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How Does Leverage Work?

The funds you deposit to your trading account is considered your margin. Leverage is a mechanism which allows you to open positions far greater than your initial margin.

For example, if you deposit 10,000 euros to a trading account, and have a maximum leverage of 1:30, your buying power can be potentially as much as €300,000. However, you absolutely should not allocate the entire value of your account to one trade. The higher your exposure is to the market; a small price movement will significantly impact profits or losses.


If for example, you open a long position for 10,000 EUR/USD, €333.33 of your margin will be used, leaving you with €9,666.67 free margin which may be used for other trades or maintained as part of a healthy risk management strategy. 

  • Account Balance 10,000 EUR
  • Leverage = 1:30
  • Used Margin 333,33 EUR
  • Free Margin 9,667.67 EUR
  • Equity 10,000 EUR
  • Margin Level 3000 %

Used Margin is the amount of margin used to maintain the open CFD position; it’s a static number. However, Free Margin is a dynamic number which adjusts according to unrealised profit and loss. Should the price fall by 300 Pips, the position experience drawdown of $300 (€245.6), which is an unrealised loss, then Free Margin will fall to €9,254.4, supposing the EUR/USD exchange rate 1.22150.

BUY 10,000 EUR/USD
EUR/USD = 1.22150
  • Account Balance 10,000 EUR
  • Leverage = 1:30
  • Used Margin 333.33 EUR
  • Free Margin 9,421.07 EUR
  • Equity 9,754.4 EUR
  • Margin Level 2926
FSCA Products
	Invention Measures

FSCA Products
Invention Measures

As a financial services provider regulated by the Financial Services Conduct Authority (FSCA), Trade Markets follows a full list of fit and proper requirements. These various requirements fall into five broad categories.

1.⁠ ⁠Honest, integrity, and good standing

2.⁠ ⁠Competence

3.⁠ ⁠Continuous professional development

4.⁠ ⁠Operational ability

5.⁠ ⁠Financial soundness

FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

MAX LEVERAGE

Major forex pairs, such as USD/JPY, EUR/USD, GBP/USD

1:30

Minor forex pairs, such as USD/MXN, EUR/CZK, GBP/SGD

1:20

Spot gold

1:20

Major indices, such as the US30, DAX30, FTSE100

1:20

Spot silver

1:10

Futures (hard & soft commodities), such as Copper vs USD or Wheat vs USD

1:10

Energy products, such as Brent vs USD

1:10

Minor indices, such as ASX, HSI

1:10

Shares of US, UK, French & German listed companies

1:5

Digital assets, such as BTC/USD, ETH/USD

1:2

Open a CFD trading
account today

* Risk Warning: Trading in forex and CFDs could lead to a loss of your invested capital.

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