How to open FXPro's swap-free Islamic account? Table of Contents
- What “Swap-Free” Means at FXPro
- Before You Apply: Know the Two Things That Matter Most
- Step One: Create Your FXPro Direct Profile
- Step Two: Complete Verification (KYC)
- Step Three: Open a Live Trading Account on Your Platform
- Step Four: Fund Your Account (Wallet or Direct)
- Step Five: Request Swap-Free Conversion (Islamic Account Activation)
- What Changes After Your Account Becomes Swap-Free
- How FXPro Calculates Swap-Free Charges (Practical Explanation)
- A Clean Setup Flow You Can Follow
- Trading Rules and Risk Controls Still Apply
- Common Mistakes When Opening a Swap-Free Islamic Account
- How to Calculate Swap Points and Swap Costs in Forex Trading
- Swap, rollover, and swap points are not the same thing
- What drives swap in forex
- The rollover day and the “triple swap” effect
- Where you find the swap numbers you need
- The core workflow: swap rate → points → money
- Step One: calculate pip value (because swap often uses pip value)
- Step Two: understand what “swap rate” means on your platform
- Step Three: calculate forex swap cost (clear, repeatable method)
- Step Four: include the triple-swap day correctly
- Step Five: convert swap into your deposit currency
- Swap points as “forward points” (what they mean and how they connect)
- How swap differs across CFD asset classes
- A practical checklist for accurate swap calculation
- Common errors traders make with swap math
- How to use swap calculations in real trading decisions
- Swap-free accounts and why swap math still matters
Forex swaps are overnight financing costs or credits applied at rollover, primarily driven by the interest rate differentials between the currency pair being traded. To accurately calculate these costs, traders must identify whether their broker quotes swaps in points, cash, or percentages and convert this into their account currency using the correct pip value. A critical factor often overlooked is the “triple swap” day, typically Wednesday, which charges for three nights to account for the weekend gap. Unlike standard forex, other instruments like shares and crypto CFDs utilize distinct formulas often based on notional value and fixed annual percentages. Ultimately, understanding these calculations is essential for position traders to budget effectively and avoid unexpected costs on multi-day holds.
| Definition | Removes overnight interest (riba) for religious reasons, replacing it with administrative rollover fees after a set grace period. |
| Account Scope | Global conversion: Requesting swap-free status converts all of your real trading accounts; you cannot mix swap and swap-free accounts. |
| Activation Process | Requires a verified FxPro Direct profile and an email request to the Back Office (backoffice@fxpro.com) stating religious necessity. |
| Grace Periods | Positions can be held fee-free for a specific number of nights (e.g., 8 nights for FX Majors) before rollover fees apply. |
| Volume Limits | Swap-free conditions apply only to the first 30 lots per symbol; volume exceeding this incurs standard swap charges. |
| Weekend Fee | A triple rollover fee is charged on the designated rollover day (usually Friday or Wednesday depending on the instrument) to cover the weekend. |
| Misuse Policy | FxPro reserves the right to revoke swap-free status and correct P/L if the account is used for arbitrage or non-religious strategic advantage. |
A swap-free Islamic account is designed for traders who want to participate in forex trading and CFD trading without overnight interest (riba). In a standard trading account, holding positions past the daily rollover time can create a swap (also called a rollover) that is either charged or credited. On FXPro, the swap-free setup removes swap and replaces it with specific swap-free rules, including rollover fees after a grace period on certain instruments.
What “Swap-Free” Means at FXPro
FXPro provides swap-free trading accounts for religious reasons. The core point is simple:
- You do not pay or receive swap on a swap-free account.
- Instead, FXPro applies swap-free conditions that can include rollover fees (administrative-style charges) depending on the instrument and how many nights a position is kept open.
Just as important: FXPro’s swap-free agreement makes the swap-free offering restricted to clients who cannot use swaps due to religious beliefs, and FXPro can ask for justification and can refuse a request at its discretion.
Before You Apply: Know the Two Things That Matter Most
Your request converts all your real accounts
When you submit a swap-free request to FXPro, the swap-free agreement states that all other real trading accounts you hold will be converted to swap-free as well. This is not a per-account toggle where you keep some accounts swap-based and some swap-free.
Your request converts all your real accounts
When you submit a swap-free request to FXPro, the swap-free agreement states that all other real trading accounts you hold will be converted to swap-free as well. This is not a per-account toggle where you keep some accounts swap-based and some swap-free.
Swap-free status can be removed if FXPro detects misuse
FXPro does not allow swap-free accounts to be used to gain an advantage related to swaps. If FXPro suspects abuse, manipulation, deceitful conduct, or fraud connected to swap-free status, it can revoke the swap-free status, recover unaccrued swap-related costs, close accounts, and nullify trades and related P/L under the swap-free agreement terms.
Step One: Create Your FXPro Direct Profile
FXPro uses FXPro Direct as the main client area for account setup, verification, deposits, and account management.
To register a live trading profile, you start from the Register option on the FXPro homepage and complete the sign-up flow. You can upload verification documents during registration or later through FXPro Direct.
During registration, FXPro collects standard account profile information such as identity details, residence address, and background details used for onboarding.
Step Two: Complete Verification (KYC)
Account verification is a normal part of opening a live forex trading account. FXPro verifies identity and may verify address.
FXPro states it requires:
- A valid passport, national ID card, or driver’s license
- Used to verify identity.
- Proof of residence (if requested)
- May be requested to confirm your name and address (examples include a bank statement or utility bill).
You upload documents through FXPro Direct by signing in and using the upload documents workflow.
Step Three: Open a Live Trading Account on Your Platform
After you have a profile, you open the trading account(s) you intend to use. FXPro offers accounts on major platforms, including MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, and cTrader.
Choosing a platform for Islamic trading
Pick the platform that matches how you trade:
- MT4 / MT5: widely used for discretionary trading and Expert Advisors (EAs). FXPro supports EAs on MT4 and MT5.
- cTrader: often chosen for execution tools and an order-ticket style many active traders prefer. FXPro also uses a commission model on cTrader for FX pairs and spot metals.
FXPro’s account pricing differs by account type and platform. For example, FXPro explains that:
- MT4/MT5 Standard accounts typically use marked-up spreads with zero commission
- MT4/MT5 Raw Spread accounts use raw spreads with a per-lot commission
- cTrader accounts charge commission per million USD traded on FX and spot metals
This matters for Islamic trading because you want a clear picture of spreads + commission + swap-free rollover fees, not just spreads alone.
Step Four: Fund Your Account (Wallet or Direct)
FXPro supports funding through FXPro Direct. You can deposit into your FXPro Wallet (a central balance) and then transfer funds to trading accounts, or deposit straight into a trading account depending on the method and flow available in your FXPro Direct area.
FXPro lists multiple payment methods and states FXPro does not charge fees for deposits, while availability depends on location and jurisdiction.
Transfers between Wallet and trading accounts are described as instant inside the FXPro App flow, and FXPro Direct also supports internal transfers.
Step Five: Request Swap-Free Conversion (Islamic Account Activation)
This is the key step that changes your account into a swap-free Islamic account.
FXPro’s FAQ states that to apply for a swap-free account, you must send an email request to the FXPro Back Office at backoffice@fxpro.com.
Under FXPro’s swap-free trading account agreement:
- A swap-free request can be submitted through email and/or other methods FXPro designates
- FXPro can require adequate justification and/or proof of necessity for conversion
- FXPro can refuse the request at its discretion without providing a reason
What to include in your request email
To avoid delays, structure the request clearly:
- Your FXPro Direct registered email
- Your FXPro account number(s) (or state “convert all my real trading accounts”)
- A direct statement that you require a swap-free account due to religious reasons
- Any supporting justification/proof if requested under the swap-free agreement
Once FXPro approves and processes the request, your real trading accounts are converted to swap-free status as described in the agreement.
What Changes After Your Account Becomes Swap-Free
Once swap-free is active, the trading mechanics look normal on the platform—same order placement, same charting, same margin system—but overnight financing behaves differently.
You will not receive swap credits
The swap-free agreement states clients cannot use swap-free accounts to benefit from swaps and cannot request payment of swap amounts that would have applied before conversion.
Swap-free fees depend on the instrument and holding time
FXPro provides a swap-free commission schedule describing:
- Grace periods (a number of nights where no rollover fee applies)
- A per-lot, per-night fee after the grace period (for certain instruments)
- Special handling for weekends, where a triple charge is applied on the designated rollover day to account for weekend days
Also, swap-free conditions apply up to 30 open lots per symbol, and normal swap fees are charged on volume above that amount when positions are held overnight.
How FXPro Calculates Swap-Free Charges (Practical Explanation)
The swap-free commission PDF breaks down rules by platform grouping. A straightforward way to think about it:
- You open a trade on a symbol (for example, EUR/USD).
- If you close it the same day, no overnight component applies.
- If you hold it over rollover, the position counts “nights.”
- If the number of nights is within the grace period, no rollover fee is applied.
- If the trade stays open beyond the grace period, a rollover fee applies per lot per night, based on the group rules.
Grace periods by instrument group (MT4/MT5 and FXPro Edge swap-free)
FXPro’s schedule states these grace periods:
- Forex majors: 8 nights
- Forex minors & exotics: 3 nights
- Gold/Silver (spot metals group listed): 4 nights
- Platinum/Palladium: 3 nights
- Cryptos: 3 nights
- Spot energy: 1 night
- Spot indices: indefinitely
- Shares: indefinitely
- Futures: indefinitely
That “indefinitely” detail is important: for those groups, the schedule indicates no rollover fee is introduced by nights held, under the swap-free schedule terms.
What the rollover fee is based on
For MT4/MT5 and FXPro Edge swap-free accounts, the schedule states that after the grace period, the rollover fee is calculated using the swaps formula and posted as a balance transaction at midnight every day only if the trade is due to pay swaps. If the trade would have received swaps, then no rollover fee applies.
This is one of the most overlooked rules in Islamic forex trading: swap-free does not simply mean “no cost to hold.” It means “no swap interest,” with a defined fee logic applied after grace periods on many symbols.
Weekend handling (triple charge)
The swap-free commission schedule states commission is calculated once for each day a position rolls over, and on the designated rollover day a triple charge is applied to account for the weekend.
A Clean Setup Flow You Can Follow
If you want a simple, correct workflow for opening an FXPro Islamic account, follow this order:
- Register your FXPro Direct profile.
- Verify identity (and address if requested).
- Open the trading account on MT4, MT5, or cTrader that you plan to use.
- Deposit funds into Wallet or directly into the trading account.
- Email Back Office to request swap-free conversion.
- Trade with swap-free status active, keeping the grace-period and lot-cap rules in mind.
Trading Rules and Risk Controls Still Apply
A swap-free account changes overnight financing mechanics, not trading risk. Your margin and stop-out rules still matter, especially in leveraged forex trading.
FXPro explains the stop-out level can be set by jurisdiction and describes how stop-out is triggered when margin level falls to the stop-out threshold based on equity versus used margin.
So even with a swap-free account, holding positions longer exposes you to:
- spread and commission costs
- rollover fees (after grace periods where applicable)
- market risk and volatility
- margin pressure and stop-outs in adverse moves
Common Mistakes When Opening a Swap-Free Islamic Account
Opening many accounts before requesting swap-free
Because FXPro converts all your real accounts when you request swap-free, open only what you actually intend to use. If you plan to run separate strategies, decide that structure first, then request conversion.
Ignoring the grace period
Many traders assume swap-free means “free to hold.” On FXPro, the grace-period schedule means your holding time affects cost, especially on forex minors, exotics, crypto, and energy CFDs.
Exceeding the per-symbol lot cap
Swap-free conditions apply up to 30 open lots per symbol, and beyond that FXPro charges normal swap fees for the extra volume when held overnight. If you trade size, track your exposure per symbol carefully.
Using swap-free status in a way that triggers removal
FXPro’s agreement allows action if it detects misuse connected to swap-free status, including revoking swap-free status and taking corrective measures described in the agreement. Treat the swap-free account as a faith-based accommodation with rules, not a loophole.
How to Calculate Swap Points and Swap Costs in Forex Trading
Swap is the overnight financing applied when you keep a forex or CFD position open past the broker’s daily rollover. Depending on the instrument and whether you are long or short, swap can be a cost you pay or an amount credited to your account. Swap exists because holding a leveraged position overnight has a financing component tied to the currencies (or the underlying funding model for CFDs).
Swap, rollover, and swap points are not the same thing
A lot of confusion comes from mixing two different “swap” ideas:
- Retail trading swap (overnight fee/credit): What your broker applies to your open position at rollover. This is the swap most traders see in MT4/MT5 or cTrader as “Swap Long / Swap Short.”
