Futures Trading

NQ Futures Volatility: Why Nasdaq Futures Move More and How to Trade It

NQ futures move 1.3-1.5x the percentage range of ES due to tech concentration (top 7 stocks = ~50% of Nasdaq-100), higher beta, and speculative flow. This guide covers NQ contract specs ($20/point, $5 tick), the VXN Nasdaq Volatility Index (typically 2-5 points above VIX), ATR-based stop placement for NQ day and swing trading, NQ vs ES volatility comparison, how mega-cap earnings (NVDA, AAPL, MSFT) can move NQ 2-4% afterhours, NQ vs MNQ for volatile markets, margin requirements, tech selloff trading strategies, and how Volatility Box Futures models generate NQ-specific daily levels from VXN and NQ ATR data.

March 10, 2026

NQ futures (the E-mini Nasdaq-100 contract) are the most volatile major U.S. equity index future. On a normal trading day, NQ moves 200-450 points, worth $4,000-$9,000 per contract. That is 1.3-1.5x the percentage range of ES on the same day. This concentration of risk and opportunity comes from the Nasdaq-100’s heavy weighting in mega-cap tech: the top 7 stocks account for roughly 50% of the index. This guide covers why NQ is structurally more volatile than ES, how to measure that volatility with ATR and the VXN index, how to trade NQ during tech selloffs and earnings season, and how Volatility Box Futures models generate daily levels calibrated to NQ’s wider range.

Published March 10, 2026

NQ Futures Contract Specs: E-mini vs Micro

NQ trades at $20 per point, less than ES’s $50, but the percentage moves are larger, so dollar risk per contract can exceed ES on volatile days. MNQ (Micro Nasdaq-100) at $2 per point provides the same price action at 1/10th the exposure.

Specification NQ (E-mini Nasdaq-100) MNQ (Micro E-mini Nasdaq-100)
Multiplier $20 per point $2 per point
Tick size 0.25 ($5.00) 0.25 ($0.50)
Day trade margin ~$17,000-$20,000 ~$1,700-$2,000
Overnight margin ~$20,000-$24,000 ~$2,000-$2,400
Daily dollar range (avg) $4,000-$9,000 $400-$900
High-vol day dollar range $9,000-$14,000+ $900-$1,400+
Trading hours Sun 6 PM – Fri 5 PM ET Sun 6 PM – Fri 5 PM ET

A 300-point NQ move (routine when VIX is above 20) equals $6,000 per contract. The same percentage move on ES at $50 per point produces roughly $3,300. This is why NQ attracts traders who want amplified exposure to U.S. equity volatility, and why it punishes those who size positions based on ES habits.

$20Dollar Value Per NQ Point
200-450 ptsAverage Daily Range (VIX 15-20)
1.3-1.5xMore Volatile Than ES (% Terms)
~50%Nasdaq-100 Weight in Top 7 Stocks

Why NQ Is More Volatile Than ES Futures

NQ’s excess volatility is not random. It is structural, driven by three factors that compound on each other.

Tech Concentration

The Nasdaq-100 is a tech-heavy index. Apple, Microsoft, NVIDIA, Amazon, Meta, Alphabet, and Tesla collectively represent approximately 50% of the index weight. The S&P 500 holds the same stocks, but they comprise roughly 30% of that index. When any single mega-cap tech stock moves 3-5% on earnings or guidance, the impact on NQ is nearly double what it is on ES.

This concentration creates correlation risk. When tech sells off as a sector (rising rates, antitrust fears, AI hype reversal), NQ drops harder than ES because the same theme hits half the index simultaneously. In the 2022 tech selloff, NQ fell 33% peak-to-trough while ES dropped 25%.

Higher Beta

Growth stocks carry higher beta than value stocks. The Nasdaq-100 skews heavily toward growth: high P/E, revenue-driven valuations sensitive to interest rate expectations. When the 10-year Treasury yield moves 10 basis points, NQ reacts more than ES because rate changes disproportionately affect the discounted cash flow valuations of growth companies.

