
The US30 is a price-weighted index that tracks 30 large US blue-chip companies and serves as a leading benchmark for the US stock market. It is also known as the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) and appears on Google Finance under the ticker INDEXDJX: .DJI.
The index represents established large-cap companies across technology, finance, healthcare, consumer, and industrial sectors. Their combined performance is widely used as a gauge of the health of the broader US economy.
The US30 is maintained by S&P Dow Jones Indices, which selects the constituents and oversees changes to the index. The US30 price on this page reflects the current value of the index, quoted in US dollars.
The US30 is price-weighted, which means higher-priced stocks move the index more than lower-priced ones, regardless of company size.
The value is found by adding the share prices of all 30 constituents and dividing the total by the Dow Divisor. The Dow Divisor is a figure that is adjusted for stock splits, mergers, and other corporate actions, so that these events do not distort the index.
This approach differs from market-capitalisation weighting, used by indices such as the S&P 500, where company size determines influence. Under price weighting, a high-priced stock can move the US30 more than a larger company with a lower share price.
The US30 comprises 30 blue-chip companies spanning technology, finance, healthcare, consumer, and industrial sectors. The constituents are reviewed periodically, and membership changes when companies are added or removed.
The table below shows the current constituents and their sectors.
Constituents as of the latest index review. Membership is updated periodically by S&P Dow Jones Indices.
The US30 price is driven by 5 main factors: Federal Reserve policy, US economic data, corporate earnings, sector concentration, and overall market sentiment.
These forces act at the same time, which is why the US30 can move quickly around major announcements and data releases.
Trading the US30 gives you exposure to the Dow Jones index price without owning the underlying 30 stocks. You profit by correctly predicting whether the index will rise or fall.
The US30 is available as a cash CFD and as a futures CFD. Cash CFDs have no expiry date and incur overnight swaps, while futures CFDs have a set expiry and no daily swaps, which suits longer-term positioning. Both can be traded on MT4 and MT5, with Trading Central analysis and market sentiment data available to support decisions.
The US30 offers 6 benefits to traders: high liquidity, two-directional trading, macroeconomic responsiveness, diversification within US equities, leverage, and a long trading window.
Trading the US30 carries 5 main risks: price volatility, leverage amplification, gap risk, concentration, and liquidity shifts.
A common risk management rule is to risk no more than 1% of your total trading capital on a single trade.
The best time to trade the US30 is during the US cash session, from 14:30 to 21:00 UTC (09:30 to 16:00 EST), when the underlying stock market is open. Liquidity peaks during these hours, spreads compress, and order execution is at its fastest. The US30 cash CFD is also available for close to 24 hours on weekdays, though liquidity is thinner outside the US session.
Scheduled US data releases concentrate volatility within this window.
You can start trading the US30 directly from this page. The live chart above displays the current Dow Jones price, and the Trade Now button prompts you to open a trading account.
To place your first US30 trade on TMGM, follow these five steps:
TMGM quotes a bid and ask price for the US30. The difference between them is the spread, which is deducted from your position at entry. Monitor your open trade against the live chart and adjust your stop-loss as the price moves.
The minimum deposit to start trading the US30 on TMGM is $100. The amount you need beyond that depends on your position size, leverage ratio, and margin requirement.
US30 margin is calculated as the position value divided by the leverage ratio. For example, if the index is trading at 38,000 and you open a 0.1 lot position with 1:50 leverage, the required margin is based on the position value divided by 50. A larger position or a lower leverage ratio increases the margin needed to open and hold the trade.
Your trading capital should also account for the spread cost on entry and enough free margin to absorb price fluctuations without triggering a margin call. Risking no more than 1% of your account balance per trade gives you room to manage positions and withstand short-term moves against your direction.
Trade the US30 from $100 on TMGM.
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