Trading Energy ETFs In Foreign Currencies: What To Focus On

 | Sep 21, 2021 12:08PM ET

Trading energy ETFs outside of U.S. exchanges can be tricky, as it often means lower liquidity and some latency, but is it worth trying? Definitely!

Let’s do a comparative study between the WTI Crude Oil and an Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) tracking this energy commodity as the underlying asset.

Prelude

In the previous two-part series (see Part II ), we presented different ways to trade energies like stocks, ETFs, CFDs and futures. We saw that picking the right instrument or vehicle depended on businesses, regions, risk profiles, psychology, etc. So, today, as an example, we will compare the well-known WTI Crude Oil futures contract (quoted in U.S. dollars) with a 2:1 (2x) leveraged ETF traded in Toronto, in Canadian dollars.

Crude Oil Futures Vs. Horizons BetaPro Crude Oil Leveraged Daily Bull ETF

Here is a comparison table between the two products:

CME/NYMEX WTI Crude Oil Futures
Codes: CL (Standard), MCL (Micro)
Currency: USD
Specs: (micro)

BetaPro Crude Oil Daily Bull ETF (TSX:HOU)
Code: HOU
Currency: CAD
Specifications:

WTI Crude Oil Futures:
CL (Exchange: CME Group (NASDAQ:CME))
Higher liquidity
No management fees
Higher leverage
24-hour access
Cross-margining
Tighter correlation to physical market

Other Crude Oil ETFs (quoted in USD):
USO/UCO/DBO/USL/SCO/OILK/OIL
Lower liquidity
Low management fee
Lower leverage (2:1) and less risk
Easy access to the market
Less maintenance for position rolling
Read more:

Brent Crude Oil Futures:
B (Exchange: ICE (NYSE:ICE))

Brent Crude Oil ETF:
BNO ( )

And here are the latest charts: