Independent broker research
027Vol. IVJuly 10, 2026
Independent broker research

Broker research

Fusion Markets Crypto checklist

If you are researching crypto trading through Fusion Markets, the most reliable approach is to treat every claim you read elsewhere as something to confirm against the broker's own current documents. Crypto product lineups, pricing, and availability can change, and they often differ by country and regulatory entity. This page is a working checklist of what to verify before you open or fund an account, along with general points about how crypto products offered through brokers usually differ from buying coins on an exchange.

Fusion Markets Crypto checklist cover image

Confirm what crypto products are actually offered

Brokers can offer crypto exposure in different forms, and the form matters. Some brokers list crypto derivatives such as CFDs, where you trade price movements without owning the underlying asset. Others may not offer crypto at all in certain jurisdictions because of local rules. Before assuming Fusion Markets offers any specific crypto instrument, open the broker's official product list or contract specifications and check what is available for your country of residence and account type. Do not rely on third-party summaries, including this one, as a substitute for the broker's current documents.

  • Check the official instrument list for the exact crypto pairs or products available to your entity and region.
  • Confirm whether crypto exposure is offered as a derivative or as ownership of the underlying asset, since these carry different rights and risks.
  • Verify whether crypto trading is restricted or unavailable in your jurisdiction before opening an account.

Verify costs, spreads, and trading conditions

Crypto instruments at brokers frequently carry different costs than forex or index products. Spreads, commissions, overnight financing on leveraged positions, and weekend trading rules can all differ by instrument and account type. Because these figures change, the only dependable source is the broker's current pricing schedule and contract specifications. Pull up the live figures inside a demo or live platform if possible, and compare them against the published schedule. You can also use the InvestorTrip broker comparison tool at /tools/compare-brokers?brokers=fusion-markets to line this broker up against others you are considering.

  • Check current spreads and any commissions for each crypto instrument on the account type you plan to use.
  • Confirm overnight financing or swap charges for leveraged crypto positions, including weekend treatment.
  • Verify margin requirements and any leverage caps that apply to crypto under your regulatory entity.
  • Look for trading-hour differences, since some brokers quote crypto outside standard market hours.

Check account, funding, and regulatory details

Crypto rules vary widely between regulators, so the entity that onboards you determines what you can trade and under what protections. Confirm which Fusion Markets entity would hold your account, which regulator oversees it, and what client-money and complaint arrangements apply. Also verify how deposits and withdrawals work for the account you plan to open, since funding methods and processing times differ by region. For broader context on the broker, return to the full Fusion Markets review at /reviews/fusion-markets, or browse other research pages at /reviews.

  • Identify the specific legal entity and regulator for your account before funding.
  • Read the client agreement and product disclosure documents for crypto-specific terms.
  • Confirm deposit and withdrawal methods, currencies, and any fees for your region.
  • Test support responsiveness with a pre-account question about crypto availability.

Continue researching

Open related InvestorTrip pages before treating this topic as a final decision.

FAQ

Does Fusion Markets offer crypto trading?

You should confirm this directly with the broker. Crypto availability depends on your country, the regulatory entity that onboards you, and the broker's current product list. Check the official instrument list and contract specifications, or ask support in writing before opening an account.

Is trading crypto through a broker the same as buying coins on an exchange?

Usually not. Many brokers offer crypto as derivatives such as CFDs, where you trade price movements without owning the coins. That means no wallet, no ability to transfer coins, and different costs and risks, including leverage and overnight financing. Verify the exact product structure before trading.

What crypto costs should I verify before opening an account?

Check current spreads, any commissions, overnight or weekend financing charges on leveraged positions, margin requirements, and any leverage caps set by the regulator. All of these change over time, so confirm them in the broker's current pricing schedule rather than older reviews.