- FX swap points (forward points): The difference between spot and forward pricing driven by the interest-rate differential for a specific period (often tied to tom/next in interbank pricing). Those “swap points” are used to price forwards and roll spot positions from value date to value date.
Retail platforms usually display swap as a daily number (often in points or in your deposit currency) that is charged or credited at rollover. Even if your broker calls it “swap points,” what matters for you is how that number turns into account currency cost per lot per night.
What drives swap in forex
For spot FX, the economic driver is the interest rate differential between the two currencies: you are effectively long one currency and short the other when you hold a position overnight. That differential can be positive or negative depending on which side you hold.
Brokers then apply their own methodology and adjustments (including markups) when translating interbank funding into retail swap. So your broker’s displayed swap can differ from a simplified “interest differential / days” calculation.
The rollover day and the “triple swap” effect
Swap is applied once per day at rollover. Because FX settlement conventions create a weekend adjustment, many brokers apply a triple swap on a specific weekday to account for weekend days in one go. This is a standard convention across many retail FX providers.
If you are calculating expected swap costs for a multi-day hold, you must include that triple-charge day in your night count. Otherwise your estimate will be wrong even if your per-night swap rate is correct.
Where you find the swap numbers you need
You can calculate swap only if you start from the swap rates your broker publishes for the instrument.
Common places brokers show swap rates:
- The instrument “specification” window in MT4/MT5 (Swap Long / Swap Short, often shown in points)
- The “symbol info” panel in cTrader (swap/financing entries vary by broker settings)
- The broker’s web page listing swap/overnight charges and formulas (many brokers state how their swap is calculated for different CFD asset groups)
Your calculation is only as accurate as the swap rate inputs you use. The goal is to convert the published swap rate into a money amount.
The core workflow: swap rate → points → money
No matter the platform, the logic is the same:
- Identify the swap rate for your direction (long or short).
- Identify what unit the swap rate is quoted in (points, pips, currency per lot, percentage per year, etc.).
- Convert that swap rate into a cash amount per night for your position size.
- Multiply by the number of nights (including the triple-swap day when it applies).
Brokers may publish different formulas by asset group. One broker example (FxPro) explicitly states different swap formulas for forex, shares, spot metals/energy/indices, and cryptocurrencies, which illustrates why you must know the instrument category before calculating.
Step One: calculate pip value (because swap often uses pip value)
In forex, swap calculations commonly rely on pip value (the money value of one pip for your lot size). If you can compute pip value, you can convert many swap quotes into money.
Standard definitions
- Standard lot: 100,000 units of the base currency for most FX pairs.
- Mini lot: 10,000 units.
- Micro lot: 1,000 units.
Pip size
- For most FX pairs: 1 pip = 0.0001
- For JPY-quoted pairs: 1 pip = 0.01
Pip size
- For most FX pairs: 1 pip = 0.0001
- For JPY-quoted pairs: 1 pip = 0.01
Pip value formula (general)
Pip Value (in quote currency) = Lot Size × Pip Size
Example (1.00 lot EUR/USD):
Pip value in USD = 100,000 × 0.0001 = 10 USD per pip
If your account currency is the quote currency, you’re done. If not, you convert.
Converting pip value into your account currency
If your pip value is in USD but your account is in EUR, you convert using the relevant FX rate at the time of conversion. That conversion step is also how traders convert MT4 “swap points” into deposit currency in practical examples.
Step Two: understand what “swap rate” means on your platform
If your swap is shown as “points” (typical on MT4/MT5)
Many brokers show swap as a number like “-5.4” or “+0.6” in the symbol specification. In many MT4/MT5 setups, that figure is points per lot. You then convert points to money using the contract size and price conversion rules used by the broker/platform. Practical walkthroughs commonly show converting swap points into account currency by applying the relevant exchange rate conversion.
A safe way to handle MT4-style swap display is:
- Treat the “Swap Long / Swap Short” as a per-lot, per-night value in the unit the broker defines (often points).
- Convert “points” into a cash value using the instrument’s pricing increment and your lot size.
- Convert into your deposit currency if needed.
Because the exact point-to-cash mapping can differ by broker implementation and symbol settings, broker-provided examples and formulas are the most reliable way to interpret the number.
If your swap is shown as “points” (typical on MT4/MT5)
Many brokers show swap as a number like “-5.4” or “+0.6” in the symbol specification. In many MT4/MT5 setups, that figure is points per lot. You then convert points to money using the contract size and price conversion rules used by the broker/platform. Practical walkthroughs commonly show converting swap points into account currency by applying the relevant exchange rate conversion.
