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Fusion Markets Regulation & Safety — Licenses Explained

🟢 Tier 1 Regulated

Is Fusion Markets Safe?

Fusion Markets holds 2 regulatory licenses across different jurisdictions. The highest-tier regulation is Tier 1, which means clients benefit from strong investor protection, segregated funds, and access to compensation schemes in case of broker insolvency.

Regulatory Licenses

Regulator Country Tier Registry
ASIC — Australian Securities and Investments Commission Australia Tier 1 Verify →
VFSC — Vanuatu Financial Services Commission Vanuatu Offshore Verify →

Understanding Regulation Tiers

We classify regulators into three tiers based on the strength of their oversight, enforcement history, and client protection measures:

  • 🟢 Tier 1 — Top-tier regulators like FCA (UK), ASIC (Australia), CySEC (EU), BaFin (Germany), MAS (Singapore). These require segregated client funds, participation in investor compensation schemes, regular audits, and strict capital adequacy. If a Tier 1-regulated broker fails, clients typically have recourse through compensation funds.
  • 🔵 Tier 2 — Reputable regional regulators like DFSA (Dubai), FSCA (South Africa), SCA (UAE), CBB (Bahrain). These maintain reasonable standards but may lack the compensation schemes and enforcement resources of Tier 1 jurisdictions.
  • 🟡 Tier 3 / Offshore — Lighter-touch regulators like FSA (Seychelles), IFSC (Belize), VFSC (Vanuatu), SCB (Bahamas). These provide a basic regulatory framework but with lower capital requirements and limited client protections. Brokers regulated only at this level require extra due diligence from traders.

Fusion Markets's best regulation is Tier 1. This places them among the more trustworthy brokers from a regulatory standpoint.

Client Fund Protection

Under ASIC regulation, Fusion Markets must hold client funds in segregated trust accounts with approved Australian banks. While Australia does not have a compensation scheme like the UK's FSCS, the segregation requirement means client funds are protected from the broker's creditors in case of insolvency.

Negative Balance Protection

Fusion Markets offers negative balance protection for retail clients under its Tier 1 regulated entities. This means your account balance cannot go below zero — if extreme market volatility causes losses beyond your account balance, the broker absorbs the difference. This is a regulatory requirement in the EU, UK, and Australia for retail clients.

Compensation Schemes

Entity Scheme Coverage
ASIC (Australia) None (segregated accounts) Fund segregation only
VFSC None Basic regulatory oversight only

Regulatory History

Fusion Markets was founded in 2017 and has been operating for 9 years. While not the oldest broker around, they have built a solid operational history. During our research, we did not find any major regulatory sanctions or significant enforcement actions against Fusion Markets in recent years.

That said, regulatory compliance is not static. Brokers can face regulatory changes, and past clean records do not guarantee future conduct. We recommend verifying Fusion Markets's current license status directly on the regulator's registry before opening an account.

Our Regulation Score

Fusion Markets scores 7.5/10 for regulation in our assessment. A solid regulation score that indicates adequate oversight, though there may be room for stronger protections depending on which entity you trade under.

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8.1 / 10
Overall Score
Based on 8 categories
Trading Costs 9.5
Platforms & Tools 8.0
Regulation & Trust 7.5
Education 6.0
Customer Service 7.5
Research & Analysis 6.5
Deposit & Withdrawal 8.0
Product Range 7.0

Quick Facts

Founded
2017
Headquarters
Melbourne, Australia
Regulation
ASIC, VFSC
Min Deposit
$0
Max Leverage
1:500
Spreads From
0.0 pips
Platforms
MT4, MT5, cTrader
Support
24/5 Live Chat, Email