Retail and Momentum Participation

NQ attracts more speculative flow than ES. Options activity on QQQ (the Nasdaq-100 ETF) and individual tech names creates dealer hedging flows that amplify NQ moves. 0DTE options on tech stocks and QQQ generate gamma exposure that market makers hedge through Nasdaq futures, adding directional fuel to intraday moves.

What Is the Average Daily Range for NQ Futures

NQ’s daily range, measured from session high to low, scales with VIX and the related VXN (Nasdaq Volatility Index). The relationship is proportional, not linear, with NQ ranges expanding faster than ES as volatility rises.

VIX Level Expected NQ Daily Range (Points) Dollar Range per NQ Contract Dollar Range per MNQ Contract
12-15 (Low) 200-300 $4,000-$6,000 $400-$600
15-20 (Normal) 300-450 $6,000-$9,000 $600-$900
20-30 (Elevated) 450-700 $9,000-$14,000 $900-$1,400
30-40 (High) 700-1,000 $14,000-$20,000 $1,400-$2,000
40+ (Crisis) 1,000+ $20,000+ $2,000+

At VIX 20 with NQ trading at 20,500, the expected daily range calculation produces roughly 370 points: (20 / 15.87) x 20,500 x 1.0 = 258 points for a 1-standard-deviation move, but NQ typically overshoots its implied range by 10-20% due to momentum and gamma effects. The practical range is wider than what the formula alone suggests.

NQ vs ES Volatility: Full Comparison

Understanding the structural differences between NQ and ES is essential for anyone who trades both contracts or is deciding between them. The comparison is not just about which moves more. It is about how they move differently and what that means for stops, targets, and position sizing.

Metric NQ (E-mini Nasdaq-100) ES (E-mini S&P 500)
Multiplier $20 per point $50 per point
Tick size 0.25 ($5.00) 0.25 ($12.50)
Day trade margin ~$17,000-$20,000 ~$12,000-$15,000
Avg daily range (VIX 15-20) 300-450 points 40-60 points
Avg daily range (% terms) ~1.5-2.2% ~0.7-1.0%
Dollar range per contract $6,000-$9,000 $2,000-$3,000
Volatility ratio to ES 1.3-1.5x (% terms) 1.0x (baseline)
Correlation (ES-NQ) 0.92-0.96 (high but not identical)
Sector concentration ~50% in top 7 tech ~30% in top 7
Volatility index VXN VIX
Earnings sensitivity High (single NVDA/AAPL can move index 2-4%) Moderate (diversified dampens single-stock impact)

The 0.92-0.96 correlation between NQ and ES means they move in the same direction 92-96% of the time, but the magnitude differs. On a day when ES drops 1%, NQ typically drops 1.3-1.5%. On strong tech-led rallies, the spread widens further: NQ can outperform ES by 2x in percentage terms. This spread is the NQ-ES ratio, and it trends higher when tech outperforms and lower during tech selloffs.

Key Point A trader switching from ES to NQ without adjusting position size is implicitly increasing dollar risk by 2-3x per contract on an average day. The $20/point multiplier looks smaller than ES’s $50, but NQ’s wider point range more than compensates. Always compare dollar risk, not point multiplier.

What Is the VXN and How to Use It

The VXN is the CBOE Nasdaq-100 Volatility Index, the Nasdaq equivalent of the VIX. It measures 30-day implied volatility from Nasdaq-100 (NDX) option prices. VXN typically trades 2-5 points above VIX because the Nasdaq-100 is more volatile than the S&P 500.

VXN vs VIX Spread

When VIX is at 15, VXN is usually 17-20. When VIX spikes to 30, VXN typically hits 33-37. The spread widens during tech-specific stress (earnings blowups, antitrust headlines, semiconductor export bans) and narrows when the selloff is broad-based (FOMC shock, credit events) because broad selloffs hit both indexes more equally.

A rising VXN-VIX spread tells you that the options market is pricing in disproportionate Nasdaq risk. This is a signal to reduce NQ position sizes relative to ES, widen NQ stops, or shift allocation toward ES where the implied risk premium is lower.

