Kalshi announced the rollout of a new Commodities Hub, broadening its catalogue of event contracts to include ten more physical commodities markets.
The expansion covers trading links to natural gas, coffee, copper, sugar, corn, soybeans, wheat, nickel, diesel, and lithium. These additions join Kalshi's pre-existing contracts tied to WTI and Brent oil, gold, and silver.
24/7 access and binary structure
The Commodities Hub enables users to take positions on binary event contracts that are connected to physical commodity prices around the clock. Kalshi notes that its contracts are tradable 24/7, including on weekends when traditional commodities exchanges are closed.
Kalshi’s event contracts employ a binary format. That structure allows traders to wager on discrete outcomes framed as yes-or-no questions - for example, whether crude oil will exceed a specified price threshold within a given month or whether gold will finish a quarter above a certain level.
Market context and positioning
The launch arrives as oil prices have moved above $100 per barrel amid conflict involving Iran and reported disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz. Kalshi positions its product as an alternative to conventional futures trading by removing elements it describes as sources of complexity for participants.
Specifically, Kalshi’s offering avoids the mechanics associated with futures contracts, such as margin requirements and contract rollovers. The company presents the simplified event-contract structure as a way to make commodities exposure more accessible to users outside of institutional circles.
What the update delivers
- Ten additional commodities available via event contracts: natural gas, coffee, copper, sugar, corn, soybeans, wheat, nickel, diesel, and lithium.
- Continuous trading availability, including weekends when traditional markets are closed.
- Binary outcomes that let traders take positions on specific price-related questions rather than entering into futures with margin and rollover mechanics.
The company’s announcement frames the Hub as an expansion of access to commodity-linked trading instruments, delivered through a simplified contract form and around-the-clock market hours.