Indices Trading – What are Indices and how to use CFDs to trade them
Lachlan Meakin
22/9/2023
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Index trading is one of the most popular class of markets to trade for CFD traders, rivalling major FX pairs in trading volume, but what is indices trading and how does trading them with CFDs work? Most people will be familiar with the names of the major stock indices from financial reports in all forms of media, the most popular stock indices of CFD traders and the stocks they track are below: USA The Dow Jones Industrial average - 30 largest blue-chip companies in the US NASDAQ Composite Index – Top 100 largest non-financial companies in the US (Mostly Tech) S&P 500 Index - 500 large cap companies in the US (Bank heavy) Europe and UK FTSE 100 – Top 100 UK companies CAC 40 – Top 40 French companies DAX 40 – Top 40 German companies (Formerly known as the DAX30 which it may still be labelled as) Asia and Australia ASX 200 – Top 200 Australian companies Hang Seng - A selection of the largest companies in Hong Kong. Nikkei 225 - Consists of 225 stocks in the Prime Market of the Tokyo Stock Exchange Some of the advantages of trading indices: You can take a broad view of the health (or not) of that countries stock market, i.e. rather than take a position in a single stock, take a position in a basket of stocks by buying or selling the index they are components of.
Higher leverage available to trade stock indices, up to 100:1 for qualified Pro clients. Extended trading hours, you can take positions in most indices up to 23 hours a day, far greater hours than the underlying stock exchanges. Take positions long or short with ease to profit from both a rising and falling market.
When you take a Long (Buy) position you profit if the market moves up, a Short (Sell) position will profit when the market moves down. How Indices are priced and understanding your position size Stock Indices are priced in the native currency i.e., the Dow Jones (WS30 on the GO Markets platform) is priced in USD, the FTSE100 in GBP, the ASX200 in AUD etc. This is important to keep in mind when choosing your position size, it also important to know the specifications of the contract you are trading is to make sure you understand the lot sizing before entering a trade.
You can check the specifications of any contract on MT4 and MT5 by right clicking it in the Market Watch Window and selecting “Specification” An example specification of the Dow (WS30) is below (MT4 specs, MT5 is very similar): You can see in the example above that the WS30 contract with GO Markets has a contract size of 1, this means 1 lot will equal $1 USD per point movement in PnL if you take a position. e.g., if you buy 1 lot at a price of 33670 and the price rises to 33680 you are in profit by 10 points, which would equal $10 USD Most indices will have a contract size of 1, though it is advisable to always check as some may have different values, an example in the S&P 500 (US500) which has a contract size of 10. It is important to understand the contract size and base currency of the index you are trading before entering a trade to avoid any nasty surprises. Main drivers of what moves an Index’s price.
In choosing which Index to trade it is also important to understand the drivers of that index and it’s component stocks. All Indexes will have some common drivers, such as global growth concerns, geopolitical events and non-US indices will be affected (fairly or not) by what US markets are doing. Each index will also have its own individual drivers as well though.
Examples The NASDAQ (NDX100) is heavily weighted with mega cap tech stocks, the health of the Tech sector will heavily influence its price. The ASX200 and FTSE100 both have large contingents of miners, meaning commodity prices will be big drivers of these 2 indexes, more so the ASX200. The Russell 2000 has many regional and mid-size banks as its component stocks, which is why during the recent banking crisis it underperformed other US indices.
Understanding these unique drivers for each Index is recommended to make the best trading decisions possible. In Summary, trading Indices opens up some great opportunities to position yourself to profit from market moves, spreads on Indices with GO Markets are some of the best in the CFD industry, with tight spreads in and out of hours( Some brokers will artificially increase spreads on Indices outside the stock market hours of that country) They allow you to seamlessly take long or short positions to speculate for profit, or to headge existing stock positions from an overnight move. You can click the link below to learn more about Index trading with GO Markets. https://www.gomarkets.com/au/index-trading-cfds/
By
Lachlan Meakin
Head of Research, GO Markets Australia.
The information provided is of general nature only and does not take into account your personal objectives, financial situations or needs. Before acting on any information provided, you should consider whether the information is suitable for you and your personal circumstances and if necessary, seek appropriate professional advice. All opinions, conclusions, forecasts or recommendations are reasonably held at the time of compilation but are subject to change without notice. Past performance is not an indication of future performance. Go Markets Pty Ltd, ABN 85 081 864 039, AFSL 254963 is a CFD issuer, and trading carries significant risks and is not suitable for everyone. You do not own or have any interest in the rights to the underlying assets. You should consider the appropriateness by reviewing our TMD, FSG, PDS and other CFD legal documents to ensure you understand the risks before you invest in CFDs. These documents are available here.
Volatility doesn't discriminate. But it can punish the unprepared.
Stops getting hit on moves that reverse within minutes. Premiums on short-dated options climbing. And the yen no longer behaving as the reliable hedge it once was.
For traders across Asia, navigating this environment means asking harder questions about risk, timing, and the assumptions baked into strategies built for calmer markets.
1. How do I trade VIX CFDs during a geopolitical shock?
The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) measures the market’s expectation of 30-day implied volatility on the S&P 500. It is often called the “fear gauge.” During geopolitical shocks such as the current Iran escalations, sanctions announcements, and surprise central bank actions, the VIX can spike sharply and quickly.
What makes VIX CFDs different in a shock
VIX itself is not directly tradeable. VIX CFDs are typically priced off VIX futures, which means they carry contango drag in normal conditions.
During a geopolitical shock, several things can happen at once
Spot VIX may spike immediately while near-term futures lag, creating a disconnect.
Spreads on VIX CFDs can widen significantly as liquidity thins.
Margin requirements may change intraday as broker risk models adjust.
VIX tends to mean-revert after spikes, so timing and duration are critical.
What this means for Asian-hours traders
Asian market hours mean many geopolitical events can break while local traders are active or just starting their session.
A shock that hits during Tokyo hours may already be priced into VIX futures before Sydney opens.
Some traders use VIX CFD positions as a short-term hedge against equity portfolios rather than a directional trade. Others trade the reversion (the move back toward historical averages once the initial spike fades). Both approaches carry distinct risks, and neither guarantees a specific outcome.
Volatility Index (VIX) during the 1 March Iran conflict escalation | TradingView
2. Why are my 0DTE options premiums so expensive right now?
Zero days-to-expiry (0DTE) options expire on the same day they are traded. They have become one of the fastest-growing segments of the options market, now representing more than 57% of daily S&P 500 options volume according to Cboe global markets data.
For Asian-based participants accessing US options markets, elevated premiums during volatile periods can feel like mispricing, but usually reflects structural pricing factors.
Why premiums spike
Options pricing is driven by intrinsic value and time value. For 0DTE options, there is almost no time value left, which might suggest they should be cheap but the implied volatility component compensates for that.
When uncertainty increases, sellers may demand greater compensation for the risk of sharp intraday moves.
This can be reflected in
Higher implied volatility inputs.
Wider bid-ask spreads.
Faster adjustments in delta and gamma hedging.
In higher-VIX environments, hedging flows can contribute to short-term feedback loops in the underlying index. This can amplify price swings, particularly around key levels.
What this means for Asian-hours traders
Many 0DTE options contracts see their most active pricing and hedging flows during US trading hours. Entering positions during the Asian session may mean facing stale pricing or wider spreads.
If you are seeing expensive premiums, it may reflect the market accurately pricing the risk of a large same-day move. Whether that premium is worth paying depends on your view of the likely intraday range and your risk tolerance, not on the absolute dollar figure alone.
3. How do I adjust my algorithmic trading bot for a high-VIX environment?
Many algorithmic trading systems are built on parameters calibrated during lower-volatility regimes. When VIX spikes, those parameters can become outdated quickly.
The regime mismatch problem
Most trading algorithms use historical data to set position sizes, stop distances, and entry thresholds. That data reflects the conditions during which the system was tested. If VIX moves from 15 to 35, the statistical assumptions underpinning those settings may no longer hold.
Common failure modes in high-VIX environments include
Stops triggered repeatedly by noise before the intended directional move occurs.
Position sizing based on fixed-dollar risk, which becomes relatively small compared to actual intraday ranges.
Correlation assumptions between assets breaking down.
Slippage on execution that erodes edge.
Approaches some algorithmic traders consider
Rather than running a single fixed set of parameters, some systems incorporate a volatility regime filter. This is a real-time check on VIX or ATR that triggers a switch to different settings when conditions shift.
Approach adjustments that some traders review in high-VIX environments
Widen stop distances proportionally to ATR to reduce noise-driven exits.
Reduce position size to maintain constant dollar risk relative to wider expected ranges.
Add a VIX threshold above which the system pauses or moves to paper trading mode.
Reduce the number of simultaneous positions, as correlations tend to rise during market stress.
No adjustment eliminates risk. Backtesting new parameters on historical high-VIX periods can provide some indication of likely performance, though past conditions are not a reliable guide to future outcomes.
4. Is the Japanese Yen (JPY) still a reliable safe-haven trade?
During periods of global risk aversion, capital has historically flowed into JPY as investors unwind carry trades and seek lower-volatility holdings. However, the reliability of this dynamic has become more conditional.
Why has the yen historically moved as a safe haven?
Japan’s historically low interest rates made JPY the funding currency of choice for carry trades and when risk-off sentiment hits, those trades unwind quickly, creating demand for yen.
Additionally, Japan’s large net foreign asset position means Japanese investors tend to repatriate capital during crises, further supporting JPY.
What has changed
The Bank of Japan’s shift away from ultra-loose monetary policy in recent years has complicated the traditional safe-haven dynamic.
As Japanese interest rates rise:
The scale of carry trade positioning may change.
USD/JPY can become more sensitive to interest rate spreads.
BoJ communication and domestic inflation data may influence JPY independently of global risk appetite.
The yen can still behave as a safe haven, particularly during sharp equity sell-offs. But it may respond more slowly or inconsistently compared to earlier cycles when the policy divergence between Japan and the rest of the world was more extreme.
What to watch
For traders monitoring JPY as a safe-haven signal, BoJ meeting dates, Japanese CPI releases, and real-time US-Japan rate spread data have become more relevant inputs than they were a few years ago.
Japan rates rose into the positive in 2024 after years at -0.1% | Trading Economics
5. How do I avoid ‘whipsawing’ on energy CFDs?
Whipsawing describes the experience of entering a trade in one direction, getting stopped out as the price reverses, then watching the price move back in the original direction.
Energy CFDs, particularly crude oil, are especially prone to this in volatile markets. And for traders in Asia, the combination of thin liquidity during local hours and sensitivity to geopolitical headlines can make this particularly challenging.
Why energy CFDs whipsaw
Crude oil is sensitive to a wide range of headline drivers: OPEC+ production decisions, US inventory data, geopolitical supply disruptions, and currency moves.
In high-volatility environments, the market can react strongly to each headline before reversing when the next one arrives.
Price spikes on a headline, stops are triggered on short positions.
Traders re-enter long, expecting continuation.
A second headline or profit-taking reverses the move.
Long stops are hit. The cycle repeats.
Approaches traders may consider to manage whipsaw risk
Some traders choose to change their risk controls in volatile conditions (for example, reviewing stop placement relative to volatility measures). However these may increase losses; execution and slippage risks can rise sharply in fast markets
Other approaches that some traders review:
Avoid trading crude oil CFDs in the 30 minutes before and after major scheduled data releases.
Use a longer timeframe chart to identify the prevailing trend before entering on a shorter timeframe, reducing the chance of trading against larger institutional flows.
Scale into positions in stages rather than committing full size on initial entry.
Monitor open interest and volume to distinguish between moves with genuine participation and low-liquidity fakeouts.
Whipsawing cannot be eliminated entirely in volatile energy markets. The goal of risk management in these conditions is not to predict which moves will hold, but to ensure that losses on false moves are smaller than gains when a genuine directional move follows.
Practical considerations for volatile Asian markets
Asian markets carry structural characteristics that interact with volatility differently from US or European markets:
Thinner liquidity during local hours can exaggerate moves on thin volume, particularly in energy and FX CFDs.
Events in China, including PMI releases, trade data, and PBOC policy signals, can move regional indices.
BoJ policy decisions have become a more active driver of JPY and Nikkei volatility in recent years.
Overnight gaps from US session moves are a persistent structural risk for traders unable to monitor positions around the clock.
Margin requirements on leveraged products can change at short notice during high-VIX periods.
Frequently asked questions about volatility in Asian markets
What does a high VIX reading mean for Asian equity indices?
VIX measures expected volatility on the S&P 500, but elevated readings typically reflect global risk aversion that flows across markets. Asian indices such as the Nikkei 225, Hang Seng, and ASX 200 can often see increased volatility and negative correlation with sharp VIX spikes.
Can 0DTE options be traded during Asian hours?
Access depends on the platform and the specific instrument. US equity index 0DTE options are most actively priced during US trading hours. Asian traders may face wider spreads and less representative pricing outside those hours.
Are algorithmic trading strategies inherently riskier in high-volatility conditions?
Strategies calibrated during low-volatility periods may perform differently in high-VIX environments. Regular review of parameters against current market conditions is prudent for any systematic approach.
Has the JPY safe-haven trade changed permanently?
The Bank of Japan’s policy normalisation has introduced new dynamics, but JPY has continued to strengthen during some risk-off episodes. It may be more conditional on the nature of the shock and the BoJ’s concurrent posture.
What is the best way to set stops on energy CFDs in high-volatility conditions?
There is no universally best method. Many traders reference ATR to calibrate stop distances to prevailing conditions rather than using fixed levels. This does not guarantee exit at the desired price and does not eliminate whipsaw risk.
One day the ASX is drifting quietly... and the next, margin requirements rise, stops do not fill where expected, and portfolios open with uncomfortable overnight gaps.
If you have been searching for answers, you are not alone. Some of the most searched questions about volatility among Australian traders relate to margin calls, slippage, overnight gaps, leveraged exchange traded funds (ETFs), and tools such as average true range (ATR).
Here is what is happening.
Why this matters now
Global markets have become more sensitive to interest rates, inflation data, geopolitics and technology-driven flows. When liquidity thins and uncertainty rises, price swings widen. That is volatility.
And volatility doesn’t just affect price direction, it changes how trades are executed, how much capital is required, and how risk behaves beneath the surface.
Translation: Volatility is not just about bigger moves, rather, it’s about faster moves and thinner liquidity - that’s when the mechanics of trading matter most.
One of the most searched questions about volatility is why margin requirements increase without warning.
When markets become unstable, brokers may increase margin requirements on contracts for difference (CFDs) and other leveraged products. Larger price swings can increase the risk of accounts moving into negative equity thus raising margin requirements reduces available leverage and can help manage exposure during extreme conditions.
What this can mean in practice
-A margin call may occur even if price has not moved significantly. -Effective leverage can drop quickly. -Positions may need to be reduced at short notice.
Margin adjustments are typically a response to changing market risk, not a random decision. In highly volatile markets, it is prudent to assume margin settings can change quickly, therefore many traders choose to review position sizes and available buffers in light of that risk.
What is slippage and why didn’t my stop fill at my price?
Another frequently searched topic is slippage.
Slippage can occur when a stop order triggers and is executed at the next available price, the outcome can depend on the order type, market liquidity and gaps. In calm markets, the difference may be small whereas in fast markets, prices can gap beyond the stop level.
Illustration of price gap through stop-loss level | GO Markets
Stop-loss orders generally prioritise execution rather than price certainty and during periods of high volatility, this distinction becomes important. Adjusting position size and placing stops with reference to typical price movement may be more effective than simply tightening stops in unstable conditions.
How do I manage overnight gapping on the ASX?
Australia trades while the United States sleeps, and vice versa. This time zone difference is, sadly, one reason overnight gap risk is frequently searched by Australian traders. If US markets fall sharply, the ASX may open lower the following morning, with no opportunity to exit between the close and the open.
Examples of risk-management approaches market traders may use include
-Index hedging using ASX 200 futures or CFDs*. -Partial hedging during high risk events. -Reducing exposure ahead of major macro announcements.
Hedging can offset part of a move, but it introduces basis risk as individual stocks may not move in line with the broader index.
There is no perfect protection, only trade-offs between cost, complexity and risk reduction.
*CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money due to leverage.
What are the key risks of leveraged or inverse ETFs in volatile markets?
Leveraged and inverse ETFs are often searched during periods of heightened volatility.
While these products typically reset daily, they aim to deliver a multiple of the index’s daily return, not its long-term return. In a volatile, sideways market, daily compounding can erode value even if the index finishes near its starting level.
This occurs because gains and losses compound asymmetrically. A fall of 10 percent requires a gain of more than 10 percent to recover. When that effect is multiplied daily, outcomes can diverge materially from the underlying index over time.
Such instruments may be used tactically by some market participants. They are generally not designed as long-term hedging tools and understanding their structure is essential before using them in a strategy.
How can ATR be used to inform stop placement?
Average true range (ATR) is a commonly used indicator for measuring volatility.
ATR estimates how much an asset typically moves over a given period, including gaps. Rather than setting a stop at an arbitrary percentage, some traders reference ATR and place stops at a multiple, such as two or three times ATR, to reflect prevailing conditions.
When volatility rises, ATR expands and that can imply wider stops or smaller position sizes if overall risk is to remain constant. The shift is from asking, “How far am I willing to lose?” to asking, “What is a normal move in current conditions?"
Practical considerations in volatile markets
During periods of elevated volatility, traders may consider
Allowing for the possibility of margin changes
Sizing positions conservatively if volatility increases
Recognising that stop-loss orders do not guarantee a specific exit price
Reviewing exposure ahead of major economic events
Understanding the daily reset mechanics of leveraged ETFs
Using volatility measures such as ATR to inform stop placement
Maintaining adequate cash buffers
Volatility does not reward prediction alone. Preparation and risk awareness may assist traders in understanding potential risks, but outcomes remain unpredictable.
Australian markets face specific structural considerations cpmapred to Asian and US Markets. Overnight gap risk is influenced by US trading hours and resource heavy indices such as the ASX can respond quickly to commodity price movements and data from China. Currency exposure, including AUD and US dollar (USD) moves, can add another layer of variability.
Volatility is not uniform across regions. It behaves differently depending on market structure and liquidity depth.
Frequently asked questions about volatility
What causes sudden spikes in market volatility? Interest rate decisions, inflation data, geopolitical developments, earnings surprises and liquidity constraints are common triggers.
Why do brokers increase margin during volatile markets? To reduce leverage exposure and manage risk when price swings widen.
Can stop-loss orders fail during volatility? They can experience slippage if markets gap beyond the stop level, meaning execution may occur at a worse price than expected. In fast or illiquid markets, this difference can be significant.
Are leveraged ETFs suitable for long term hedging? They are generally structured for short-term exposure due to daily resets. Whether they are appropriate depends on your objectives, financial situation and risk tolerance.
How can volatility be measured before placing a trade? Tools such as ATR, implied volatility indicators and historical range analysis can help quantify prevailing conditions.
Risk warning: Periods of heightened volatility can lead to rapid price movements, margin changes and execution at prices different from those expected. Risk-management tools such as stop-loss orders and volatility indicators may assist in assessing market conditions but cannot eliminate the risk of loss, particularly when using leveraged products.
Every time you renew a mortgage, open a savings account, or watch the Australian dollar move, the RBA's decisions are somewhere in the background.
But what actually goes on inside the bank, and what drives the calls that ripple through the entire Australian economy?
Quick facts
The RBA's cash rate is the single most-watched number in Australian finance.
Rate decisions are made by a nine-member board, eight times per year.
The RBA targets inflation of 2–3% on average over time.
Australia's cash rate reached a 12-year high of 4.35% in November 2023.
What is the RBA?
The RBA is Australia’s central bank. Unlike commercial banks that lend to individuals and businesses, the RBA lends to financial institutions, issues the nation's currency, and acts as the government's banker.
It also plays a role in overseeing the stability of the broader financial system. It can step in during periods of economic stress to ensure credit keeps flowing.
For the average Australian, the RBA is most visible through its influence on interest rates. By setting a target for the cash rate, it shapes borrowing and saving costs across the economy.
This influence can filter through to mortgage rates, business lending, and the price of the Australian dollar.
How does the cash rate work?
The cash rate is the interest rate the RBA charges on overnight loans between banks. Banks constantly lend money to each other to manage their daily cash needs, and the RBA sets the floor on what those borrowing costs are.
When the RBA raises the cash rate, banks tend to pass that cost on to borrowers; when it cuts, interest on repayments tends to fall.
This knock-on effect is why the cash rate is such a powerful tool. Banks price their products off the cash rate, so a 0.25% RBA move typically flows through to variable mortgage rates within weeks.
Effects of RBA cash rate moves
A large share of Australian mortgages are on variable rates, so any change in the cash rate tends to pass through to household budgets faster than in countries where fixed-rate lending is more prominent.
How does the RBA make decisions?
The RBA board meets eight times per year to set monetary policy, with meeting dates published in advance.
The Board has nine members: the Governor, the Deputy Governor, the Secretary to the Treasury, and six external members appointed by the Treasurer for five-year terms. Decisions are made by consensus where possible, with the Governor holding a casting vote if needed.
These members make decisions with the intention of maintaining price stability and supporting full employment, with the economic prosperity and welfare of the Australian people as the overarching objective.
Price stability generally means keeping inflation within a 2–3% target band on average over time. The "on average over time" framing is deliberate; the RBA doesn't panic if inflation briefly strays outside the band, but sustained deviation in either direction can prompt the Board to consider a policy response.
Full employment is viewed in terms of the Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment (NAIRU), the lowest unemployment rate the economy can sustain without generating inflationary wage pressure. Estimates vary, but the RBA has historically placed this around 4–4.5%.
The tension between these two goals defines most RBA decisions. A strong labour market is good news for workers, but it can push wages (and therefore inflation) higher. On the other hand, cooling inflation often requires accepting some rise in unemployment.
In the lead-up to each meeting, RBA staff prepare extensive briefing materials covering every major economic indicator. The Board debates the evidence over two days before reaching a decision. The outcome is announced publicly at 2:30 pm AEDT on the meeting day, followed by a detailed statement and a press conference by the Governor.
Key inputs to each decision
The RBA's recent rate cycle
The current rate cycle is one of the most aggressive in the RBA's modern history. After holding the cash rate at a record low of 0.10% through the COVID pandemic, the RBA began hiking in May 2022 and raised rates thirteen times before pausing at 4.35% in November 2023.
A borrower with a $750,000 variable-rate mortgage saw their monthly repayments rise by roughly $1,500 to $1,800 between May 2022 and late 2023, a significant squeeze on household budgets that fed directly into the consumer slowdown the RBA was trying to engineer.
Throughout 2025, the RBA periodically dropped the rate back down, with it now sitting at 3.75% after a recent hike in February 2026.
Monthly CPI is generally considered the most important single data point for RBA watchers. If the data returns a “quarterly trimmed mean CPI” print above 3%, it can sharpen expectations of a hike or delay cuts (particularly if it surprises to the upside). The “trimmed mean” is the RBA's preferred measure as it tends to reduce data noise from volatility.
Labour force data
The labour force data includes numbers on the unemployment and underemployment rates, and wage growth. The RBA watches these numbers closely for any signs that wages may be rising at a pace inconsistent with the inflation target.
Governor's speeches and appearances
Between formal meetings, the Governor testifies before the House Economics Committee and delivers public speeches. These are closely scrutinised for sentiment signals of the board. Simple shifts in language, from "patient" to "vigilant", for example, can often be perceived as a change in tone that could influence the rate decision in upcoming meetings.
Neutral rate
The “neutral rate” is the cash rate range the RBA believes will neither speed the economy up nor slow it down. The current neutral cash rate is estimated at around 3.0–3.5%, which is below the actual rate of 3.75%, a sign that the RBA is still pumping the brakes on the economy. As the rate gets closer to the neutral zone, it can signal less urgency for the RBA to keep cutting. However, surprise data can always upend this assumption.
Global central banks
The RBA doesn't operate in isolation. If the US Federal Reserve holds rates higher for longer, it limits the RBA's room to cut without weakening the AUD and importing inflation through higher import prices.
Bottom line
The RBA's job is to keep the Australian economy on an even keel, and the cash rate is its main tool for doing so. Its decisions touch almost every corner of Australian financial life, from what you pay on your mortgage to how the Aussie dollar trades.
For traders, understanding how the RBA thinks and what it is watching goes a long way toward making sense of the broader Australian economic environment.
US inflation data on Wednesday is the week's centrepiece, but with oil nearing seven-month highs, Bitcoin (BTC) sentiment shifting, and the Australian dollar at three-year highs, traders have plenty to navigate in the week ahead.
Quick Facts
US inflation rate (February) is the key binary event for rate cut pricing and equity direction.
Brent crude is trading around US$82–84/bbl, near seven-month highs, with a $4–$10 geopolitical risk premium baked in from Iran/Hormuz tensions.
Bitcoin is trading above US$70,000 as of 6 March, a potential trend change if it holds through the week.
United States: inflation in focus
Last month’s US inflation reading showed prices rising 2.4% year-on-year, still well above the Fed's 2% target.
February's inflation rate, due Wednesday, will be scrutinised for signs that tariff pass-through or rising energy costs are pushing prices back up, or whether the slow grind lower is still intact.
The March FOMC meeting on 17–18 March is now priced at only an 4.7% probability of a cut. A higher-than-expected inflation print this week could potentially push rate cut expectations further out.
A softer read opens the door to renewed cut pricing and potential relief across risk assets.
Key Dates
US Inflation Rate (February CPI): Wednesday 11 March, 12:30 am (AEDT)
Monitor
Core vs. headline inflation divergence as evidence of tariff pass-through in goods prices.
2-year and 10-year treasury yield sensitivity to the print.
USD direction and FedWatch repricing in the lead up to the 18 March FOMC decision.
Target rate probabilities for 18 March FOMC meeting | CME
Oil: elevated and event-sensitive
Brent is currently trading around US$83–85 per barrel, with a 52-week range spanning $58.40 to $85.12, reflecting the dramatic move triggered by the Middle East conflict.
Analysts estimate the geopolitical risk premium already baked into oil at US$4–$10 per barrel, and average 2026 Brent forecasts have been lifted to US$63.85/bbl, up from US$62.02 in January.
The EIA's Short-Term Energy Outlook forecasts Brent to average $58/bbl in 2026, well below the current spot price.
The gap between spot and the forecast baseline could be a useful frame for traders this week: any de-escalation signal from the Middle East could rapidly close that gap.
Monitor
Strait of Hormuz developments and any diplomatic signals from Iran nuclear talks.
EIA weekly oil inventory data.
Oil's knock-on to inflation expectations and whether it shifts central bank posture.
Energy sector equity performance relative to the broader market.
BTC has been attempting to stabilise after a brutal 53% correction over the past 17 weeks, fuelled by escalating geopolitical tensions and renewed tariff concerns.
However, yesterday saw a 8% jump back above $72,000, and the crypto “fear and greed index” jumped up to 29 (fear), up from below 20 (extreme fear), where it has been sitting for over a month, indicating a potential sentiment shift.
A cooler-than-expected US inflation print on Wednesday could provide further fuel for the breakout; a hot print risks potentially pulling BTC back below the US$70,000 level it has just reclaimed.
Monitor
Inflation print reaction on Wednesday as the primary macro catalyst for the move.
Any rotation into altcoins following BTC strength.
ETF inflow/outflow data as confirmation of institutional participation.
The Aussie is trading near more than three-year highs and heading for its fourth consecutive monthly gain, up more than 6% year-to-date, making it the top-performing G10 currency in 2026.
The driver is a clear policy divergence. RBA Governor Michele Bullock signalled the March policy meeting is "live" for a possible rate increase, and warned that an oil price shock from Iran tensions could reignite domestic inflationary pressures.
Market pricing now suggests around a 28% chance of a 25bp hike at the upcoming meeting, while fully pricing in tightening through May, and around a 75% chance of another increase to 4.35% by year-end.
This hawkish read, set against a Fed on hold and facing dovish political pressure, creates a potential structural tailwind for the Aussie.
Monitor
AUD/USD reaction to Wednesday's US inflation data.
RBA rate hike probability repricing through the week.
Iron ore and commodity prices as secondary AUD drivers.
China demand signals, given Australia's export exposure.
Latin America (LATAM) saw over $730 billion in crypto volume in 2025, a 60% year-on-year surge that made the region responsible for roughly 10% of global crypto activity.
In 2026, institutional players are starting to take the region seriously, regulation is crystallising, and the structural drivers from 2025 show no sign of fading. But the region is not a single story, and 2026 will test whether the current momentum is built on solid fundamentals or speculative optimism.
Quick facts
LATAM monthly active crypto users grew 18% year-on-year (YoY), three times faster than the US.
Argentina reached 12% monthly active user penetration, accounting for over a quarter of the region's crypto activity.
Over 90% of Brazilian crypto flows are now stablecoin-related.
Three LATAM countries rank in the global top 20: Brazil (5th), Venezuela (18th), Argentina (20th).
Peru's crypto app downloads grew 50% in 2025, with 2.9 million downloads.
From survival tool to financial infrastructure
Latin America did not embrace cryptocurrency because of speculation. It embraced it because traditional financial systems repeatedly failed ordinary people. Over the past 15 years, average annual inflation across the region's five largest economies ran at 13%, compared to just 2.3% in the US over the same period.
In Venezuela, it reached 65,000% in a single year. In Argentina, it exceeded 220% in 2024. For millions of people, holding savings in local currency was a slow act of self-destruction. Stablecoins became the natural response. Digital assets pegged to the US dollar offered a reliable store of value, borderless transferability, and access without a bank account.
Unlike in the West, where crypto is seen more as a speculative instrument, in LATAM it has become a necessary financial tool. However, adoption drivers are not entirely uniform across the region. Brazil and Mexico are institutional stories, driven by regulated market participation and established financial players.
Argentina and Venezuela remain store-of-value plays, with crypto serving as a direct hedge against fiat collapse. And Peru and Colombia are more yield-seeking markets, where crypto offers returns that traditional savings accounts cannot match.
How fast is LATAM adopting crypto?
LATAM’s on-chain crypto volume rose 60% year-on-year in 2025. The region has recorded nearly $1.5 trillion in cumulative volume since mid-2022, peaking at a record $87.7 billion in a single month in December 2024.
Monthly active crypto users across LATAM also grew 18% in 2025, three times faster than the US.
Stablecoins are the primary vehicle driving this adoption. Of the $730 billion received in 2025, $324 billion moved through stablecoin transactions, an 89% year-on-year surge. In Brazil, over 90% of all crypto flows are stablecoin-related, and in Argentina, stablecoins account for over 60% of activity.
Looking ahead, the Latin America cryptocurrency market is forecast to reach $442.6 billion by 2033, growing at a compound annual rate of 10.93% from 2025, according to IMARC Group.
For traders, the speed of adoption matters less as a headline than what is driving it: a region of 650 million people building parallel financial infrastructure in real time, with stablecoins as the foundation.
