Understand LMFX leverage caps, margin calculations, product-specific margin rules, and how stop out plus negative balance protection work in Forex and CFD trading.
Condition of LMFX's Leverage (Margin Requirement) Table of Contents
- Leverage and margin in plain terms
- LMFX leverage limits by account type
- How LMFX applies margin calls and stop outs
- Forex margin on LMFX and why the tables can confuse traders
- Micro account margin behavior is different because the contract size is different
- Metals on LMFX have a fixed leverage rule
- Energy margin on LMFX uses product-specific examples
- Commodities and indices are defined by contract-based margin, not “up to high leverage”
- Share CFDs on LMFX use percentage-based used margin
- How margin requirement interacts with swaps and equity
-
Practical leverage discipline for LMFX traders
- Keep margin level far above the margin call threshold
- Treat metals, shares, indices, energy, and commodities as separate margin categories
- Size positions by margin budget, not only by stop-loss distance
- Do not stack correlated Forex positions as if they were independent
- Understand what stop out actually does
- The clean summary of LMFX leverage conditions
- LMFX Stop Out Level and Negative Balance Protection Policy Explained
- Margin, equity, free margin, and why stop out exists
- What “Margin Call” means on LMFX
- What “Stop Out” means on LMFX
- LMFX stop out levels by account type
- How stop out typically plays out inside a trading account
- Why accounts can still go negative even with stop out
- LMFX Negative Balance Protection policy in plain language
- Stop out level and NBP are one combined risk system
- What this means for position sizing and leverage choices
- How stop out interacts with multiple positions
- How overnight holding can increase stop out risk
- The practical difference between stop loss and stop out
- What to do if you want to stay far away from stop out
Leverage lets you control a larger Forex/CFD position using margin, which is collateral locked while a trade is open, not a fee.
On LMFX, leverage caps vary by account type (Premium/Micro up to 1:1000, Fixed up to 1:400, Zero up to 1:250) and margin protection thresholds differ (margin call/stop out).
LMFX margin behavior also changes by asset class: Forex tables may use a 1:100 reference baseline, metals are fixed at 1:100, shares use percentage-based margin, and indices/commodities often use contract-style margin examples.
Stop out is an automatic liquidation process triggered by margin level falling to the account’s stop out threshold, and it can still leave a negative balance in fast or gapping markets.
LMFX states negative balance protection settles the negative amount when it occurs due to stop out, but practical risk control still depends on position sizing, margin buffer, and avoiding correlated overexposure.
| Leverage vs margin | Leverage increases position size; margin is collateral reserved while the trade is open (not a fee). |
|---|---|
| Account leverage caps | Premium/Micro up to 1:1000; Fixed up to 1:400; Zero up to 1:250. |
| Margin protection thresholds | Premium/Micro: Margin Call 50%, Stop Out 20%; Fixed/Zero: Margin Call 30%, Stop Out 15%. |
| Forex margin tables | Forex “used margin” examples may be shown using a 1:100 baseline for comparison, then converted to your account leverage. |
| Metals margin rule | Metals leverage is fixed at 1:100; margin is based on notional value ÷ 100. |
| Shares margin model | Share CFDs use percentage-based margin: used margin % × lot size × current share price (e.g., 10% ≈ 1:10). |
| Stop out + NBP meaning | Stop out force-closes positions when margin level hits the threshold; LMFX states negative balances due to stop out are settled so the client does not owe the negative amount. |
Leverage is the mechanism that lets a Forex trader control a position that is larger than the cash sitting in the trading account. The “cost” of opening that leveraged position is not a fee. It is margin: a portion of your account equity set aside as collateral while your trade is open. On LMFX, margin rules are not one-size-fits-all. They change depending on your account type and, just as importantly, on the asset class you trade (Forex pairs, metals, energy, commodities, indices, shares).
Leverage and margin in plain terms
When you open a leveraged CFD trade, your broker does not require you to pay the full notional value of the trade. Instead, the broker requires margin.
- Notional value is the position size multiplied by the current market price.
- Leverage is the ratio between notional value and the margin required.
- Margin requirement is the amount of equity reserved to support the open position.
A high leverage setting reduces required margin per trade, which increases the number of positions you can open with the same balance. That also increases risk, because your free margin can disappear fast during adverse price moves.
