Get your first commodity watchlist risk scan
Enter the tickers you actually care about. CommodityNode will turn them into a first-pass commodity exposure preview, then route you into the exact report, simulator path, and Pro workflow that finishes the decision.
Stocks, ETFs, or companies that move when raw materials reprice.
Oil, metals, grains, softs, energy, and event catalysts.
Start free, run simulator, or compare the Pro model readout.
Energy producer upside vs airline/transport fuel-cost pressure.
Gold minersNEM, GOLD, AEM, GDX, GLDBullion, miner beta, dollar/rate shock, and ETF exposure.
AirlinesDAL, UAL, AAL, LUV, JETSJet-fuel pass-through and transport ETF sensitivity.
EV battery metalsTSLA, ALB, LIT, RIVN, GMLithium and battery-chain shocks translated into EV risk.
Add your watchlist to generate the first readout.
The scan will summarize watchlist size, primary commodity shock, likely workflow path, and the Pro unlock moment.
Free helps you validate whether the commodity shock is relevant.
Pro finishes the workflow with deeper forecast bands, RL policy context, and named beneficiaries/pressure points.
Review historical/replay-scoped calls and outcomes without treating them as guarantees.
What the preview scan does and does not do
The watchlist scan is a lightweight research organizer. It does not submit orders, rank securities, personalize recommendations, or tell a reader what to buy or sell. It simply maps a user-entered list of tickers or company names to commodity themes, public research pages, simulator routes, and source-checking prompts.
A useful scan should answer basic research questions: which input costs matter, which commodity hubs are relevant, whether the shock is supply-led or demand-led, which data release should be checked next, and where the scenario could be wrong. If those answers are not useful, readers can ignore the workflow and use the public research archive directly.
Why the scan asks for user input
Commodity exposure is contextual. A food manufacturer, airline, miner, utility, and semiconductor company can react to the same commodity move in different ways. The input box helps route readers to the right public research path instead of pretending one generic article covers every watchlist.