LATAM Crypto — By The Numbers
LATAM crypto by the numbers
Total on-chain volume
$730B
Total on-chain crypto volume received across LATAM in 2025 (~10% of global total)
+60% year-on-year
Stablecoin transaction volume
$324B
LATAM stablecoin transaction volume in 2025, reflecting surging demand for dollar-pegged assets
+89% year-on-year
Brazil's share of LATAM volume
~33%
Of all LATAM on-chain volume received by Brazil in 2025, making it the region's dominant crypto market
~250% annual growth
Annual remittance market
$142B
Annual remittance flows across Latin America, with an increasingly large share now settled in stablecoins
Stablecoin-settled
The institutional turn
For most of LATAM’s crypto history, adoption was bottom-up. Unbanked or underbanked retail users drove volumes through local exchanges. That picture is now changing at the top end of the market.
In February 2026, Crypto Finance Group, part of the leading global exchange operator Deutsche Börse Group, announced its expansion into Latin America, targeting banks, asset managers, and financial intermediaries seeking institutional-grade custody and trading infrastructure.
Traditional banks and fintechs are following suit. Nubank now rewards customers for holding USDC. Brazil's B3 exchange approved the world's first spot XRP and SOL ETFs, ahead of the US, in 2025. Centralised exchanges, including Mercado Bitcoin, NovaDAX, and Binance, have collectively listed over 200 new BRL-denominated trading pairs since early 2024.
In March 2025, Brazilian fintech Meliuz became the first publicly traded company in the country to launch a Bitcoin accumulation strategy, now holding 320 BTC.
“Crypto adoption in LatAm is already global-scale. What the market needs now is institutional-grade governance, and that’s exactly why we’re here,” — Stijn Vander Straeten, CEO of Crypto Finance Group
Crypto remittance use case
Latin America receives hundreds of billions of dollars annually from workers abroad, making remittances one of the most concrete and measurable crypto use cases in the region. Traditional transfer services charge an average of 6.2% per transaction. On a US$300 transfer, that is roughly US$20 in fees.
Blockchain-based infrastructure more broadly offers dramatic fee reductions. Bitcoin brings costs to around US$3.12 per US$100 transferred. While cheaper alternatives like XRP or Ethereum layer-2 infrastructure can reduce that to less than US$0.01.
For a migrant worker sending US$1,500 home to Peru, switching from a legacy bank saves more than the average Peruvian weekly wage in fees alone.
LATAM’s crypto regulatory environment
The variable that will most determine whether LATAM lives up to its 2026 potential is crypto regulation. And here, the picture is genuinely mixed.
Brazil leads the region with its Virtual Assets Law, which covers asset segregation, VASP licensing, AML/KYC requirements, and capital standards. It also implemented the Travel Rule for domestic VASP transfers, which came into force in February 2026. However, some more controversial proposals, including a US$100,000 cap on cross-border stablecoin transactions and a ban on self-custody wallet transfers, remain under active consultation.
Mexico's 2018 Fintech Law remains one of the world's earliest formal recognitions of virtual assets. Chile's 2023 Fintech Law established licences for exchanges, wallets, and stablecoin issuers, formally recognising digital assets as 'digital money.'
Bolivia reversed a decade-long crypto ban in June 2024 by authorising regulated digital asset transactions. Argentina introduced mandatory exchange registration in 2025. And El Salvador continues to expand tokenised economic initiatives despite removing Bitcoin's legal tender status.
Ten countries across the region now have formal crypto frameworks of some kind. But for traders, regulatory divergence remains a live risk, and given Brazil receiving nearly one-third of all LATAM crypto volume, any significant policy reversal there could have outsized consequences.
Brazil's institutional momentum is the most significant structural trend. With $318.8 billion in on-chain volume in 2025, Brazil effectively is the LATAM market.
The outcome of the Brazil stablecoin consultation could have a big influence. A restriction on foreign stablecoins in domestic payments would directly impact the most traded asset class in the region's dominant market.
Argentina is the volatility play. Monthly active user penetration of 12% and 5.4 million crypto app downloads in 2025 signal deep and growing retail engagement.
Colombia is an early-warning market to watch. The peso's 5.3% depreciation in 2025 and deepening fiscal crisis are driving stablecoin inflows in a pattern that mirrors Argentina's trajectory in earlier years. If Colombia's macro situation deteriorates further, crypto adoption could accelerate.
There is also an exchange concentration risk at play. Binance crypto exchange is the primary exchange for over 50% of LATAM crypto users. If the exchange faces any regulatory action, operational disruption, or competitive shock, it could have an outsized market impact.
Bottom line
Latin America's crypto market has entered a new phase. The structural drivers that caused initial crypto-demand in the region have not gone away: inflation, remittances, financial exclusion, and currency instability are all still at play.
What has changed is the layer being built on top of them. Institutional infrastructure, regulatory frameworks, corporate treasury adoption, and global exchange capital flowing into a region that was, until recently, largely self-contained.
Brazil's near-250% volume growth in 2025 and its position receiving nearly one-third of all LATAM crypto are the defining market developments. Its regulatory trajectory, stablecoin policy decisions, and ETF pipeline will effectively set the tone for the region in 2026.
For traders, the headline growth figures are real, but so are the concentration risks, regulatory uncertainties, and country-level divergences that sit beneath them.
On February 28, 2026, as the joint US and Israeli attack began, the numbers on the screens started moving in ways that felt clinical, even as the reality on the ground with the tragic deaths of civilian casualties in Iran, felt anything but. Markets, as they say, do not have a moral compass, rather they have a weighing machine and right now, they are weighing the transition of the entire global economy from a "just-in-time" model to a "just-in-case" cycle.