LMFX defines these core account metrics clearly:
- Free Margin = Equity − Margin
- Margin Level = (Equity / Necessary Margin) × 100
Those two lines explain most “why did I get stopped out?” questions. If equity drops because your floating PnL is negative (or because swaps reduce balance), margin level drops. If margin level reaches the broker’s thresholds, the account enters protection mode.
LMFX leverage limits by account type
LMFX lists different maximum leverage caps depending on the account plan:
- Premium: leverage up to 1:1000
- Micro: leverage up to 1:1000
- Fixed: leverage up to 1:400
- Zero: leverage up to 1:250
These caps matter because they set the lowest possible margin requirement you can reach on instruments where leverage is not fixed by the product specification.
Why account type changes the margin pressure you feel
LMFX also lists different margin protection thresholds (Margin Call and Stop Out) by account type:
- Premium: Margin Call 50%, Stop Out 20%
- Micro: Margin Call 50%, Stop Out 20%
- Fixed: Margin Call 30%, Stop Out 15%
- Zero: Margin Call 30%, Stop Out 15%
This is not cosmetic. A higher margin call threshold means you reach the warning zone earlier. On Premium and Micro, the platform starts signaling danger sooner because the margin call is set at 50%. On Fixed and Zero, the call threshold is lower (30%), but stop out is also lower (15%). In practical terms: Premium/Micro warn earlier; Fixed/Zero allow deeper drawdown before the margin call threshold, but stop out still arrives if equity keeps falling.
How LMFX applies margin calls and stop outs
LMFX’s account agreement explains the mechanics in direct language:
- A Margin Call is issued when the margin posted is below the minimum margin requirement. The client must either add margin (deposit funds) or close positions.
- A Stop Out is the closing of open positions without prior notice when funds are insufficient to maintain open positions based on the stop out level of the account type or bonus scheme.
That last part is important: stop out is not a negotiation. It is an automated safety action that closes positions when the account can no longer support them.
What changes in your account when margin stress hits
As margin level falls:
- Your ability to open new trades is reduced because free margin shrinks.
- A margin call condition is reached at the threshold for your account type.
- If equity keeps dropping and margin level reaches the stop out level, positions are closed to reduce used margin.
The only “inputs” that change margin level are:
- Floating PnL from open positions
- Swaps/financing adjustments on positions held past the broker’s rollover time
- New trades that increase used margin
- Partial closes that reduce used margin
- Deposits/withdrawals that change balance (and therefore equity)
Forex margin on LMFX and why the tables can confuse traders
LMFX publishes detailed Forex tables that include a column named “Used Margin (USD)” and a note that the margin shown is based on a position size of 1 lot (100,000) and 1:100 leverage.
This is a reference baseline. It is not saying your account is limited to 1:100. It is showing margin as if leverage were 1:100 so traders can compare pairs consistently.
How to convert the LMFX Forex margin example to your account leverage
If the margin shown is for 1:100 leverage, then:
- At 1:1000, required margin is one tenth of the table value.
- At 1:400, required margin is one quarter of the table value.
- At 1:250, required margin is 0.4 (40%) of the table value.
So if the table shows a margin requirement of “X” for one standard lot at 1:100:
- Premium/Micro at 1:1000 use margin ≈ X ÷ 10
- Fixed at 1:400 use margin ≈ X ÷ 4
- Zero at 1:250 use margin ≈ X × 0.4
This is the simplest way to translate the published Forex margin examples into what your account will reserve.
Why the currency conversion lines matter
Forex margin is often calculated in the quote currency or needs conversion into your account currency. LMFX’s Forex table reflects that reality with conversion expressions (for example, using the relevant rate). This is why the margin line for a cross pair can include a conversion factor. The trading platform does this in real time, and the margin requirement changes as prices change.
Micro account margin behavior is different because the contract size is different
On LMFX, the Micro account lists 1 lot = 1,000 units, while standard-style accounts list 1 lot = 100,000 units. That one line changes the entire leverage-and-margin experience for smaller balances.
- If you trade 1.00 lot on a standard contract (100,000), you are trading a full standard lot.
- If you trade 1.00 lot on a Micro contract (1,000), you are trading what many traders would call a micro-lot size.
So, Micro is not only about spreads or “beginner friendliness.” It is about the unit size that drives notional value, margin, and pip value. With Micro sizing, you can create smaller notional exposure without needing to rely on very small “0.01” position sizes.
Practical effect: Micro contract sizing helps you keep margin usage low while still trading with clear position sizes. That makes it easier to avoid margin level collapse caused by oversized trades.