Converting VXN to Expected NQ Daily Range

Expected NQ Daily Range = (VXN / √252) × NQ Price

Example: VXN = 22, NQ = 20,500
Expected Range = (22 / 15.87) × 20,500 = 1.387% × 20,500 = 284 points ($5,680 per NQ contract)

This is the 1-standard-deviation expected move. Roughly 68% of trading days stay within this range. Use VXN for NQ-specific calculations instead of VIX. The VIX understates NQ’s expected range because it is derived from S&P 500 options, not Nasdaq-100 options.

Measuring NQ Volatility with ATR

The Average True Range (ATR) on NQ works identically to ES but produces much larger point readings due to NQ’s wider swings. ATR(14) on the daily chart is the standard baseline for NQ volatility measurement.

Typical NQ ATR Readings

  • 5-minute ATR(14): Normal reading: 20-45 NQ points. Expands to 50-100+ during volatile opens and earnings reactions. Used for intraday stop placement.
  • Daily ATR(14): Normal conditions (VIX 15-20): 250-400 points. Elevated (VIX 20-30): 400-650 points. Crisis (VIX 30+): 650+ points.
  • Weekly ATR(14): Captures ~3 months of swing volatility. Typical reading: 800-1,500 points. Used for multi-day position stops.

When daily ATR(14) on NQ is rising while ATR(14) on ES is flat, tech-specific volatility is expanding. This divergence preceded the August 2024 Nasdaq selloff, where NQ dropped 8% in three sessions while ES fell 5%. ATR caught the acceleration before it was obvious in price.

ATR-Based Stops on NQ

NQ stops are wider in absolute point terms than ES but should be similar in dollar terms per contract. Use 1.5-2x ATR(14) on the 5-minute chart for day trading.

  • Scalping (1-3 min chart): 1-1.5x ATR(14), typically 20-40 NQ points ($400-$800 per contract)
  • Day trading (5-min chart): 1.5-2x ATR(14), typically 45-90 NQ points ($900-$1,800 per contract)
  • Intraday swing (15-min chart): 2-2.5x ATR(14), typically 80-150 NQ points ($1,600-$3,000 per contract)
  • Swing trading (daily chart): 2-3x ATR(14), typically 600-1,200 NQ points ($12,000-$24,000 per contract)

Compare these dollar values to ES: a 1.5x ATR stop on the 5-min ES chart runs roughly $500-$1,000 per contract. NQ is wider but not dramatically so in dollar terms because the $20 multiplier partially offsets the wider point range. The key difference is that position sizing on NQ requires more margin per contract, so your contract count will typically be lower.

How Earnings Season Affects NQ Futures Volatility

Earnings season is the single biggest driver of NQ-specific volatility because a handful of mega-cap tech companies can move the entire index. This is structurally different from ES, where no single company has enough weight to produce a 2%+ index move on earnings alone.

The FAANG/Mega-Cap Earnings Effect

When NVIDIA reports earnings, NQ can move 2-4% in afterhours trading (4:00-6:00 PM ET). Apple and Microsoft earnings regularly produce 1.5-3% NQ moves. Meta, Amazon, Alphabet, and Tesla each move NQ 1-2%. Because these stocks collectively account for ~50% of the Nasdaq-100, a single earnings report can generate more NQ range than an average full trading day.

Company Approx. NQ Weight Typical NQ Move on Earnings Typical Afterhours NQ Range
NVIDIA ~8-9% 2-4% 400-800 points
Apple ~8-9% 1.5-3% 300-600 points
Microsoft ~8-9% 1.5-3% 300-600 points
Amazon ~5-6% 1-2.5% 200-500 points
Meta ~5-6% 1-2.5% 200-500 points
Alphabet ~5-6% 1-2% 200-400 points
Tesla ~3-4% 1-2% 200-400 points

Earnings Season NQ Trading Rules

  • Reduce or close NQ positions before a mega-cap earnings report. Holding 2 NQ contracts through an NVIDIA earnings print means $16,000-$32,000 of potential overnight movement. Unless you have the account size to absorb that, exit before 4 PM ET.
  • Trade the afterhours reaction between 4:00-6:00 PM ET. Liquidity is thinner but the move is often 60-80% complete within 30 minutes of the report. NQ futures trade through this window; the afterhours reaction provides directional opportunity if you size conservatively (MNQ instead of NQ).
  • Watch the next-day open carefully. Afterhours moves frequently gap further or partially reverse by 9:30 AM ET as more participants react. The first 15 minutes after the open on a post-mega-cap-earnings morning can add 100-200 NQ points of additional range.

