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Commodity ETFs: How to Invest in Gold, Oil, and More

Commodity ETFs let you invest in physical goods — gold, silver, oil, natural gas, agriculture, or broad commodity baskets — without owning or storing the actual materials. They provide diversification beyond stocks and bonds, and historically serve as an inflation hedge because commodity prices tend to rise when the purchasing power of the dollar falls.

How Commodity ETFs Work

Not all commodity ETFs are built the same. The structure matters because it directly affects returns, tax treatment, and tracking accuracy.

StructureHow It WorksExamplesTax Treatment
Physical-BackedFund holds actual commodity in vaultsGold ETFs, silver ETFsCollectibles rate (28% max for precious metals)
Futures-BasedFund rolls futures contracts monthlyOil ETFs, broad commodity funds60/40 tax rule (K-1 for some)
Equity-BasedFund holds commodity-producer stocksMining ETFs, energy stock ETFsStandard equity tax rates
ETN (Exchange-Traded Note)Unsecured debt tracking a commodity indexCommodity index notesVaries — check prospectus

The Contango Problem

Futures-based commodity ETFs face a structural drag called contango. When the next-month futures contract costs more than the expiring one, the fund loses money every time it rolls positions forward. Over time, this roll cost can cause the ETF to significantly underperform the spot price of the commodity.

This is why a crude oil ETF can drop even when oil prices are flat. Physical-backed funds (like gold ETFs) avoid this issue entirely because they hold the real asset. If you’re considering a futures-based fund, always check the fund’s historical tracking error against the spot commodity price.

Major Commodity Categories

CategoryKey CommoditiesInflation Hedge?Volatility
Precious MetalsGold, silver, platinumStrong — especially goldModerate
EnergyCrude oil, natural gasModerate — supply-drivenVery high
AgricultureCorn, wheat, soybeans, coffeeModerateHigh (weather-dependent)
Industrial MetalsCopper, aluminum, nickelModerate — tied to economic growthModerate to high
Broad BasketDiversified across all aboveGood overall hedgeModerate

Commodity ETFs vs. Commodity Stocks

FactorCommodity ETFsCommodity Stocks
ExposureDirect commodity priceCompany earnings (affected by management, costs, hedging)
Correlation to CommodityHigh (physical) or moderate (futures)Moderate — stocks have equity risk too
DividendsTypically noneMany commodity producers pay dividends
Leverage to Prices1:1 (approximately)Often 2–3x the commodity move (operating leverage)
Tax ComplexityK-1 forms possible (futures funds)Standard 1099

When to Use Commodity ETFs

Commodities make sense as a portfolio diversifier because they have low long-term correlation with equities and bonds. During inflationary periods, commodities — especially gold and energy — tend to outperform financial assets. A typical allocation is 5–10% of a diversified portfolio.

For deeper commodity investing beyond ETFs, you might explore futures accounts or commodity-focused mutual funds. But for most investors, an ETF is the simplest and most liquid entry point. Use the same ETF selection framework you’d apply to any fund — starting with expense ratio, structure, and tracking accuracy.

Analyst Tip
If you want commodity exposure without K-1 headaches or contango drag, consider an equity-based commodity ETF that holds producers (mining companies, energy firms). You get indirect commodity exposure plus potential dividends — and standard tax reporting.

Key Takeaways

  • Commodity ETFs come in four structures: physical-backed, futures-based, equity-based, and ETNs — each with different risk and tax profiles.
  • Futures-based funds suffer from contango drag, which erodes returns over time even when the commodity’s spot price is flat.
  • Physical-backed gold and silver ETFs are the cleanest way to get direct precious metal exposure.
  • Commodities serve as an inflation hedge and portfolio diversifier with low stock/bond correlation.
  • Keep commodity allocation to 5–10% of total portfolio and favor broad baskets over single-commodity bets for core positions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a commodity ETF?

A commodity ETF is an exchange-traded fund that tracks the price of one or more physical commodities — like gold, oil, or agriculture products — through physical holdings, futures contracts, or commodity-producer stocks.

Are commodity ETFs a good hedge against inflation?

Generally yes. Commodity prices tend to rise during inflationary periods because they represent the real goods whose prices are increasing. Gold and broad commodity baskets have historically shown the strongest inflation-hedging properties.

What is contango and why does it matter?

Contango occurs when longer-dated futures contracts cost more than near-term ones. Futures-based ETFs must sell expiring contracts and buy more expensive ones, creating a performance drag known as roll cost.

Do commodity ETFs issue K-1 tax forms?

Some do — particularly futures-based commodity ETFs structured as limited partnerships. Physical-backed precious metal ETFs and equity-based commodity funds typically issue standard 1099s instead.

How much should I allocate to commodity ETFs?

Most portfolio strategists suggest 5–10% as a diversifier. The right amount depends on your inflation outlook, risk tolerance, and overall asset allocation strategy.