Metals on LMFX have a fixed leverage rule
Metals are a category where LMFX sets a fixed leverage condition that overrides your account type leverage cap. LMFX states that leverage on metal products is always fixed at 1:100.
- Even if your Premium account can reach 1:1000 on Forex pairs, metals do not follow that leverage.
- Your margin requirement for metals is based on 1:100.
LMFX also provides a direct calculation rule:
- Margin for metals = Notional Value ÷ 100
- Notional Value = Number of ounces × Current market price
LMFX even provides an explicit worked example for gold that shows how margin is computed when you open 1 lot (100 ounces).
Why metals are treated this way
Metals often move in sharp intraday swings, and many brokers enforce stricter margin rules to prevent accounts from taking extreme exposure using very high leverage. On LMFX, the rule is clear and consistent: metals are on 1:100.
Energy margin on LMFX uses product-specific examples
Energy products on LMFX (such as oil and natural gas) show “Used Margin in this example” per 1 lot, with the note that margin is based on a position size of 1 lot. LMFX also states that the oil margin example shown is calculated based on a 1:400 leverage account.
Two practical takeaways follow from this:
- Energy margin is presented as a per-lot example, not as “up to X leverage” marketing.
- The margin reserved can be understood as product-specific, and the broker is explicit about the leverage context used to compute the example.
LMFX also states maximum trade size limitations on certain energy products (for example, a cap per live account for oil contracts). This matters for margin planning because position limits restrict how much notional exposure you can stack into a single account, regardless of free margin.
Commodities and indices are defined by contract-based margin, not “up to high leverage”
For commodities (softs and some metals like copper, platinum, palladium), LMFX provides a table that includes:
- Contract size per lot
- Used Margin per lot (an explicit amount)
- Other trading variables
This is a “fixed margin per contract” style presentation. Instead of saying “leverage is X,” the broker shows the margin that will be reserved for one lot of that commodity contract. That makes it easy to plan: if you open 1 lot, you can expect that margin block to be reserved.
Indices are similar in spirit. LMFX lists indices with:
- Contract size (noted as 1 lot equals 1 contract)
- A “Used Margin” column for the 1-lot contract example
- A note that margin shown is based on a position size of 1 lot
This presentation encourages the correct mental model: index CFDs are commonly handled with contract-based margin rules, and margin can be meaningfully different from Forex, even if the same account offers high leverage on currency pairs.
Share CFDs on LMFX use percentage-based used margin
Shares are where LMFX gives a clean formula and makes the margin model obvious:
- Margin requirement = used margin % × lot size × current market share price
In the share tables, LMFX lists used margin percentages per share CFD. Many US share CFDs in the table show 10% used margin, while some UK shares show 14% used margin.
Percentage-based margin is effectively “leverage by another name”:
- 10% margin corresponds to roughly 1:10 leverage on that share CFD.
- 14% margin corresponds to roughly about 1:7.14 leverage.
The math is simple: leverage ≈ 1 ÷ margin percentage.
This is why share CFDs usually feel “heavier” on margin than Forex. Even if your Forex account can use very high leverage, shares commonly require a much larger collateral percentage per position.
How margin requirement interacts with swaps and equity
Margin is reserved to support your positions, but your ability to keep positions open depends on equity. Equity is balance plus floating PnL, and swaps can change the balance over time.
LMFX explains that swaps are applied when positions are held past the broker’s rollover time. If swaps are negative on your positions, your balance will decrease, and equity will fall if floating PnL does not offset it. That lowers margin level.
This matters most when you run tight free margin. A trader can survive normal price fluctuation but still hit margin stress because swap debits grind down equity on leveraged exposure.
Practical leverage discipline for LMFX traders
High leverage is not “good” or “bad.” It is a tool. On LMFX, the conditions make one point unavoidable: leverage changes how fast your margin level moves.
Here are practical rules that align with LMFX’s structure:
Keep margin level far above the margin call threshold
If your account’s margin call is 50%, running near 60–80% margin level is asking for a call during normal volatility. The same logic applies to 30% accounts. The closer you trade to the threshold, the smaller the price move required to force action.
Treat metals, shares, indices, energy, and commodities as separate margin categories
LMFX publishes category-specific margin behavior:
- Metals are fixed at 1:100 and use notional/100.
- Shares use a percentage-based formula.
