Live leadership meter for the seven megacaps that move the Nasdaq — each name's buy/sell pressure side by side — plus a blended-basket footprint. Read who's actually leading the index, in the heat of the moment.
The index isn't the story — the names behind it are. The Mag-7 pull-stack meter is a live leadership read on the seven megacaps that actually move the Nasdaq, side by side: AAPL, MSFT, NVDA, AMZN, META, GOOGL, TSLA. When ES or NQ moves, you can see in one glance whether the megacaps are leading the move or fighting it — instead of staring at the index and guessing.
Alongside the meter it builds a blended-basket footprint: the seven names combined into one cap-weighted instrument, drawn as a constant-volume footprint chart. It lives in the order-flow / DOM workspace and is part of Pro.
Each name gets a bar driven by its session cumulative delta — buy volume minus sell volume since the cash open. Leaning up means net buying (the name is being stacked into); leaning down means net selling (it's being pulled). It's a read of aggression — what the prints are actually doing, name by name.
| Relative to the strongest | The default. The name with the largest move fills the scale and the other six read against it — so the leader is obvious at a glance. |
| Per-name normalized | Each bar is that name's delta divided by its own volume, clamped to ±1 — for when constituents trade very different sizes (this is how the Eurex basket runs), so one high-volume leg never flattens the rest. |
The seven are weighted by their Nasdaq-100 cap weight in the basket, so MSFT, AAPL and NVDA carry more than TSLA or GOOGL — the megacaps that move the index most move the meter most.
Below the meter, the seven names are blended into one cap-weighted price and a constant-volume footprint is built from their combined flow — bid and ask volume at every price level, with a fresh number-candle each time the basket trades a set volume. It's one footprint view of “the megacaps” as a single instrument, so you can read absorption and imbalance in megacap flow the same way you read it on your contract.
The same engine runs on the Eurex index complex — FDAX FESX FSMI FTDX FGBL — as a per-instrument meter (so the very different volumes stay comparable) with an FDAX-driven footprint: the DAX's own number-candles, with the rest of the complex reading as leadership around it.