Indices

Enhance trading diversity with EC Markets via global indices: Dow Jones, Nikkei, Hang Seng.

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Indices Trading Conditions

Symbol Minimum Spread Average Spread Pip Value Min price movement Contract Value
100GBP
UK 100
5.5 5.8 13.56 0.1 10 USD
200AUD
Australia 200
6.2 6.26 6.60 0.1 10 USD
225JPY
Japan 225
4.2 5.12 0.62 0.1 100 USD
A50USD
China A50
11 11 10.00 0.1 10 USD
D40EUR
D40EUR
5.7 5.72 11.73 0.1 10 USD
E50EUR
Europe 50
5.4 5.55 11.73 0.1 10 USD
F40EUR
CAC 40
6.8 6.85 11.73 0.1 10 USD
H50HKD
Hong Kong 50 Cash Index
9 9.5 1.28 0.1 10 USD
NDXUSD
US Tech 100
3.7 3.85 10.00 0.1 10 USD
S35EUR
Spain 35 Index
7.2 10.51 11.73 0.1 10 USD
SPXUSD
US SPX 500
2.7 2.88 10.00 0.1 10 USD
U30USD
Wall Street 30
3.2 3.65 10.00 0.1 10 USD
USDIDX
US Dollar Index
20 22 10.00 0.001 1000 USD
Symbol Minimum Spread Average Spread Pip Value Min price movement Contract Value
100GBP
UK 100
4.5 4.8 13.56 0.1 10 USD
200AUD
Australia 200
5.2 5.25 6.60 0.1 10 USD
225JPY
Japan 225
3 3.59 0.62 0.1 100 USD
A50USD
China A50
10 10 10.00 0.1 10 USD
D40EUR
D40EUR
4.7 4.73 11.73 0.1 10 USD
E50EUR
Europe 50
4.2 4.25 11.73 0.1 10 USD
F40EUR
CAC 40
5.8 5.83 11.73 0.1 10 USD
H50HKD
Hong Kong 50 Cash Index
8 8.5 1.28 0.1 10 USD
NDXUSD
US Tech 100
2.5 2.6 10.00 0.1 10 USD
S35EUR
Spain 35 Index
6 7.82 11.73 0.1 10 USD
SPXUSD
US SPX 500
1.5 1.75 10.00 0.1 10 USD
U30USD
Wall Street 30
2 2.3 10.00 0.1 10 USD
USDIDX
US Dollar Index
5 6 10.00 0.001 1000 USD
Symbol Minimum Spread Average Spread Pip Value Min price movement Contract Value
100GBP
UK 100
4.5 4.8 13.56 0.1 10 USD
200AUD
Australia 200
5.2 5.25 6.60 0.1 10 USD
225JPY
Japan 225
3 3.25 0.62 0.1 100 USD
A50USD
China A50
10 10 10.00 0.1 10 USD
D40EUR
D40EUR
4.7 4.73 11.73 0.1 10 USD
E50EUR
Europe 50
4.2 4.23 11.73 0.1 10 USD
F40EUR
CAC 40
5.8 5.83 11.73 0.1 10 USD
H50HKD
Hong Kong 50 Cash Index
8 8.5 1.28 0.1 10 USD
NDXUSD
US Tech 100
2.5 2.55 10.00 0.1 10 USD
S35EUR
Spain 35 Index
6 7.59 11.73 0.1 10 USD
SPXUSD
US SPX 500
1.5 1.62 10.00 0.1 10 USD
U30USD
Wall Street 30
2 2.15 10.00 0.1 10 USD
USDIDX
US Dollar Index
5 5.5 10.00 0.001 1000 USD

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Indices FAQ

Stock market indices (like S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100) are groups of stocks that focus on the economy of a particular industry or country. Instead of buying individual shares, which are subject to significant idiosyncratic risk, trading indices involves using CFDs (Contracts for Difference) to speculate on movements of entire industries and countries, enabling traders to profit from large macroeconomic and industry trends.

