrend.
Volume & Open/Close
Volume represents the number of contracts traded during the session. The open price is where the commodity started trading, and the previous close is the last session's closing price — useful for calculating overnight gaps.