- Indices and commodities show contract-based used margin per lot.
- Energy margin is shown as per-lot examples with stated leverage context.
If you mix categories in one account, your margin usage can change in ways that surprise traders who only think in Forex leverage terms.
Size positions by margin budget, not only by stop-loss distance
Many traders size by risk-per-trade (for example, equity × risk%). That is necessary, but on high leverage accounts it is not sufficient. You also need a margin budget:
- Decide the maximum percentage of equity you will allow as used margin at any time.
- Keep a buffer so that spreads widening, slippage, and swap effects do not push you into margin call territory.
Do not stack correlated Forex positions as if they were independent
If you open multiple pairs that move together, your floating PnL swings will amplify. That can crash equity quickly, which lowers margin level. The platform does not care that you “diversified” across symbols; it only measures equity and necessary margin.
Understand what stop out actually does
Stop out closes positions because the account cannot support the required margin. That is forced risk reduction. You do not control which tick triggers it, and you do not control the fill quality during fast markets. The only control you have is earlier: position sizing, buffer, and limiting total exposure.
The clean summary of LMFX leverage conditions
LMFX leverage is best understood as a layered system:
- Account-type leverage caps apply primarily to Forex-style margin calculations:
- Premium/Micro up to 1:1000
- Fixed up to 1:400
- Zero up to 1:250
- Margin call and stop out thresholds differ by account type:
- Premium/Micro: 50% margin call, 20% stop out
- Fixed/Zero: 30% margin call, 15% stop out
- Product specifications override the simple “up to 1:1000” thinking:
- Metals are fixed at 1:100 with explicit margin formula.
- Shares use used margin percentages with a margin formula tied to price and lot size.
- Indices and commodities show contract-based margin per lot.
- Energy shows margin examples and also includes trade-size limits on some contracts.
If you trade LMFX like a Forex-only broker, you will misjudge margin on metals, shares, indices, and commodity CFDs. If you trade it as a product-by-product margin system, your account behavior becomes predictable.
Source notes (not part of the article)
- LMFX account leverage caps and margin call/stop out levels by account type.
- LMFX definitions of margin, free margin, margin level, margin call, and stop out.
- LMFX Forex margin table note (margin shown for 1 lot at 1:100).
- LMFX metals: leverage fixed at 1:100 and margin calculation method.
- LMFX shares: margin requirement formula and used margin percentages shown in tables.
- LMFX indices, commodities, energy: contract-based “used margin” examples per lot and related notes.
LMFX Stop Out Level and Negative Balance Protection Policy Explained
In Forex and CFD trading, the broker’s most important safety system is not a feature you click on. It is the margin engine that decides when you are allowed to keep positions open, when you are warned, and when positions are closed automatically. On LMFX, this system is defined through two parts that every trader must understand as a single package:
- the stop out level, which is the threshold where the platform closes positions because there is not enough equity to support the open trades
- the Negative Balance Protection (NBP) policy, which explains what happens if a stop out still leaves the account below zero
The core idea
A stop out is designed to prevent losses from getting out of control by force-closing positions when equity is too low compared to used margin. Negative balance protection is designed to prevent the stop out process from turning into debt if the market moves too quickly and positions are closed at worse prices than expected.
On LMFX, both rules are spelled out clearly in its trading account specifications and its account agreement.
Margin, equity, free margin, and why stop out exists
Stop out levels make no sense until you understand the three values the platform watches every second:
- Equity: the real-time value of your account when open trades are included
- Margin: the collateral locked to keep trades open
- Free Margin: what is left to absorb losses and to open new trades
LMFX defines these directly:
- Free Margin = Equity − Margin
- Margin Level = (Equity / Necessary Margin) × 100
That second line is the one that matters most. Your account does not get stopped out because your balance is “low.” It gets stopped out because your margin level falls to the broker’s stop out threshold.
A simple way to picture it
- Used margin is like a deposit locked for each open trade.
- Equity is your balance plus the floating PnL (plus swap adjustments).
- When price moves against you, equity drops, margin level drops, and you move closer to the stop out line.
Stop out exists because leveraged positions can lose more than the cash in the account when the market moves sharply or gaps. The stop out mechanism tries to cut exposure automatically before that happens.
What “Margin Call” means on LMFX
Before stop out happens, there is a warning zone. LMFX defines Margin Call as the situation where margin posted is below the minimum margin requirement; the client must add funds or close positions, and if the client does not, the execution venue can close positions.