To trade indices a trader needs to have an account with a broker that can offer them access to CFDs on the stock market indices that the trader wants to participate in. The trader can then buy or sell based on their speculation of which direction the market will take.

Although there is no single best index to trade, there are several indices that are more popular amongst traders. The top indices are the S&P 500, the Nasdaq-100, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the FTSE, and DAX 40.

As indices are simply the weighted average prices of a pool of individual stocks, the market value of a stock market index is fundamentally determined by the stocks that comprise it. These stocks themselves are affected by the forces of supply and demand as traders buy and sell individual stocks. As these individual stock prices move, so too does the price of the index. The key difference between the movement of prices of individual stocks and that of an index is that indices are diversified and as such lower idiosyncratic risk, which is the risk associated with a single company. An individual stock price is highly affected by events specific to its company, but has less effect on an index that it is in due to being a small part of the entire index. For this reason, index prices move with industry-level trends (for industry specific indices) and macroeconomic trends (for country specific indices).

When trading indices, idiosyncratic risk, which is risk specific to a single company, is largely diversified away. This means that movements in prices of indices follow industry-level trends (for industry-focused indices) or macroeconomic-level trends (for country-focused indices). As such, indices are more predictable, experience less volatility, and fewer gaps, than individual stocks and can be more easily capitalised on by traders.

Yes, trading indices is often a good choice for beginners due to the lower risk, higher liquidity, less volatility, and more predictability of the markets. Additionally information regarding the performance and expected performance of indices is widely available, making it straightforward for new traders to find actionable information.

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Latest Insights

Indices

02 Oct 2025

What Moves Currency Pairs? An Introduction for New Traders

If you’ve ever travelled abroad, you’ve seen exchange rates at work. One year your pound buys you two cappuccinos in Rome, the next year barely one and a half. For traders, those shifts aren’t just holiday quirks – they’re opportunities. The big question is simple: what moves currency pairs?

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Indices

01 Oct 2025

Dollar Strength vs Emerging Markets: EEM vs DXY Technical Analysis

In late September 2025 we’ve seen a softening US dollar as emerging-market equities rally. The iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (EEM) has climbed to multi-month highs around $53.4 (near its 52-week peak of $53.67) while the US Dollar Index (DXY) has backed off recent highs (~98.6) to test lower support (around 97.6).

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Indices

30 Sep 2025

Healthcare as a Shelter: Defensive Sector or Growth Story?

Investors often think of health care as a “safe harbour” – people need medicine whether the economy booms or busts. But the picture in Q2 2025 is mixed. Over the past year health-care shares have lagged the wider market, leaving valuations near multi-year lows. That has caught some bargain-hunters’ eye: the S&P 500 Health Care index was flat in early 2025 while the S&P 500 gained around 7%. At the same time, the sector is home to new blockbuster drugs and AI-driven innovation. In short, health care is playing both roles – steady defensive sector and potential growth story. So which wins out?

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Indices

29 Sep 2025

Fed Pivot, China Cues Lift Risk Appetite | Weekly Recap: 22-26 Sept 2025

Markets spent most of last week stuck between two narratives: inflation that remains stubbornly high and a Fed that finally made its first cut since late 2024. August’s PCE numbers came in as expected with core prices up 0.3% on the month, 2.7% YoY. Not exactly encouraging, but not worse than feared either. It was just enough to calm nerves after the cut, though investors were left second-guessing whether this was the start of an easing cycle or simply a cautious adjustment.

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Indices

24 Sep 2025

Relative Strength Charts: Picking Sectors Before They Rotate

Stock markets often move in waves – one sector cools as another heats up. It’s how markets rotate. Recently, the tech-heavy “Magnificent Seven” names have lost steam while cyclicals like energy and industrials have been rallying. This is why traders are eyeing relative strength charts. These charts show which sectors are outperforming and hint at who might lead next. For example, a recent analysis noted consumer discretionary and communications stocks are firmly in the “leading” quadrant on a relative rotation graph, whereas tech is rolling into “weakening” territory. Healthcare is meanwhile just beginning to climb from lagging to improving, suggesting its turn could be near.

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