
The ticker XTIUSD pairs XTI, the code for one barrel of West Texas Intermediate crude oil, with USD to quote WTI oil's dollar price in real time. Some brokers list the same instrument under the ticker USOIL.
West Texas Intermediate is the primary US crude oil benchmark. Produced from landlocked US oil fields and delivered to the storage hub at Cushing, Oklahoma, it serves as the reference price for US domestic crude oil contracts. The XTIUSD price reflects the current market value of one barrel of this benchmark grade, expressed in dollars.
XTIUSD prices are driven by 8 main factors: supply and demand, US crude oil inventories, OPEC+ production policy, geopolitical conflict, economic growth expectations, supply disruptions, US dollar strength, and government regulation and energy policy.
US dollar strength is a direct force on the XTIUSD pair because WTI is priced in dollars. A stronger dollar makes oil more expensive for non-dollar buyers and pressures the quoted price lower, while a weaker dollar supports it.
US crude oil inventories carry outsized influence on XTIUSD specifically: the weekly EIA petroleum status report measures stockpile changes at Cushing, Oklahoma, where WTI contracts are physically delivered, and deviations from consensus drive immediate repricing of the pair.
The XTIUSD price represents the value of one barrel of WTI crude oil (XTI) quoted in US dollars (USD). The pair moves when either side of the equation changes: rising demand for WTI oil drives the price higher, while a strengthening US dollar drives it lower. Both forces act simultaneously, which is why XTIUSD reflects the relative strength between WTI crude oil and the dollar at any given moment.
You trade XTIUSD by taking a leveraged long or short position on the WTI oil price against the US dollar. Your profit or loss depends on whether you correctly predict the direction of the price movement.
You can open and close positions within the same day to capitalise on intraday WTI oil price movements.
XTIUSD offers 8 benefits to traders: high liquidity, portfolio diversification, US economic sensitivity, two-directional profit potential, leverage, hedging capability, data-driven trading opportunities, and exposure to domestic energy demand.
Trading XTIUSD carries 5 main risks: unpredictable price swings, leverage amplification, gap risk, liquidity shifts, and inventory-driven volatility.
A common risk management rule is to risk no more than 1% of your total trading capital on a single trade.
The best time to trade XTIUSD is during the London/New York overlap, from 13:00 to 17:00 UTC (08:00 to 12:00 EST). New York hosts NYMEX, where the WTI futures contract is listed, and London runs ICE Futures Europe for related energy derivatives. When both centres are active simultaneously, XTIUSD liquidity peaks, spreads compress, and order execution is at its fastest.
Two recurring US data events concentrate the strongest XTIUSD price action within this window.
US economic data releases at 13:30 UTC (NFP, CPI, PPI) fall at the start of the overlap window and affect USD strength directly, adding a second layer of volatility to the XTIUSD pair. After London closes at 17:00 UTC, liquidity narrows to NYMEX activity alone and spreads widen. Higher liquidity produces tighter spreads, faster execution, and lower slippage risk on every XTIUSD trade.
You can start trading XTIUSD directly from this page. The live chart above shows the real-time WTI oil price, and the Trade Now button takes you to the account opening process.
To place your first XTIUSD trade on TMGM, follow these five steps:
TMGM displays a bid and ask price for XTIUSD. The gap between them is the spread, which is applied to your position at entry. Track your open trade on the live chart and move your stop-loss as the price develops.
The minimum deposit to start trading XTIUSD on TMGM is $100. The amount you need beyond that depends on your position size, leverage ratio, and margin requirement.
XTIUSD margin is calculated by dividing the position value by the leverage ratio. For example, if WTI oil is trading at $100 per barrel and you open a 0.1 lot position (10 barrels) with 1:100 leverage, the required margin is $10. A larger position or lower leverage ratio increases the margin needed to open and hold the trade.
Your account balance should also cover the spread cost at entry and retain enough free margin to withstand price swings without triggering a margin call. Limiting risk to no more than 1% of your account balance per trade provides room to hold multiple positions and absorb short-term moves against your direction.
Trade WTI crude oil from $100 on TMGM.
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