During peak earnings weeks (typically late January, late April, late July, late October), NQ daily ATR expands by 20-35% compared to non-earnings periods. This is when the Volatility Box daily models widen their expected range bands automatically, reflecting the elevated implied volatility from VXN.

How to Trade NQ During Volatile Tech Selloffs

Tech selloffs produce the widest NQ ranges and the most opportunity, but also the fastest drawdowns. A 3% NQ decline at 20,500 equals 615 points, or $12,300 per contract on the wrong side. Discipline and volatility awareness are the difference between capitalizing on the move and getting destroyed by it.

Identifying a Tech Selloff in Progress

  • VXN-VIX spread widens beyond 5 points. This signals tech-specific stress rather than broad-market selling.
  • NQ underperforms ES by more than 0.5% intraday. Check the NQ/ES ratio. When it drops sharply during selling, tech is leading the decline.
  • Semiconductor stocks (NVDA, AMD, AVGO) gap down together. Semiconductor weakness often precedes broader NQ selling by 30-60 minutes.
  • QQQ put volume spikes. Heavy put buying on QQQ creates dealer hedging flows that add selling pressure to NQ futures.

Trading the Selloff

Short-side NQ trades during tech selloffs work best with momentum, not anticipation. Wait for the first lower high on the 5-minute chart after the initial plunge. The bounce attempt that fails to reach the prior high is the setup. It confirms sellers are in control.

Stops go above the lower high plus 1.5x the 5-minute ATR. Targets are 2-3x stop distance. On a selloff day with 5-min ATR reading 50 points, a typical short entry has a 75-point stop ($1,500 per NQ contract) and a 150-225 point target ($3,000-$4,500).

Avoid shorting after NQ has already dropped 2%+ intraday without a bounce. Late sellers get caught in snap-back rallies that can retrace 40-60% of the decline within 30 minutes. The Volatility Box hourly models recalculate support levels as the selloff progresses, providing updated downside targets calibrated to the expanding range.

Key Point During tech selloffs, NQ often overshoots ES-implied support levels by 0.3-0.5%. If ES is at a support level, NQ may still have 50-100 points of downside before finding its own floor. Do not use ES levels as NQ support during tech-specific stress. Use NQ-specific levels from VXN-adjusted calculations.

Best Times to Trade NQ for Maximum Volatility

NQ’s volatility distribution throughout the day follows the same U-shape as ES (highest at the open and close, lowest midday), but with two additional windows that are unique to NQ.

9:30-10:30 AM ET: The Opening Range

The cash market open accounts for 25-35% of NQ’s total daily range, just as with ES. However, NQ’s opening range is wider in both point and percentage terms. On a day when ES opens with a 20-point range in the first hour, NQ typically prints a 70-100 point range. Breakout strategies and Volatility Box daily model level bounces generate the highest-probability NQ setups in this window.

4:00-6:00 PM ET: Afterhours Earnings Reactions

This window does not exist for ES in meaningful form. NQ, however, can move 200-800 points between 4:00 and 6:00 PM ET when NVIDIA, Apple, Microsoft, or other mega-cap names report earnings. Futures trade through this period with reduced but actionable liquidity. MNQ is preferable to NQ here due to wider spreads and thinner order books.

Pre-Market: 8:00-9:30 AM ET

NQ is more sensitive to pre-market semiconductor and tech news than ES. Asian session tech earnings (TSMC, Samsung), European regulatory announcements, and pre-market tech company guidance revisions move NQ 50-150 points before the cash session. The Volatility Box scanner captures these pre-market shifts and adjusts opening levels accordingly.

3:30-4:00 PM ET: The Closing Drive

Identical pattern to ES: MOC orders and end-of-day rebalancing create a volatility spike. On NQ, this window produces 30-60% more point movement than the equivalent ES close window due to the higher beta of Nasdaq-100 components.

Best Strategies for Trading NQ in High Volatility

When VXN pushes above 27 (roughly equivalent to VIX 25), NQ’s character shifts. Mean reversion fades work at wider levels, momentum trades require larger stops, and intraday ranges can double. Here are the adjustments that separate profitable NQ traders from those who give back gains.

