Axi Adds New US, UK and EU Stock CFDs
Multi-regulated Axi has added a selection of stock CFDs from major economies. This includes Spotify, PayPal and Berkshire Hathaway. The new share CFDs are available with zero commission and 1:5 leverage.
Hot Stocks, Fresh Opportunities
The latest additions allow traders to speculate on leading firms from the US, UK and EU.
Amongst the most popular new stocks are Adobe, BlackRock and Dr Pepper from the US, Aston Martin, BT and the Hut Group from the UK, plus Air France, Porsche and SAP from the EU.
The introduction of big players in finance and cryptocurrency, such as Credit Suisse and Coinbase, is particularly enticing given the recent banking failures and crypto’s modest uptick.
Competitive Trading Conditions
The new stocks are available as CFDs, a derivative that allows you to bet on rising and falling prices without owning the underlying shares.
CFDs are also available with leverage, meaning you can increase your buying power with a small deposit. 1:5 leverage is available on share CFDs at Axi, so a $100 outlay will give you $500 in buying power, multiplying any gains or losses 5x (less any fees).
The broker charges no commission on its stocks. Instead, traders pay a competitive variable spread plus an overnight financing fee for any positions held through to the next day.
About Axi
Axi is an award-winning broker with more than 60,000 clients in over 100 countries. Established in 2007, the firm has over 15 years experience in the trading industry and authorization from leading regulators, including the UK’s FCA and Australia’s ASIC.
As well as CFDs on stocks, traders can take positions on popular indices, forex and commodities. Spreads are tight starting at 0.0 pips and there are no hidden charges.
New traders can sign up with a selection of accessible payment methods, including wire transfer, Skrill, Neteller and bank cards. We also rate that most payment options offer near-immediate funding with zero fees.
Sign up with Axi today to start trading major stocks from the US, UK and EU.