A safe way to handle MT4-style swap display is:
- Treat the “Swap Long / Swap Short” as a per-lot, per-night value in the unit the broker defines (often points).
- Convert “points” into a cash value using the instrument’s pricing increment and your lot size.
- Convert into your deposit currency if needed.
Because the exact point-to-cash mapping can differ by broker implementation and symbol settings, broker-provided examples and formulas are the most reliable way to interpret the number.
If your broker publishes a direct formula (best-case scenario)
Some brokers publish explicit formulas by asset group. For example, FxPro states:
- Forex: Pip Value × Swap Rate × Number of nights / 10
- Shares: Number of Shares × Last price × Annual Percentage charge / 360
- Spot Metals, Energy & Indices: Lot Size × Swap Rate × Number of nights
- Cryptocurrencies: Number of Coins × Closing Price × 20% / 360
When your broker provides a formula like this, you should follow it exactly because it reflects the broker’s internal swap model for that product.
Step Three: calculate forex swap cost (clear, repeatable method)
There are two common calculation paths:
Path A: broker gives swap in “cash per lot per night”
If your broker shows swap like “-3.20 USD per lot per night”:
Swap Cost = Swap (cash per lot per night) × Lots × Nights
Example (hypothetical numbers):
Swap = -3.20 USD, Lots = 1.5, Nights = 4
Swap Cost = -3.20 × 1.5 × 4 = -19.20 USD
If your account currency is not USD, convert the -19.20 USD into your account currency at the conversion rate used by the platform.
Path B: broker gives swap as “swap rate” tied to pip value (common on broker swap pages)
If your broker uses the “pip value × swap rate” model (as FxPro shows for forex):
Swap Cost = Pip Value × Swap Rate × Nights / 10
This tells you two important things:
- Swap Rate is scaled so that dividing by 10 is part of the broker’s convention.
- Pip Value must match your position size and be in the correct currency.
Example (hypothetical numbers):
Pip Value (1 lot) = 10 USD
Swap Rate = -7.0
Nights = 3
Swap Cost = 10 × (-7.0) × 3 / 10 = -21 USD
If you trade 0.20 lots, pip value becomes 2 USD per pip, and the swap cost scales linearly:
Swap Cost = 2 × (-7.0) × 3 / 10 = -4.2 USD
This “linear scaling” is why lot size is the first thing you must get right.
Step Four: include the triple-swap day correctly
A very common mistake is multiplying by “calendar days” instead of “rollover nights.”
If your broker charges triple swap once per week to include weekend rollover, then:
- One of those rollover nights counts as 3 nights for swap charging purposes.
So your “Nights” variable in the formula is not always equal to how many times you slept while holding a trade; it is how many swap-charge nights occurred.
Practical approach:
- Count how many rollover events your position passes through.
- Replace the triple-swap rollover with a 3 in your sum.
Example night weighting:
- Normal rollover night = 1
- Triple rollover night = 3
Total “swap nights” = (normal nights × 1) + (triple nights × 3)
Then multiply by the per-night swap cost.
Step Five: convert swap into your deposit currency
Even if the swap is calculated in the quote currency or another reference currency, your platform posts it in your account currency.
So you may need one conversion step:
Swap (account currency) = Swap (calculation currency) × FX conversion rate
This same principle is used when converting MT4 swap points into an equivalent monetary value in the account’s base currency in broker examples.
If your account is in EUR and swap is posted in USD:
- A negative USD swap becomes a negative EUR amount after conversion
- The conversion uses the FX rate applied by the broker/platform at posting time
For planning and budgeting swap costs, using the current spot conversion rate gives a close estimate.
Swap points as “forward points” (what they mean and how they connect)
In institutional FX, “swap points” often refer to forward points: the difference between spot and forward rates for a given tenor. Those points reflect the interest-rate differential and money-market pricing for the period (commonly tom/next for short rolls).
The practical connection for retail traders is:
- Retail rollover fees are ultimately anchored to the same economic idea (interest-rate differential),
- But brokers translate that into their product structure, platform units, and markups.
So if you see “swap points” in a broker context, treat them as the broker’s posted unit for overnight financing—not necessarily the same as interbank forward points.