1. Volatility-Scaled Position Sizing

If your normal NQ position is 2 contracts at VXN 18, reduce to 1 contract at VXN 27 and consider switching to MNQ above VXN 35. The math: VXN 27 implies ~1.7% daily range on a $20,500 NQ = 349 points = $6,980 per contract. VXN 35 implies ~2.2% = 452 points = $9,040. Your dollar risk per contract has doubled, so your contract count must halve.

2. Wider Stops, Wider Targets

High-VXN NQ trading requires stops of 2-2.5x normal ATR-based distance. A normal 5-min ATR stop of 50 points becomes 100-125 during elevated volatility. Targets extend correspondingly: aim for 2.5-3x stop distance instead of the normal 1.5-2x.

3. Level-to-Level Trading

In high volatility, NQ respects major levels more cleanly because the moves are driven by institutional order flow, not noise. Trade from one Volatility Box daily model level to the next. Enter at a level, stop beyond the level, target the adjacent level. This approach removes discretionary guessing and anchors your trades to volatility-calibrated support and resistance.

4. Avoid Midday Entirely

High-VXN midday NQ is noise with teeth. The 11:30 AM-1:30 PM ET window in high volatility produces directionless 100-200 point swings that trigger stops in both directions. Flat from 11:30 to 2:00 is a strategy, not a missed opportunity.

5. Use Limit Orders Exclusively

NQ market orders during VXN 30+ can slip 5-15 points ($100-$300 per contract). At 2-3 fills per day, that slippage compounds into $200-$900 of dead loss. Limit orders at Volatility Box levels eliminate this drag. If the level is valid, price comes to you. If it blows through without filling, you avoided a losing trade.

NQ vs MNQ for Day Trading in Volatile Markets

The decision between NQ and MNQ is not about preference. It is about account size, risk tolerance, and the current volatility regime. MNQ exists because NQ’s dollar volatility is too large for most day trading accounts.

Factor NQ ($20/point) MNQ ($2/point)
Day trade margin ~$17,000-$20,000 ~$1,700-$2,000
300-point move (P&L) $6,000 $600
Recommended account minimum $50,000+ $5,000+
Round-trip commission ~$4.50 ~$1.50
Commission as points 0.225 points 0.75 points
Overnight liquidity Deep Moderate
Afterhours spread 0.25-0.50 points 0.50-1.50 points

When to Use MNQ Over NQ

  • Account under $50,000. NQ’s dollar range at normal volatility ($6,000-$9,000/day) means a single bad trade can consume 10%+ of a $50,000 account. MNQ keeps that to 1-2%.
  • VXN above 30. Even well-capitalized traders should consider downsizing to MNQ when NQ’s daily range exceeds 500 points ($10,000+). The per-contract risk at VXN 30+ is equivalent to what a normal NQ trade risks at VXN 18.
  • Afterhours earnings trading. Wider spreads and thinner liquidity in the afterhours session amplify slippage. MNQ limits the cost of poor fills to $0.50 per tick of slippage versus $5.00 on NQ.
  • Scaling into positions. Precise position sizing with MNQ: if your risk model calls for $8/point exposure, trade 4 MNQ instead of rounding to 0 or 1 NQ.

MNQ Limitations

Commissions on MNQ are proportionally higher: $1.50 round-trip equals 0.75 points of friction versus 0.225 points on NQ. For scalpers taking 15+ trades daily, MNQ commission drag reaches $22.50+ compared to roughly $11.25 on NQ for the same point exposure. Overnight liquidity can thin significantly, with spreads widening to 1.00-1.50 points in the Globex session versus 0.25-0.50 on NQ.

How Much Margin Is Needed for NQ Volatility Trading

Margin requirements for NQ vary by broker, session, and volatility regime. Brokers increase margins when VXN spikes, which is exactly when traders want to increase size, creating a natural friction that protects under-capitalized accounts from themselves.

