INDEX CFD TRADING ON ZQFX
S&P 500. FTSE 100. DAX. Nasdaq. Take a position on the world's leading economies without picking individual stocks.
A stock index represents the performance of a basket of companies the S&P 500 tracks 500 of the largest US companies, the FTSE 100 tracks the top 100 UK firms. When you trade an index CFD, you take a position on whether the entire economy is rising or falling.
Indices move on macroeconomic forces: interest rates, GDP, employment, central bank policy, and global sentiment. It's the cleanest way to express a view on a market and one of the most traded instruments in the world.
S&P 500, FTSE 100, DAX 40, Nasdaq 100, Dow Jones, Nikkei 225 — all major economies in one platform.
Profit from rising or falling markets. Trade directionally or hedge existing positions.
Many indices move beyond local cash sessions — react instantly to global economic events.
One index trade gives exposure to dozens or hundreds of companies — built-in diversification.
Competitive pricing on all major indices designed for active traders and scalping strategies.
Trade economies, not individual stocks — the cleanest way to express global macro views.
Built for macro trading, speed & global exposure
Trade major global indices from the US, Europe, Asia, and Gulf markets — all from one ZQFX account.
S&P 500 · Nasdaq 100 · Dow Jones · Russell 2000
The heart of global equity markets.
FTSE 100 · DAX 40 · CAC 40 · Euro Stoxx 50 · IBEX 35
The major European economies in single trades.
Nikkei 225 · Hang Seng · ASX 200 · TADAWUL
Asia, Pacific, and Gulf market exposure.
Global indices. One platform. Real-time trading.
Clear answers to help you understand index trading.
A stock represents ownership in a single company. An index represents the combined performance of many companies. Trading an index gives you broad market exposure in one position.
If you believe an index will rise, buy (go long). If you believe it will fall, sell (go short). Profit or loss is the difference between entry and exit, multiplied by your position size.
Macroeconomic factors — central bank decisions, inflation reports, GDP data, employment numbers, and overall market sentiment.
TAKE A VIEW ON THE WHOLE MARKET