What markets were signalling
On March 2, the index tape stayed cautious while defence rose. Historically, conflicts can speed up restocking and orders but how big it gets (and how fast) still depends on budgets, approvals and delivery bottlenecks.
The Winners
1. Hanwha Aerospace (012450.KS)
Hanwha is one of the more actively traded names linked to the “K-Defence” theme, a company markets increasingly view as a scalable supplier into a tightening global artillery and munitions cycle. Capacity and delivery credibility.
When replenishment becomes urgent, the ability to produce at scale often matters as much as the platform itself. Export demand tied to systems like the K9 Thunder and Chunmoo has reinforced the narrative of durable order flow even when outcomes still hinge on budgets, approvals and delivery timelines.
Key things that can move sentiment: order-book updates, production cadence, and any follow-on export announcements.
2. Northrop Grumman (NOC)
Northrop moved into focus as investors repriced exposure to strategic modernisation and large, long-running programs. Defence markets often seen as mission-critical can persist across cycles. It’s less about one quarter and more about whether momentum stays steady if modernisation priorities remain in place (and whether timelines shift if they don’t).
Key variables that can move sentiment: Procurement pace, contract timing, and program-related funding language.
3. RTX Corporation (RTX)
RTX returned to the centre of the tape as investors priced an interceptor replenishment cycle and the economics of high-tempo air defence. Attrition is expensive and when usage rates rise, governments typically have to replenish inventories and, in many cases, fund production expansion which can extend backlog and lift revenue visibility.
Key variables that can move sentiment: Replenishment orders, manufacturing expansion indicators, and delivery throughput.
4. Lockheed Martin (LMT)
Lockheed drew attention as markets focused on missile-defence demand and the question every procurement desk faces in a high-tempo environment: how fast can inventories be rebuilt? If utilisation stays elevated, the winners tend to be the contractors best positioned to scale production and deliver reliably. Lockheed’s missile defence exposure keeps it closely tied to that replenishment narrative.
Key variables that can move sentiment: production ramp signals, unit economics, and budget-driven order cadence.
5. BAE Systems (BA.L)
With an £83.6 billion backlog and a central role in the AUKUS submarine program, BAE moved into focus as parts of Europe signalled higher defence spending ambitions. The stock rose 6.11% to a 52-week high amid a “risk-off” rotation, with traders watching AUKUS milestones and European air and missile defence procurement, including “Sky Shield”.
Key variables that can move sentiment: A potential catalyst is any clear step-up in German spending that lifts order flow across BAE’s European units, while key risks include a sharp spike in UK gilt yields, renewed pound sterling volatility, or “threat of peace” profit-taking.
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The Losers: not every ‘war stock’ rises
6. AeroVironment (AVAV)
AeroVironment surged 18% at the open before falling 17% intraday after reports that the US Space Force was reopening a US$1.4 billion contract. The move highlights how procurement processes and contract risk can drive volatility, even in supportive thematic environments.
7. Kratos Defence (KTOS)
Kratos sits in the drone and loitering munition theme that gained attention as the Middle East conflict intensified. The stock still sold off after earnings, highlighting a common defence-sector risk. Kratos announced a large follow-on equity offering in the US$1.2 billion to US$1.4 billion range, the move strengthens the balance sheet and can support future program investment.
For traders focused on short-term “conflict premium” narratives, dilution can quickly change the setup. Even when demand conditions appear supportive, the market may reprice the stock if each shareholder ultimately owns a smaller portion of the business.
8. Intuitive Machines (LUNR)
Some speculative space-tech names lagged as investors appeared to favour companies with more established defence-linked revenue.
9. Boeing (BA)
Boeing was down around 2.5% on the session. While its defence division is meaningful, its commercial business can be more sensitive to aviation demand, airspace disruptions and oil-price moves.
10. Spirit AeroSystems (SPR)
Spirit AeroSystems remains closely tied to the global aircraft production cycle as a major aerostructures supplier.Recent results showed widening losses despite higher sales, reflecting ongoing production cost increases on major aircraft programs. These pressures have weighed on investor confidence in the near-term outlook. The planned acquisition by Boeing may ultimately reshape the company’s position in the supply chain, but execution risk and production stability remain central to how the market prices the stock.
What to watch next
Escalation vs de-escalation: A shift toward diplomacy or ceasefire discussions can quickly change sentiment around defence stocks.
Oil and shipping: Energy spikes can tighten financial conditions and pressure cyclical sectors.
Budgets and awards: Price moves can sometimes precede contract decisions, with clarity arriving when awards are finalised.
Production capacity: Companies with proven production and delivery track records often attract the most investor attention.
Supply chain constraints: Rare earths, propulsion and electronics remain potential bottlenecks that can limit how quickly production scales.
The longer term lens
The 2026 Iran conflict is first and foremost a human tragedy. For markets, it may also represent a shift in how national security spending is prioritised within fiscal frameworks. If defence spending remains elevated over a multi year horizon, companies with scalable manufacturing capacity and integrated technology stacks could attract sustained investor attention. That said, markets move in cycles. Structural themes can persist, but they can also reprice quickly when assumptions change. Staying analytical and risk aware remains critical.
References to specific companies, sectors or market movements are provided for general market commentary only and do not constitute a recommendation, offer or solicitation to buy or sell any financial product.Market reactions to geopolitical or macroeconomic events can be volatile and unpredictable, and outcomes may differ materially from expectations.