Standard Margin Levels

  • NQ day trade margin: ~$17,000-$20,000. Some brokers offer reduced intraday margins ($8,000-$12,000) but these get revoked during high-volatility events.
  • NQ overnight margin: ~$20,000-$24,000. Required to hold positions through the close. This is the CME exchange-set maintenance margin.
  • MNQ day trade margin: ~$1,700-$2,000. One-tenth of NQ margin, matching the 10:1 multiplier ratio.
  • MNQ overnight margin: ~$2,000-$2,400.

Practical Account Sizing

Margin is not risk capital. It is a performance bond. Having enough margin to hold a position is not the same as having enough capital to absorb the loss if the position moves against you. A practical rule: your account should be at least 3-5x the day trade margin for the number of contracts you trade.

For 1 NQ contract: 3x $18,000 = $54,000 minimum. For 1 MNQ contract: 3x $1,800 = $5,400 minimum. These figures account for normal drawdowns, commission costs, and the ability to take a 2x ATR stop loss without a margin call.

Key Point Brokers can and do raise intraday margins during volatility spikes, sometimes doubling them with 24 hours’ notice. If your account balance barely covers normal margin, a margin increase during VXN 35 can force liquidation of your position at the worst possible time. Maintain a minimum 2x margin buffer above your open position requirements.

How Volatility Box Futures Models Handle NQ

The Volatility Box Futures daily models generate NQ-specific support and resistance levels using VXN (not VIX), NQ-specific ATR, NQ volume profile, and Market Pulse regime classification. The levels are not derived from ES and scaled up. They are independently calculated from Nasdaq-100 volatility data.

Each trading day, the model publishes pre-market NQ levels with confidence zones. Primary levels represent expected range boundaries at the current VXN reading. Secondary levels mark the extended range, typically reached on mega-cap earnings days, FOMC sessions, or when VXN exceeds 27.

The hourly models update NQ levels throughout the session, recalculating as new volatility data arrives. This is critical during earnings season, when a 4 PM NVIDIA report can shift NQ’s expected range by 300+ points within minutes. Static pre-market levels become obsolete; the hourly recalculation provides updated zones calibrated to the post-earnings volatility regime.

Putting It All Together: An NQ Volatility Trading Workflow

  1. Check VXN and VIX before the open. Calculate the expected NQ daily range using (VXN / sqrt(252)) x NQ Price. If VXN is 24 and NQ is 20,500, expect a ~310-point range (1-sigma), with realized range likely 10-20% wider.
  2. Check the VXN-VIX spread. If the spread is above 5, tech-specific risk is elevated. Reduce NQ size or shift allocation to ES.
  3. Check NQ daily ATR(14). If ATR reads 300 while VXN implies 400, volatility is expanding. Widen stops and reduce contracts.
  4. Review the earnings calendar. If NVIDIA, Apple, or Microsoft report after the close, decide before 4 PM whether to hold or flatten. If holding, use MNQ and size for a 2-4% afterhours move.
  5. Check VB daily model levels. Identify NQ-specific support and resistance from the Futures daily model. These levels reflect VXN-calibrated range, not ES-derived estimates.
  6. Trade the volatility windows. Focus on 9:30-10:30 AM ET. If a mega-cap reports after hours, the 4:00-6:00 PM ET window on MNQ is the secondary opportunity.
  7. Set ATR-based stops. Day trades: 1.5-2x ATR(14) on the 5-min chart. NQ stops will be wider in points than ES, so verify the dollar risk before entry.
  8. Size for the stop and the volatility regime. If your 2x ATR stop is 80 points on the 5-min chart, one NQ contract risks $1,600. If your max risk per trade is $1,500, switch to MNQ: 80 points x $2 = $160 per contract, allowing up to 9 MNQ contracts within budget.