In practical trading language:
- Margin call is the broker’s “you are close to forced liquidation” stage.
- It is your last clean chance to reduce risk voluntarily.
Some platforms restrict new trades around margin call levels. Even if you can still trade, it is usually a bad time to add exposure because the account is already under stress.
What “Stop Out” means on LMFX
LMFX defines Stop Out as the closing of open positions without prior notice when there are insufficient funds to maintain positions, based on the stop out level shown in the features/specifications of each account type and bonus scheme.
That definition includes four points that matter:
- Positions can be closed without prior notice
- Stop out happens when funds are insufficient to maintain open positions
- The trigger is a stop out level (a margin level threshold)
- The exact stop out level depends on account type and can also depend on a bonus scheme
So stop out is not a manual “LMFX chose to close me.” It is rule-based liquidation tied to margin level.
LMFX stop out levels by account type
LMFX publishes margin call and stop out levels for its main account types.
Here is the practical overview:
| LMFX account type | Margin call level and Stop out level |
|---|---|
| Premium | Margin call level 50%, Stop out level 20% |
| Micro | Margin call level 50%, Stop out level 20% |
| Fixed | Margin call level 30%, Stop out level 15% |
| Zero | Margin call level 30%, Stop out level 15% |
These numbers are not trivia. They determine how close to the edge your account can get before liquidation starts.
What the percentages actually mean
The stop out level is tied to margin level, which is equity divided by required margin.
Example logic (no special assumptions, just the formula):
- If your account has $1,000 equity and $2,000 used margin, your margin level is 50%
- If your margin level reaches 20% (Premium/Micro), the stop out process can start
- If your margin level reaches 15% (Fixed/Zero), the stop out process can start
So stop out is not “when your balance hits zero.” It is “when equity becomes too small relative to used margin.”
Why Premium/Micro feel different from Fixed/Zero
Premium and Micro have a higher margin call threshold (50%) and a higher stop out (20%). Fixed and Zero use 30% and 15%.
What this changes in real trading:
- On Premium/Micro, you enter the warning zone sooner, and liquidation starts sooner.
- On Fixed/Zero, you get closer to the edge before the warning, and closer still before liquidation begins.
Neither is “better.” They are simply different risk-control settings.
How stop out typically plays out inside a trading account
Even though the definition is clear, traders often misunderstand the stop out process.
A stop out is usually not a single event where everything closes instantly. It is typically a sequence where the platform closes positions until margin level moves back above the stop out threshold. The goal is to reduce used margin and stop the account from collapsing further.
What you experience during a stop out event can include:
- partial liquidation (some positions closed, others remain)
- rapid changes to used margin after each forced close
- positions closing at worse prices than your chart suggests if the market is moving fast
This is exactly why stop out cannot be treated as a “safety net you can rely on.” It is an emergency brake.
Why accounts can still go negative even with stop out
Many traders assume stop out prevents the balance from going below zero. In real markets, that is not guaranteed by the mechanics of stop out alone.
A negative balance can happen when:
- the market gaps through prices (price jumps, skipping levels)
- liquidity is thin, spreads widen, and orders fill far from expected
- fast moves create slippage, especially on large positions
- multiple correlated positions lose at the same time, reducing equity faster than liquidation can stabilize it
In those cases, liquidation may occur after the account is already below zero because the closes happen at prices that were not available at the moment the stop out threshold was reached.
This is the exact risk Negative Balance Protection is meant to address.
LMFX Negative Balance Protection policy in plain language
LMFX states that if a negative balance occurs in the client’s trading account due to stop out, the company makes a settlement of the full negative amount so the client does not suffer the loss.
That is the practical NBP statement. It means:
- the negative balance is linked to a stop out event
- the broker settles the negative amount in full
- the client is not left owing that negative amount
In everyday trading terms, this is negative balance protection tied to stop out: if forced liquidation still leaves the account below zero, the negative amount is cleared by the broker rather than becoming a debt owed by the trader.
What LMFX NBP is tied to
The wording is specific: the settlement applies when the negative balance occurs due to stop out.
So the protection is anchored to a particular scenario: a liquidation event driven by margin rules.
Stop out level and NBP are one combined risk system
For Forex traders, it is best to treat LMFX’s stop out rules and NBP policy as two layers of the same protection stack:
- Stop out level attempts to prevent the account from collapsing by closing positions when margin level falls too low.
