GOIL_FUT & GOIL_CASH

Gasoline prices are shaped by refining margins, regional supply chains, and consumer demand cycles. Summer travel booms, refinery outages, or unexpected shifts in crude oil spreads can all push gasoline higher and eat into your costs.
With ZitaPlus, hedging turns these unpredictable moves into a planned element of your business strategy.
Gasoline Cash Contracts provide flexibility for immediate market exposure, making them ideal for short-term cost management, while Gasoline Futures Contracts secure long-term price stability, allowing businesses to plan ahead and protect margins against seasonal or structural market shifts.
A Market That Moves Fast
Gasoline reacts directly to refinery performance and consumer demand. A storm in the Gulf Coast, an unplanned refinery shutdown, or a surge in driving demand can send prices higher overnight.
Liquidity at Your Fingertips
When handling large-scale transactions, speed and depth define success. At ZitaPlus, we provide direct access to global liquidity, enabling you to structure precise full or partial hedges that align seamlessly with your exposure.
Operational Certainty, Financial Stability
Our solutions address both operational and financial risk, transforming natural market volatility into a factor you can manage, plan for, and control instead of a threat to your business.
Gasoline is directly tied to refining capacity, seasonal driving demand, and regional supply chains. A refinery outage, hurricane, or surge in summer consumption can quickly push prices higher, making them more volatile than crude benchmarks alone.
At ZitaPlus, you can choose cash contracts for short-term exposure or futures contracts for long-term certainty. This flexibility lets you adapt your strategy to match both operational needs and financial objectives.
During peak driving seasons, demand can surge and strain supply, leading to sharp price increases. Hedging helps companies lock in stable costs before seasonal peaks, reducing the financial pressure of sudden demand-driven price jumps.
Absolutely. Low-price environments are often the best time to hedge, as they allow businesses to secure favorable levels before potential rebounds driven by supply disruptions, refinery outages, or geopolitical events.