How swap differs across CFD asset classes
Swap is not only a forex concept. Many brokers apply overnight financing on indices, metals, energy, shares CFDs, and crypto CFDs. The structure changes by product, and that is why broker pages often list separate formulas by asset group.
Shares CFDs
A common model is an annualized percentage financing charge applied to the notional value:
Swap Cost (shares) = Number of Shares × Last price × Annual percentage charge / 360
What matters:
- More shares = higher notional
- Higher price = higher notional
- Higher annual charge = higher daily cost
Spot metals, energy, and indices CFDs
A common model is a per-lot swap rate:
Swap Cost = Lot Size × Swap Rate × Nights
So if the swap rate is -2.5 and you trade 1.0 lot for 4 nights:
Swap Cost = 1.0 × (-2.5) × 4 = -10.0 (in the currency/unit the broker specifies)
Crypto CFDs
Some brokers apply an annualized funding charge on notional:
Swap Cost (crypto) = Number of Coins × Closing Price × 20% / 360
Here the cost is driven by:
- number of coins
- price level
- annual percentage rate
Spot metals, energy, and indices CFDs
A common model is a per-lot swap rate:
Swap Cost = Lot Size × Swap Rate × Nights
So if the swap rate is -2.5 and you trade 1.0 lot for 4 nights:
Swap Cost = 1.0 × (-2.5) × 4 = -10.0 (in the currency/unit the broker specifies)
A practical checklist for accurate swap calculation
Before you calculate, confirm these items in your own trade plan:
- Instrument: EUR/USD is not the same as XAU/USD, US30, or a share CFD.
- Direction: swap long and swap short can differ, sometimes dramatically.
- Lot size: swap scales linearly with volume.
- Swap unit: points, pips, cash, or annual percentage.
- Rollover weighting: include the triple-swap rollover convention.
- Account currency conversion: if swap is posted in a different currency, you must convert.
If any one of these is wrong, your calculation will be wrong.
Common errors traders make with swap math
Mixing pips and points
On many platforms:
1 pip = 10 points (for 5-digit brokers on most pairs)
If your platform quotes swap in “points” and you treat it as “pips,” your numbers can be off by a factor of 10.
Forgetting the contract size
Some CFDs have contract sizes that do not match FX standard lots. Always use the correct lot/contract definition for that symbol.
Assuming the same rollover rule for every product
Triple swap is common for many FX products, but product conventions vary. Brokers document how their swaps are applied and when the rollover weighting occurs.
Forgetting the contract size
Some CFDs have contract sizes that do not match FX standard lots. Always use the correct lot/contract definition for that symbol.
Assuming the same rollover rule for every product
Triple swap is common for many FX products, but product conventions vary. Brokers document how their swaps are applied and when the rollover weighting occurs.
Ignoring that swap rates change
Swap rates are not fixed forever. They can move as funding conditions and broker pricing inputs change. For planning, use the swap rate currently shown for the symbol you trade.
How to use swap calculations in real trading decisions
Swap is a trading cost like spread and commission, but it behaves differently:
- Spread is paid once at entry (and effectively again at exit through the bid/ask).
- Commission is charged per side or per round turn, depending on account type.
- Swap is charged per night, so the longer you hold, the more it matters.
This is why swap calculation is essential for:
- swing trading
- position trading
- carry-style strategies
- hedging that stays open through many rollovers
If your strategy typically holds positions only intraday, swap is less relevant. If you hold for multiple rollovers, swap can become one of your largest costs.
Swap-free accounts and why swap math still matters
Swap-free (Islamic) accounts remove swap interest, but brokers often apply different charging rules (such as alternative fees after a holding period). That means you still need the same skill: turning published overnight conditions into a clear money cost so you know what a multi-day hold actually costs.
- Get Swap Long and Swap Short for the symbol.
- Pick the correct one for your direction.
- Decide your lot size.
- Compute pip value for your lot size (and convert if needed).
- Apply the broker’s stated formula (or convert platform points into cash).
- Count swap-charge nights, including the triple rollover.
- Convert into your account currency if necessary.
- Add the swap cost to your total trade cost model alongside spread and commission.
Once you can do that quickly, you stop guessing about overnight fees. You know the number, you know why it is that number, and you can price it into your plan before you place the trade.
Please check FXPro official website or contact the customer support with regard to the latest information and more accurate details.
Please click "Introduction of FXPro", if you want to know the details and the company information of FXPro.


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