- NBP settlement addresses the leftover problem: if stop out still leaves a negative balance, that negative balance is settled in full so the client does not carry the loss as debt.
This structure matters because it changes the meaning of “worst case” for a retail trader. Without NBP, worst case can be more than the deposit. With NBP as stated, the stop out scenario that drives the account negative does not turn into an amount you must repay.
What this means for position sizing and leverage choices
Even with NBP, your risk management should be built so you never come close to stop out in normal conditions. Stop out is not a strategy. It is what happens when the strategy failed.
Keep margin level far above the danger zone
Because LMFX margin call and stop out levels are published as fixed thresholds by account type, you can plan around them.
A practical way to think:
- If you are frequently under 200% margin level, your account has little buffer against fast moves.
- If you are drifting toward your margin call threshold (50% or 30% depending on account), you are operating in a zone where small volatility swings can force liquidation.
The clean approach is to run your trading so that even a sharp adverse move does not bring margin level anywhere near the stop out percentage.
Avoid the “max leverage = max safety” mistake
High leverage reduces the margin required to open positions, which can make it easier to open trades that are too large. Traders sometimes confuse “low margin used” with “low risk.” They are not the same.
You can open a huge position with little used margin under high leverage, and still be stopped out quickly because a small price move creates a large floating loss that crushes equity.
So leverage is not protection. It is capacity. Risk comes from position size relative to equity and volatility.
How stop out interacts with multiple positions
Stop out risk increases when you run many trades at once, especially if they are correlated.
In Forex, correlation is common:
- pairs sharing the same base or quote currency often move together
- risk-on and risk-off shifts can move multiple majors at once
- commodity-linked currencies can react together to macro moves
If your account is loaded with trades that lose together, equity can drop quickly while used margin remains high. That combination drives margin level down fast, and it is exactly the condition that triggers stop out.
How overnight holding can increase stop out risk
Two forces tend to raise stop out risk when holding positions longer:
- swaps/financing can reduce equity over time if the swap is negative
- gap risk increases when markets reopen or when liquidity is thin
Even if a trade looks stable on a calm chart, a gap can move price beyond your stop loss, creating a larger-than-planned loss. That loss hits equity instantly and can push margin level into stop out territory.
NBP is designed to prevent debt if a stop out event creates a negative balance, but it does not change the fact that a gap can wipe out an account.
The practical difference between stop loss and stop out
Traders confuse these constantly, so it’s worth making the difference clear:
- A stop loss is your own order to exit a trade at a chosen level. It is part of your plan.
- A stop out is the platform closing positions because the account can no longer support them.
Stop losses can slip in fast markets. Stop outs can also occur during chaos. The difference is control: stop loss is proactive risk control; stop out is emergency liquidation.
If you rely on stop out to manage risk, you are choosing the most expensive form of risk management available: forced closing at the worst time.
What to do if you want to stay far away from stop out
Here are practical, high-impact habits that fit LMFX’s stop out structure:
Use a margin budget, not only a risk-per-trade budget
Risk-per-trade (like 1% of equity) is helpful, but you also need to control how much of your equity becomes used margin.
A solid approach is:
- decide a maximum total used margin percentage you will allow across all open trades
- keep extra free margin so spread spikes and slippage do not push margin level into the danger zone
Reduce exposure before high-volatility periods
When spreads widen and liquidity thins, stop out risk increases because equity can fall faster and fills can be worse. The most reliable way to manage that is reducing position size or reducing the number of open trades before volatility hits.
Avoid stacking positions that behave like one trade
If you are long several USD pairs at the same time, you may not have “several trades.” You may have one concentrated USD trade with multiple legs. That concentration increases stop out risk because losses arrive together.
Treat high leverage accounts with stricter sizing
If your account type offers high maximum leverage, the correct response is not using the maximum position size it allows. The correct response is keeping position sizing tight enough that your margin level stays comfortably high.
LMFX defines stop out as forced closing of positions without notice when there are insufficient funds, based on the stop out level of the account type and bonus scheme.
LMFX publishes stop out levels by account type:
- Premium: stop out 20%
- Micro: stop out 20%
- Fixed: stop out 15%
- Zero: stop out 15%
Please check LMFX official website or contact the customer support with regard to the latest information and more accurate details.
Please click "Introduction of LMFX", if you want to know the details and the company information of LMFX.


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