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

Broker research

Fusion Markets Forex checklist

Researching forex trading with Fusion Markets works well as a verification exercise: instead of taking marketing claims or third-party summaries at face value, work through the broker's current documents on pairs offered, pricing, execution and account conditions. This page does not confirm the broker's current forex offering. It sets out the questions to answer, where to look, and how to compare what you find against other reviewed brokers before committing funds.

Fusion Markets Forex checklist cover image

Verify the forex product range and account structure

Begin with the broker's official instrument list and account pages. Confirm which currency pairs are available, how they are categorised, and whether the offering differs by account type or by the entity serving your country. Pair availability, contract sizes and margin requirements are all details that belong in the broker's product schedules rather than in general reviews, so treat those documents as your primary source.

  • Check the broker's published instrument list for the currency pairs you intend to trade.
  • Confirm contract specifications such as lot sizes, margin requirements and trading hours per pair.
  • Note whether the available account types differ in pricing model, and which applies to residents of your country.

Check pricing, commissions and total trading costs

Forex costs usually combine spreads, any per-lot commissions and overnight swap charges. Headline spread figures are often averages or minimums, so read how the broker defines them and whether commissions apply on top. Swap rates matter if you hold positions overnight, and they change with market conditions. Build a simple cost estimate for your typical trade size and holding period using the broker's current published figures, then re-check those figures before going live.

  • Read whether quoted spreads are minimums, averages or typical figures, and over what period they were measured.
  • Confirm whether commissions apply per lot and how they combine with spreads for your account type.
  • Check current swap or overnight financing rates for the pairs you plan to hold beyond a session.

Review regulation, execution and platform details before funding

Before depositing, identify the legal entity that would hold your account and verify its regulatory status on the relevant official register, since this affects leverage limits and client protections. Also read what the broker discloses about execution methods, order handling and slippage. Finally, compare your findings against other brokers so your decision reflects the full picture rather than a single data point.

  • Verify the regulated entity for your country and read its client agreement before funding.
  • Read the broker's execution and order handling disclosures rather than assuming a particular execution model.
  • See the full Fusion Markets review at /reviews/fusion-markets, compare options at /tools/compare-brokers?brokers=fusion-markets, and browse further research at /reviews.

Continue researching

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

FAQ

Which forex pairs can I trade with Fusion Markets?

Check the broker's current instrument list on its official website. Pair availability and contract specifications can change and may differ by account type or by the entity serving your country, so this page does not confirm a fixed list.

How do I estimate the real cost of a forex trade?

Combine the spread, any per-lot commission and applicable swap charges for your holding period, using the broker's current published figures. Then confirm those figures again shortly before trading, since pricing conditions change.

What leverage applies to forex accounts?

Leverage limits depend on the regulated entity holding your account and your client classification. Verify the entity in the client agreement and check the leverage rules stated for your account type before trading.