ForxZen
RISK-01Divulgación de Riesgos
Leveraged trading can lose more than you expect. Understand the risk before you open a position.
18+ Age & capacity restricted — see Eligibility in our Términos del Servicio.
Trading forex and CFDs (contracts for difference) is a leveraged product: it lets you control a position larger than your account balance, which magnifies both gains and losses. Most retail CFD accounts lose money — that is a documented fact across the industry, not a worst-case scenario. Only ever trade with capital you can afford to lose in full.
Leverage amplifies losses, not just gains
- Losses can exceed your deposit on some account types and instruments unless your broker offers negative-balance protection — check this explicitly before funding an account.
- Margin calls and stop-outs can close your position automatically at a loss if your account equity falls below the broker's required margin.
- Volatility events (news releases, market opens, low-liquidity hours) can widen spreads and cause slippage past your intended stop-loss level.
Nothing here is financial advice
ForxZen publishes education, broker reviews and calculators — never a personal recommendation to buy, sell or trade a specific instrument. No outcome is guaranteed, and past performance (an operator's historical spreads, a strategy's backtest) is never a reliable indicator of future results. If you are unsure whether trading is appropriate for your circumstances, seek independent, regulated financial advice before opening an account.
Practical risk controls
- Position sizing — risk a small, fixed percentage of your account per trade (see our position size calculator) rather than a fixed lot size regardless of stop distance.
- Stop-loss orders — decide your exit before you enter, and use guaranteed stops where a broker offers them if slippage risk concerns you.
- Leverage caps — many regulators (FCA, ESMA) cap retail leverage on major pairs specifically because unlimited leverage causes outsized retail losses; use the regulatory maximum as a ceiling, not a target.
- Demo first — practise on a demo account until your process is consistent before risking real capital.
Verify a broker before you fund an account
Always confirm a broker's licence directly on the regulator's own public register — not just the badge on the broker's marketing page. These official tools let you check a firm's registration and read investor-protection guidance:
- FCA (UK) — ScamSmart
- ESMA (EU) — investor warnings
- NFA (US) — background affiliation status
- CFTC — check registration
- ASIC (Australia) — MoneySmart
For our own approach to verifying regulatory tier and scoring brokers, see our Política Editorial.