Key Takeaways

  • NQ is 1.3-1.5x more volatile than ES in percentage terms due to tech concentration, higher beta, and speculative flow
  • Top 7 Nasdaq-100 stocks (AAPL, MSFT, NVDA, AMZN, META, GOOGL, TSLA) account for ~50% of the index weight
  • NQ average daily range: 200-300 points at VIX 12-15, 300-450 at VIX 15-20, 450-700 at VIX 20-30
  • VXN (Nasdaq Volatility Index) trades 2-5 points above VIX; use VXN, not VIX, for NQ range calculations
  • Single mega-cap earnings (NVDA, AAPL, MSFT) can move NQ 2-4% in afterhours, producing 400-800 points of range
  • ATR-based NQ day trade stops: 1.5-2x ATR(14) on 5-min chart, typically 45-90 points ($900-$1,800/contract)
  • MNQ at $2/point is essential for accounts under $50,000 and for afterhours earnings trading
  • NQ margin: ~$17,000-$20,000 day trade; maintain 3-5x margin as account minimum
  • Volatility Box Futures models calculate NQ levels independently from VXN, NQ ATR, and NQ-specific volume profile

Get Daily NQ Volatility Levels Before the Open

Volatility Box Futures models calculate daily support and resistance for NQ, ES, and other futures using VXN, ATR, volume profile, and regime data. NQ levels are independently derived, not scaled from ES. Levels update pre-market and adjust hourly throughout the session, including during afterhours earnings reactions.

Explore Futures Daily Models

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is NQ more volatile than ES futures? +
NQ is more volatile because the Nasdaq-100 is concentrated in mega-cap tech stocks. The top 7 names account for ~50% of the index. These growth stocks carry higher beta than the value and defensive stocks that dilute ES volatility. Additionally, heavy options activity on QQQ and individual tech names creates dealer hedging flows that amplify NQ moves. In percentage terms, NQ typically moves 1.3-1.5x ES on any given day.
What is the average daily range for NQ futures? +
NQ's average daily range depends on volatility regime. At VIX 12-15: 200-300 points ($4,000-$6,000 per contract). VIX 15-20: 300-450 points ($6,000-$9,000). VIX 20-30: 450-700 points ($9,000-$14,000). VIX 30+: 700-1,000+ points ($14,000-$20,000+). Use VXN for precise NQ calculations: (VXN / sqrt(252)) x NQ Price.
What is VXN and how does it differ from VIX? +
VXN is the CBOE Nasdaq-100 Volatility Index, measuring 30-day implied volatility from NDX options. It typically trades 2-5 points above VIX because the Nasdaq-100 is more volatile than the S&P 500. Use VXN instead of VIX when calculating expected NQ range, setting NQ stops, or assessing Nasdaq-specific risk. A widening VXN-VIX spread indicates tech-specific stress.
How do you set stop losses on NQ futures? +
Use ATR-based stops: 1.5-2x ATR(14) on the 5-minute chart for day trading. If 5-min ATR reads 30 points, your stop is 45-60 points from entry ($900-$1,200 per NQ contract, $90-$120 per MNQ). For swing trading, use 2-3x ATR(14) on the daily chart. NQ stops are wider in points than ES but similar in dollar terms per contract because of the $20 vs $50 multiplier difference.
How do mega-cap earnings affect NQ futures? +
NVIDIA, Apple, and Microsoft earnings can each move NQ 2-4% in afterhours trading (400-800 points). Meta, Amazon, Alphabet, and Tesla typically move NQ 1-2.5% (200-500 points). Because these 7 stocks represent ~50% of the Nasdaq-100, a single earnings report can generate more NQ range than an average full trading day. The afterhours reaction window (4:00-6:00 PM ET) provides trading opportunity on futures.
Should I trade NQ or MNQ for day trading? +
Trade MNQ if your account is under $50,000 or if VXN is above 30. NQ at $20/point produces $6,000-$9,000 of daily range per contract at normal volatility, and a single bad trade can cost $1,500-$3,000. MNQ at $2/point keeps that to $150-$300 per contract. The tradeoff: MNQ commissions are proportionally higher (0.75 points vs 0.225 points round-trip) and afterhours liquidity is thinner. Use NQ for lower volatility regimes and MNQ when VXN is elevated.
How much account size do I need to trade NQ futures? +
Day trade margin for NQ is ~$17,000-$20,000, but margin is not risk capital. A practical minimum is 3-5x the day trade margin: $54,000-$100,000 for 1 NQ contract. For MNQ, the minimum is $5,400-$10,000. These amounts account for drawdowns, commissions, and the ability to absorb a 2x ATR stop loss without margin pressure. Brokers may raise margins during volatility spikes, so maintain at least a 2x buffer.

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