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Global Indices

Live Stock Indices

Real-time values and today's moves across the world's benchmark indices — from the S&P 500, Nasdaq and Dow in the US to the Nifty 50, FTSE 100, DAX and Nikkei abroad. Select any index for a full interactive chart, technical indicators and its constituents.

Indices tracked
10
Advancing
9
Declining
1
Avg. daily move
+0.84%
Biggest movers
NameLast 14d
S&P 500SPX$7,575.39+0.42%
Nasdaq 100NDX$29,825.11+0.33%
Dow Jones Industrial AverageDJI$52,637.01+0.29%
Nifty 50NIFTY$24,206.90+1.02%
FTSE 100FTSE$10,497.29+0.24%
DAXDAX$25,067.09+0.20%
Nikkei 225N225$68,557.73+1.20%
Hang SengHSI$24,175.12+0.60%
BIST 100XU100$14,321.19+1.53%
BovespaIBOV$177,866.38+2.97%

How to read the indices table

Each row shows a live index level with its daily change colour-coded green for gains and red for declines, plus a 14-day trend sparkline. Focus on the percentage change rather than the raw number: each index uses a different base value, currency and weighting, so the headline figures aren't directly comparable.

This universe spans US megacap benchmarks (S&P 500, Nasdaq 100, Dow Jones), European gauges (FTSE 100, DAX), and Asian and emerging-market leaders (Nikkei 225, Hang Seng, Nifty 50, BIST 100, Bovespa). Because they trade in different time zones, some update live while others are closed. Figures are indicative and for information only.

Frequently asked questions

Are these index values real-time?

Values are pulled live from market data feeds and server-rendered on each request. During each market’s trading hours they track the latest level closely; when a market is closed the last value holds until it reopens. Global indices trade in different time zones, so some update while others are shut.

What is a stock-market index?

An index measures the combined performance of a basket of companies to represent a market or segment — for example the S&P 500 for large US firms or the Nifty 50 for India. It is a benchmark, not a company, so you track it rather than buy it directly.

Why can’t I compare two indices by their raw number?

Each index uses its own base value, currency and weighting method, so the headline number isn’t comparable across indices — a higher figure doesn’t mean a “bigger” market. What matters is the percentage change over time, not the absolute level.

Can I use this table for investment decisions?

The data is for information and education only, not investment advice. You cannot invest in an index directly; exposure comes via funds, ETFs or futures. Always do your own research and verify with a regulated provider.

TrendiView provides indicative market data and educational information only — not investment advice. You cannot invest in an index directly; exposure comes through funds, ETFs or futures.