Leverate Adds Managed MT4/5 Hosting With Geo-Based Server Recommendations for Brokers

Tuesday, 07/04/2026 | 09:05 GMT by Damian Chmiel
  • The new review service tracks infrastructure KPIs and recommends server locations based on actual trader geography.
  • Leverate says the offering consolidates hosting, maintenance, and operational review into a single managed package for MT4/5 operators.
Leverate, iFX EXPO
Leverate, iFX EXPO

Leverate has launched a managed MT4 and MT5 hosting service paired with what the company calls a "Broker Review" process, aimed at FX and CFD operators running MetaTrader infrastructure. The service, according to the firm, tracks server performance metrics and recommends hosting locations based on the geographic distribution of a broker's active traders.

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The Tel Aviv-headquartered technology provider, which has operated in the brokerage technology space for more than 19 years, says the product is designed for licensed MT4 or MT5 brokers looking to either launch new infrastructure or migrate from an existing setup.

Leverate said in March that interest from MetaTrader brokers had climbed 400% since it began marketing its managed ecosystem around MT4 and MT5 earlier this year.

Broker Tech Providers Race to Bundle Infrastructure Services

Leverate is far from the only company trying to consolidate broker technology under one roof. The managed hosting and infrastructure space for MetaTrader brokers has grown increasingly crowded, with multiple providers vying for the same pool of operators looking to simplify their tech stacks.

Match-Trade Technologies, for instance, has been aggressively expanding its own brokerage infrastructure offering. The Polish firm reported a 290% increase in server clients since January 2024 and recently added full MT5 integration to its Match-Trader platform. Your Bourse, another B2B provider, launched its own MT4 and MT5 hosting solution built on Equinix data centers with DDoS protection and real-time monitoring, specifically targeting brokers who want flexible, shorter-term contracts.

Meanwhile, Fortex has long offered MT4/MT5 hosting from Equinix facilities in New York, Hong Kong, and London, marketing sub-millisecond latency and dedicated hardware for brokers and institutional clients.

The competitive landscape means that Leverate's managed hosting pitch sits alongside a range of existing alternatives, and what the company is selling is not so much the hosting itself as the continuous monitoring and advisory layer wrapped around it. Whether that distinction is enough to stand out in a market where broker tech is becoming increasingly commoditized remains to be seen.

The "Broker Review" Layer

Leverate says its team works with operators to assess broader operational parameters, including trading conditions, group structures, liquidity routing, and risk management configurations. The company frames this as a data-driven advisory process rather than a one-time audit.

Guy Paz
Guy Paz

"Broker performance today depends on how well infrastructure aligns with trader distribution," Guy Paz, Leverate's COO, said. "Leverate actively optimizes this by analyzing real-time KPIs and geo-data, enabling brokers to eliminate latency bottlenecks and maintain execution integrity at scale."

The company published a case study involving what it described as a mid-sized FX/CFD broker that had experienced persistent slippage, platform instability, and trader drop-off.

Leverate claimed the broker saw approximately 50% lower latency, 90% less downtime, and a 30% reduction in support tickets after the infrastructure review and monitoring were implemented. The firm did not name the broker, and the figures have not been independently verified.

The firm has also been pushing into new product categories. It launched a white-label prediction markets platform in February and formed a partnership with Level2 and Convrs to deliver no-code algorithmic trading automation to retail brokers in January. Leverate also runs its own proprietary SiRiX trading platform as an alternative to MetaTrader, giving it a foot in both camps.

Hosting Package

According to Leverate, the service also handles server setup, daily maintenance, gateway and price feed management, symbol configuration, and round-the-clock monitoring. The company says it consolidates functions that typically require multiple vendors into a single managed relationship.

The core pitch revolves around ongoing performance tracking. Leverate says it monitors CPU utilization, memory allocation, network throughput, and other server-level indicators. When the data points to a mismatch between where a broker's servers sit and where its traders are concentrated geographically, the firm says it flags the issue and recommends changes.

Most brokers select a server location when they first set up their MetaTrader environment, and that choice often stays in place even as the client base shifts across regions. Leverate claims its model addresses this by actively reviewing whether infrastructure still aligns with actual trader distribution. The company did not disclose how many brokers are currently using the service or provide specifics on pricing.

In January, the company rolled out a three-month free trial of its full MetaTrader brokerage stack, a move widely seen as a response to tighter competition across the broker technology market. In February, it introduced transparent, account-based pricing that removes setup fees for new operators.

The broader trend across the brokerage technology sector is toward bundled, all-in-one offerings. As industry executives noted at the Finance Magnates London Summit 2025, brokers are facing pressure to simplify their tech stacks and reduce costs, which has pushed vendors toward increasingly comprehensive, and competitively priced, infrastructure packages.

Leverate has launched a managed MT4 and MT5 hosting service paired with what the company calls a "Broker Review" process, aimed at FX and CFD operators running MetaTrader infrastructure. The service, according to the firm, tracks server performance metrics and recommends hosting locations based on the geographic distribution of a broker's active traders.

Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)

The Tel Aviv-headquartered technology provider, which has operated in the brokerage technology space for more than 19 years, says the product is designed for licensed MT4 or MT5 brokers looking to either launch new infrastructure or migrate from an existing setup.

Leverate said in March that interest from MetaTrader brokers had climbed 400% since it began marketing its managed ecosystem around MT4 and MT5 earlier this year.

Broker Tech Providers Race to Bundle Infrastructure Services

Leverate is far from the only company trying to consolidate broker technology under one roof. The managed hosting and infrastructure space for MetaTrader brokers has grown increasingly crowded, with multiple providers vying for the same pool of operators looking to simplify their tech stacks.

Match-Trade Technologies, for instance, has been aggressively expanding its own brokerage infrastructure offering. The Polish firm reported a 290% increase in server clients since January 2024 and recently added full MT5 integration to its Match-Trader platform. Your Bourse, another B2B provider, launched its own MT4 and MT5 hosting solution built on Equinix data centers with DDoS protection and real-time monitoring, specifically targeting brokers who want flexible, shorter-term contracts.

Meanwhile, Fortex has long offered MT4/MT5 hosting from Equinix facilities in New York, Hong Kong, and London, marketing sub-millisecond latency and dedicated hardware for brokers and institutional clients.

The competitive landscape means that Leverate's managed hosting pitch sits alongside a range of existing alternatives, and what the company is selling is not so much the hosting itself as the continuous monitoring and advisory layer wrapped around it. Whether that distinction is enough to stand out in a market where broker tech is becoming increasingly commoditized remains to be seen.

The "Broker Review" Layer

Leverate says its team works with operators to assess broader operational parameters, including trading conditions, group structures, liquidity routing, and risk management configurations. The company frames this as a data-driven advisory process rather than a one-time audit.

Guy Paz
Guy Paz

"Broker performance today depends on how well infrastructure aligns with trader distribution," Guy Paz, Leverate's COO, said. "Leverate actively optimizes this by analyzing real-time KPIs and geo-data, enabling brokers to eliminate latency bottlenecks and maintain execution integrity at scale."

The company published a case study involving what it described as a mid-sized FX/CFD broker that had experienced persistent slippage, platform instability, and trader drop-off.

Leverate claimed the broker saw approximately 50% lower latency, 90% less downtime, and a 30% reduction in support tickets after the infrastructure review and monitoring were implemented. The firm did not name the broker, and the figures have not been independently verified.

The firm has also been pushing into new product categories. It launched a white-label prediction markets platform in February and formed a partnership with Level2 and Convrs to deliver no-code algorithmic trading automation to retail brokers in January. Leverate also runs its own proprietary SiRiX trading platform as an alternative to MetaTrader, giving it a foot in both camps.

Hosting Package

According to Leverate, the service also handles server setup, daily maintenance, gateway and price feed management, symbol configuration, and round-the-clock monitoring. The company says it consolidates functions that typically require multiple vendors into a single managed relationship.

The core pitch revolves around ongoing performance tracking. Leverate says it monitors CPU utilization, memory allocation, network throughput, and other server-level indicators. When the data points to a mismatch between where a broker's servers sit and where its traders are concentrated geographically, the firm says it flags the issue and recommends changes.

Most brokers select a server location when they first set up their MetaTrader environment, and that choice often stays in place even as the client base shifts across regions. Leverate claims its model addresses this by actively reviewing whether infrastructure still aligns with actual trader distribution. The company did not disclose how many brokers are currently using the service or provide specifics on pricing.

In January, the company rolled out a three-month free trial of its full MetaTrader brokerage stack, a move widely seen as a response to tighter competition across the broker technology market. In February, it introduced transparent, account-based pricing that removes setup fees for new operators.

The broader trend across the brokerage technology sector is toward bundled, all-in-one offerings. As industry executives noted at the Finance Magnates London Summit 2025, brokers are facing pressure to simplify their tech stacks and reduce costs, which has pushed vendors toward increasingly comprehensive, and competitively priced, infrastructure packages.

About the Author: Damian Chmiel
Damian Chmiel
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About the Author: Damian Chmiel
Damian Chmiel is a Senior Analyst & Editor at Finance Magnates with more than 15 years of experience in the CFD and online trading industry. Active as both a trader and journalist since 2010, he focuses on broker coverage, fintech innovation, and regulatory developments across Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. His work includes interviews with C-level leaders at major brokerages and fintech platforms, as well as co-authoring Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry benchmarking reports. Damian’s reporting is data-driven, market-aware, and grounded in direct industry engagement. His analysis and commentary have also been cited by external media outlets, including Investing.com, Binance, The Asset, Stockhead, and Dispatch. Education: MA in Finance and Accounting, Cracow University of Economics
  • 3406 Articles
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