LiteFinance Adds Oil Trading with Perpetual Contracts Tied to Brent and WTI

Wednesday, 20/05/2026 | 20:51 GMT by Jared Kirui
  • The launch reflects a broader industry shift toward perpetual trading models originating in crypto markets.
  • Adoption of perpetual structures is expanding beyond crypto into commodities and equities, with growing trading volumes.
Oil in An Age of Oversupply:

LiteFinance Global LLC, which operates the offshore LiteFinance platform and was previously known as LiteForex in several markets, has introduced two new instruments which track the price of WTI and Brent crude oil through perpetual contracts.

The move allows clients to trade oil without time restrictions, including outside traditional exchange hours, as brokers increasingly adopt always-on trading models.

New Instruments and Trading Access

According to Wednesday's announcement, the contracts are available across all account types and can be traded via MetaTrader 5, cTrader, LiteFinance’s web platform, and mobile applications. The broker stated that the instruments mirror the price of the underlying oil benchmarks, giving traders direct exposure to market movements.

Perpetual contracts differ from traditional futures as they do not have an expiration date. This structure allows traders to keep positions open as long as margin requirements are met.

LiteFinance said the new instruments enable users to react to market developments at any time. Oil prices often respond to geopolitical events, supply disruptions, and macroeconomic data, many of which occur outside standard trading sessions.

Broader Shift Toward Perpetual Trading

The launch aligns with a wider industry trend toward perpetual contracts. These instruments gained prominence in cryptocurrency markets, where they now account for the majority of trading volume globally.

Recent data shows that trading activity in perpetual contracts linked to tokenized commodities and equities has increased significantly, pointing to growing adoption beyond digital assets.

Keep reading: Number of Oil Traders Jumps 276% on Capital.com as Middle East Tensions Rattle Markets

Market participants use these instruments for various strategies, including spread trading between WTI and Brent. Continuous trading access also allows faster execution of trades in response to breaking news.

LiteFinance’s addition of oil perpetuals highlights how traditional asset classes are adopting structures first developed in crypto markets, as brokers respond to demand for more flexible trading conditions.

Perpetual Structures Move Beyond Crypto

LiteFinance’s move comes as brokers and exchanges expand perpetual-style derivatives beyond crypto. Perpetual contracts on tokenized commodities and stocks have seen sharp growth in trading volumes in recent quarters, and crypto derivatives venues report that perpetuals now account for the bulk of global trading in that segment.

You may also like: AI Is Slowing Hiring at Prop Firms, Not Replacing Traders – Yet

Some large brokers have previously introduced non-expiring oil CFDs or spot contracts, offering continuous exposure to Brent and WTI, but most still market these instruments as traditional CFDs rather than perpetuals.

LiteFinance Global LLC, which operates the offshore LiteFinance platform and was previously known as LiteForex in several markets, has introduced two new instruments which track the price of WTI and Brent crude oil through perpetual contracts.

The move allows clients to trade oil without time restrictions, including outside traditional exchange hours, as brokers increasingly adopt always-on trading models.

New Instruments and Trading Access

According to Wednesday's announcement, the contracts are available across all account types and can be traded via MetaTrader 5, cTrader, LiteFinance’s web platform, and mobile applications. The broker stated that the instruments mirror the price of the underlying oil benchmarks, giving traders direct exposure to market movements.

Perpetual contracts differ from traditional futures as they do not have an expiration date. This structure allows traders to keep positions open as long as margin requirements are met.

LiteFinance said the new instruments enable users to react to market developments at any time. Oil prices often respond to geopolitical events, supply disruptions, and macroeconomic data, many of which occur outside standard trading sessions.

Broader Shift Toward Perpetual Trading

The launch aligns with a wider industry trend toward perpetual contracts. These instruments gained prominence in cryptocurrency markets, where they now account for the majority of trading volume globally.

Recent data shows that trading activity in perpetual contracts linked to tokenized commodities and equities has increased significantly, pointing to growing adoption beyond digital assets.

Keep reading: Number of Oil Traders Jumps 276% on Capital.com as Middle East Tensions Rattle Markets

Market participants use these instruments for various strategies, including spread trading between WTI and Brent. Continuous trading access also allows faster execution of trades in response to breaking news.

LiteFinance’s addition of oil perpetuals highlights how traditional asset classes are adopting structures first developed in crypto markets, as brokers respond to demand for more flexible trading conditions.

Perpetual Structures Move Beyond Crypto

LiteFinance’s move comes as brokers and exchanges expand perpetual-style derivatives beyond crypto. Perpetual contracts on tokenized commodities and stocks have seen sharp growth in trading volumes in recent quarters, and crypto derivatives venues report that perpetuals now account for the bulk of global trading in that segment.

You may also like: AI Is Slowing Hiring at Prop Firms, Not Replacing Traders – Yet

Some large brokers have previously introduced non-expiring oil CFDs or spot contracts, offering continuous exposure to Brent and WTI, but most still market these instruments as traditional CFDs rather than perpetuals.

About the Author: Jared Kirui
Jared Kirui
  • 2805 Articles
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About the Author: Jared Kirui
Jared Kirui is an Editor at Finance Magnates with more than five years of experience in financial journalism. He covers online trading, fintech, payments, and crypto industries with a focus on companies, regulation and compliance, executive moves, trading technology, and market analysis. His work has been featured in other media outlets, including Benzinga, ZyCrypto, The Distributed, and The Daily Hodl. Education: Bachelor of Commerce degree (Finance option), University of Nairobi
  • 2805 Articles
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