Key Points
- DGCX launches the GCC’s first regulated same-day (T+0) spot gold contract on Monday, 22 June.
- Based on one-kilogram UAE Good Delivery gold and settled in dirhams, the contract integrates trading, central clearing through the DCCC, and physical delivery via approved vaults in one regulated framework.

The Dubai Gold and Commodities Exchange (DGCX) will launch a same-day settled spot gold contract on Monday, 22 June, introducing a regulated instrument that lets market participants trade, clear and take delivery of physical gold within a single trading day.
The Gold Spot T+0 Contract will be the first same-day physically settled spot gold product on a regulated exchange in the GCC, positioning Dubai among a limited number of international markets offering such functionality. It has been developed to address growing demand for faster settlement, improved price certainty and greater operational efficiency in physical gold trading.
The launch speaks to a structural shift in global bullion markets. While many exchange-traded products continue to operate on next-day or longer settlement cycles, the new contract enables participants to execute, clear and settle physical gold on the same day, reducing operational friction and improving the efficiency of capital deployment.
How it works
The Gold Spot T+0 Contract is based on one-kilogram UAE Good Delivery gold and settled in UAE dirhams. Its defining feature is the integration of three functions that have traditionally sat apart — trading, clearing and delivery — within a single regulated framework, giving participants a regulated alternative to over-the-counter transactions.
All transactions are cleared through the Dubai Commodities Clearing Corporation (DCCC), which provides counterparty risk management and settlement certainty, while physical delivery takes place through approved vault infrastructure. Acting as the central counterparty, the DCCC guarantees the financial completion of each trade while coordinating the physical transfer of the metal.
The operational case is straightforward. Global precious metals trading often runs on settlement cycles of one day or longer, requiring participants to commit capital for extended periods while remaining exposed to price movements and counterparty risk until settlement completes. Collapsing that window to zero frees up capital faster and shortens the period a position sits unhedged.
The contract has been developed specifically for bullion dealers, refineries, brokers, clearing members and institutional market participants. Through integration with approved vault infrastructure, it creates a direct connection between trading activity and physical delivery while reducing the friction associated with legacy settlement cycles.
A market on a strong run
DGCX enters the launch with momentum behind it. In 2025, total traded volumes rose 30 per cent year-on-year to 2,048,556 lots, with the total value of contracts traded reaching USD 46.96 billion. Average daily volumes increased to 7,940 lots, while average open interest reached 13,015 lots — underlining the continued depth and resilience of DGCX markets.
The timing also coincides with renewed safe-haven demand. DGCX, part of the Dubai Multi Commodities Centre (DMCC), said shorter settlement cycles reflect broader market shifts toward speed and efficiency. The launch comes as geopolitical tensions lift gold trading volumes; while prices have retreated from record highs, widening fiscal deficits and sustained central-bank buying continue to support gold’s longer-term investment case.
Ahmed Bin Sulayem, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of DGCX, framed the launch as an upgrade to Dubai’s market infrastructure. “Dubai is one of the world’s leading hubs for physical gold trade, handling significant bullion flows between East and West,” he said. “As the market continues to expand, participants increasingly need faster, more efficient, and more transparent ways to trade and settle physical gold.”
“By bringing exchange trading, central clearing, and same-day physical settlement together within a regulated framework, we are providing market participants with greater certainty, improved efficiency, and direct access to physical delivery,” he added. “This contract reinforces Dubai’s position at the centre of the global gold market while deepening liquidity, strengthening price discovery, and establishing a more robust benchmark for physical gold in the UAE.”
The contract may be the first of several new products. Bin Sulayem said the exchange is evaluating further instruments, including a yuan–US dollar currency pair and, over the medium to long term, cryptocurrency derivatives.

