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

Broker research

FxPro Mutual Funds checklist

If you are researching whether FxPro is a suitable place to hold or trade mutual funds, the most reliable approach is to verify the current product range directly with the broker. Brokers change their instrument lists, account types and fee schedules over time, and third-party summaries can go out of date quickly. This page does not claim that FxPro does or does not offer mutual funds. Instead, it walks through the questions you should answer using FxPro's own documents before you commit any money, and it explains how mutual fund access typically differs from other products a multi-asset broker may list.

FxPro Mutual Funds checklist cover image

Step 1: Confirm whether mutual funds are actually offered

Start on FxPro's official website and locate its full instrument or markets list. Many brokers that are known primarily for forex and CFDs do not offer traditional mutual funds at all, while others provide fund-like exposure through ETFs or CFDs on ETFs instead. These are different products with different cost structures, ownership rights and risk profiles, so the wording matters. If the instrument list is unclear, contact FxPro support in writing and keep the response, so you have a record of what was confirmed and when.

  • Check the broker's official markets or instruments page rather than relying on third-party summaries.
  • Distinguish between actual mutual funds, ETFs and CFDs on funds or ETFs, since each works differently.
  • Ask support to confirm availability for your country of residence, as product ranges can vary by region.
  • Save written confirmation from the broker before funding an account.

Step 2: Verify costs, minimums and account requirements

If a fund or fund-like product is available, the next task is understanding the total cost of holding it. Mutual funds typically carry their own management fees set by the fund provider, and a broker may add platform fees, custody fees, dealing charges or currency conversion costs on top. Also confirm minimum deposit and minimum investment amounts, which account types support the product, and whether there are inactivity or withdrawal fees that could affect a long-term holding. All of these figures should come from FxPro's current fee schedule and account documentation, not from cached review pages.

  • Read the current fee schedule for dealing, custody, conversion and inactivity charges.
  • Confirm minimum deposits and which account types support the product you want.
  • Check the fund's own ongoing charges in its official documentation, separate from broker fees.

Step 3: Check regulation, protections and how the product fits your plan

Before opening any account, confirm which FxPro entity would hold your account and which regulator oversees that entity, because client protections differ by jurisdiction. Then consider fit: mutual funds are usually long-term, diversified holdings, while CFD-based alternatives involve leverage and counterparty exposure that suit a very different approach. If your goal is buy-and-hold fund investing, make sure the account you open actually supports that, and compare your findings with other reviewed brokers before deciding.

  • Identify the specific regulated entity your account would sit under and read its client agreement.
  • Understand whether you would own fund units or hold a derivative position.
  • Match the product structure to your time horizon and risk tolerance before funding.
  • Use the InvestorTrip comparison tool to see how alternatives handle the same product area.

Continue researching

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

FAQ

Does FxPro offer mutual funds?

InvestorTrip does not make claims about current product availability on this page. Broker instrument lists change, so check FxPro's official markets page or ask its support team in writing for confirmation that applies to your country of residence.

What is the difference between a mutual fund and a CFD on a fund or ETF?

A mutual fund gives you units in a pooled investment vehicle, usually held for the long term. A CFD is a leveraged derivative that tracks a price without ownership, involves financing costs and counterparty exposure, and is generally used for short-term trading. Always confirm which structure a broker is actually offering.

What fees should I check before investing in funds through a broker?

Look at the fund's own ongoing charges, plus any broker-side dealing fees, custody or platform fees, currency conversion costs, and inactivity or withdrawal fees. All figures should come from the broker's current published fee schedule and the fund's official documents.