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IPC Mexico Index (MEX35) Trading Guide 2024

···6 min read
MEX35
indices (other)
$1
50 pips
1
01:00 UTC Monday — 22:00 UTC Friday

Pre-Market01:0014:30 UTC
Regular14:3021:00 UTC
Extended21:0022:00 UTC

The IPC Mexico Index — traded as MEX35 on MetaTrader 5 — tracks the 35 most liquid companies listed on the Bolsa Mexicana de Valores, making it the primary barometer of Mexican equity market health. With a pip value of 1 and a typical spread of 50 pips, this instrument behaves very differently from major European or US indices, and misunderstanding those mechanics is the fastest way to blow a position. This guide breaks down everything from contract specifications to session timing so you can trade MEX35 with a clear edge.

  • The MEX35 has a pip size of 1 and a pip value of 1, meaning every single point of price movement equals exactly $1 per c...
  • MEX35 trades from 01:00 UTC Monday through 22:00 UTC Friday, divided into three distinct windows: Pre-Market (01:00–14:3...
  • The 50-pip spread on MEX35 is not a minor detail — it is the central risk management problem for this instrument. Any st...
1

IPC Mexico Index Key Metrics and Contract Specifications

The MEX35 has a pip size of 1 and a pip value of 1, meaning every single point of price movement equals exactly $1 per contract. That sounds modest — but at a typical spread of 50 pips, you're starting each trade 50 points in the hole before the market moves a tick in your favor. Compare that to the DAX40, which often trades with a spread of 1-2 pips, and you immediately understand why position sizing on MEX35 demands a different mindset.

The contract size is 1, which keeps things clean mathematically. If you open 2 lots and the index moves 100 points in your direction, you profit $200. Reverse the move and you lose $200. No complex multipliers to account for.

The IPC (Índice de Precios y Cotizaciones) was established in 1978 and has grown to represent sectors including financials, consumer staples, telecommunications, and mining — with América Móvil and Grupo Financiero Banorte historically among the heaviest weightings. Because the index reflects a commodity-linked emerging market economy, it tends to show elevated sensitivity to oil price swings, US dollar strength, and Federal Reserve policy decisions. A 25-basis-point Fed rate hike can move MEX35 by several hundred points within a session, purely through the USD/MXN transmission mechanism.

Why this matters: knowing that MEX35 is a spread-heavy instrument tied to emerging market risk appetite tells you immediately that scalping is expensive here, and that macro events carry outsized weight compared to purely technical setups.

2

Best Trading Sessions for MEX35: When Does Liquidity Peak?

MEX35 trades from 01:00 UTC Monday through 22:00 UTC Friday, divided into three distinct windows: Pre-Market (01:00–14:30 UTC), Regular (14:30–21:00 UTC), and Extended (21:00–22:00 UTC).

The Regular session — 14:30 to 21:00 UTC — is where you want to be. This window aligns directly with the opening of the Bolsa Mexicana de Valores and overlaps with the US equity session from 14:30 UTC onward. That dual overlap creates the highest volume, tightest effective spreads relative to the quoted 50-pip norm, and the most reliable follow-through on breakouts. Major Mexican economic releases, including Banxico monetary policy decisions and GDP prints, are typically scheduled within this window.

The Pre-Market phase (01:00–14:30 UTC) sees thin participation. Price can drift or gap on overnight news — particularly anything touching US-Mexico trade relations or Pemex (the state oil company, which influences sentiment on the index). Positions held through Pre-Market are exposed to gap risk without the liquidity to exit cleanly.

The Extended session (21:00–22:00 UTC) is a 60-minute tail that catches late US session momentum. Volume drops sharply here. Spreads effectively widen in real terms because market makers pull depth. Unless you have a specific reason to hold into this window — such as managing an open swing trade — most intraday strategies should be closed before 21:00 UTC.

A counterintuitive reality: the first 30 minutes of the Regular session (14:30–15:00 UTC) are often the most volatile but not necessarily the most tradeable. Order flow is chaotic as institutional players rebalance. Waiting until 15:15 UTC for the initial volatility to settle frequently produces cleaner entry signals with better risk-to-reward ratios.

The 50-pip spread on MEX35 is not a minor detail — it is the central risk management problem for this instrument.

3

Risk Management Approach for MEX35: Accounting for the 50-Pip Spread

The 50-pip spread on MEX35 is not a minor detail — it is the central risk management problem for this instrument. Any stop-loss placed less than 50 points from entry is almost certain to be triggered by normal bid-ask fluctuation before the market has had a chance to move in your direction. Treat 50 pips as the absolute minimum buffer just to escape the spread, and build your stop placement from there.

A practical rule: for intraday trades during the Regular session, stop-losses below 100 points are generally too tight. The index can swing 150–300 points on a single US macro release without any change in the underlying trend. A 150-point stop with a 300-point target gives you a 1:2 risk-to-reward ratio — the minimum worth accepting on a spread-heavy instrument.

Position sizing follows directly from pip value. If your account risk per trade is $200 and you're placing a 200-point stop, you can trade exactly 1 lot (200 points × $1 per pip × 1 lot = $200 risk). Scale up to 2 lots and your risk doubles to $400. The math is refreshingly simple given the pip value of 1, but that simplicity can lull traders into oversizing.

Correlation risk deserves attention. MEX35 has a historically positive correlation with crude oil prices (Mexico is a significant oil exporter) and a negative correlation with USD/MXN strength. Running a long MEX35 position alongside a long crude oil trade is not diversification — it is concentration. Stress-testing your portfolio for scenarios where oil drops sharply and the peso weakens simultaneously is a necessary discipline for anyone holding MEX35 overnight.

For swing trades held across multiple days, the Pre-Market gap risk described earlier becomes a direct risk management concern. Sizing swing positions at 50% of your normal intraday size is a reasonable adjustment when you cannot monitor the market during the 01:00–14:30 UTC window.

Trader Sentiment

MEX35

32% Long68% Short

Simulated sentiment data based on historical averages. Not real-time.

Advanced trading tools for IPC Mexico Index on MetaTrader 5.