Gold price dropped below $4,000 psychological level with Monday's 3% plunge followed by Tuesday's continued weakness.
The move was triggered by US-China trade framework agreement at ASEAN conference eliminating 100% tariff threat.
Near-term gold price predictions suggest the metal could decline by another 17 percent, although the long-term outlook remains bullish.
Why is gold price falling? Let's check the current chart and gold price predictions
Gold price plunged
below the psychologically critical $4,000 level on Monday, losing over 3% after
its steepest single-day decline since 2020, as investors reduced safe-haven
positions following breakthrough progress in US-China trade negotiations.
The
precious metal continues its retreat today (Tuesday), 28 October 2025,, down
another 1% to $3,963.53 per ounce, marking a three-week low and the first
sustained move below $4,000 since the October rally stalled.
In this
article, I explore why the price of gold is going down, conduct a technical
analysis of the XAU/USDT chart, and identify a key support zone, suggesting
that gold may correct by another 17%.
Why Gold Price Is Going
Down Today?
The selloff
accelerated over the weekend as US and Chinese negotiators meeting during the
ASEAN conference in Malaysia hammered out a framework agreement that eliminates
the threat of 100% US tariffs on Chinese goods and secures a one-year delay on
rare earth export restrictions.
Treasury
Secretary Scott Bessent stated the proposed tariffs are "off the
table," dramatically reducing the geopolitical risk premium that had
propelled gold to record highs above $4,380 just days earlier.
Gold
Price Decline Metrics
Data (Oct
28, 2025)
Current
Spot Price
$3,963.53/oz
Daily
Change
-$18.00
(-0.45%)
Monday's
Plunge
-3.0%
Year-High
(Oct 17-19)
$4,381.58/oz
Decline
from Peak
-9.5%
Year-to-Date
Gain
+42.83%
Support
Target
$3,830 (50
EMA)
"Gold
is losing due to decreasing risk regarding international trade, while
simultaneously reacting to recent moves from ETF funds,” Michał Stajniak, Deputy
Chief Analyst at XTB, explained the catalyst for gold's decline. “During the
ASEAN conference in Malaysia, a meeting between Chinese and American
negotiators produced a working agreement that eliminates the risk of 100%
tariffs on Chinese products and is meant to reduce rare earth export
restrictions from China to the USA."
How Low Can Gold Go? Technical
Breakdown Below $4,000 Triggers Selloff
According
to my technical analysis, gold is realizing profits after testing historical
maximums around the $4,380 per ounce level, where it remained from October 17
to 19. On October 19, there was a strong single-day correction, the strongest
since 2020, which triggered a wave of selling and ultimately pushed prices
below the psychological threshold of $4,000 per ounce, after gold slid sharply
again on Monday, losing over 3%.
Tuesday's
session brings a continuation of declines, with gold currently down 1% and
testing the $3,942 level. Where can gold head from here? According to my
forecasts based on technical analysis, the first target level for declines will
be the 50 EMA located currently around the $3,830 level.
The main
technical support, however, remains the zone of historical highs drawn from
April through the end of August, between $3,270 and $3,440 per ounce.
Simultaneously, the 200 EMA falls in this location, creating a strong
reaccumulation zone and confluence of supports. Gold has approximately 17%
downside to the lower boundary of this range from current levels.
And
although this would be a strong correction that we haven't seen in a long time,
I would use this as an opportunity to buy at more attractive prices, rather
than as a reason to panic. Everything above the blue 200 EMA is still an
uptrend.
How low can gold price go now? Source: Tradingview.com
Such a
decline would also allow the RSI indicator to reset, which has been moving in
the overbought zone for a long time and hasn't been in the oversold zone for
many long months, which would support a buy signal in the range I've marked in
green on the chart.
ETF Outflows Amplify
Profit-Taking Pressure
Stajniak
highlighted the role of institutional flows in accelerating the decline:
"Friday also saw the largest gold sales on the market among ETF funds
since May. Last week also brought the first weekly decline since the second
week of August." The combination of reducing geopolitical risk premiums
and institutional profit-taking after gold's extended rally to record highs
created powerful selling pressure that overwhelmed traditional support levels.
However, Marek
Rogalski, Chief FX Analyst at BossaFX, noted that the technical damage remains
limited thus far: "Nevertheless, declines in precious metal futures are
not that large, the market has not retested the lows from October 22 at $4,021.
At the same time, we remain above the $4,000 barrier."
This
suggests the correction may represent healthy profit-taking rather than a
fundamental reversal of gold's long-term bull market.
In the
coming days, an interesting topic for gold will be the Fed's announcement on
Wednesday, according to Rogalski. "The rate cut is certain, and the
Reserve will most likely also deliver a 'dovish' message boosting expectations
for further reductions. This traditionally helped gold prices. Similarly, one
could interpret potential news about the end of the government shutdown, which
has already lasted 27 days (we are therefore decidedly closer to its
end)."
Markets are
pricing a 98.3% probability of a 25-basis-point rate cut at
Wednesday's Federal Reserve meeting, with another reduction expected in
December. Lower interest rates typically support gold by reducing the
opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets and weakening the dollar. The
dollar index showed minimal strength at -0.1%, indicating the precious metal's
decline stems primarily from reduced safe-haven demand rather than currency
dynamics.
Gold Price Prediction
Technical Targets Point to
$3,830 and $3,270-$3,440 Zone
Based on my
technical projections, the immediate downside target sits at the 50-day
exponential moving average around $3,830, representing
approximately 3.4% further decline from current levels. This moving average has
provided dynamic support during previous pullbacks and would represent the
first meaningful technical test during this correction.
The more
significant support zone stretches from $3,270 to $3,440, the range
of historical highs established from April through August before gold's final
surge to record levels. This zone coincides with the 200-day exponential moving
average, creating a powerful confluence of technical, psychological, and
historical support. A decline to this range would represent approximately 17%
downside from current $3,963 levels.
While
gold's near-term decline has captured headlines, not everybody believes the
precious metal's bull market has ended. Major financial institutions released
updated forecasts last week maintaining strongly bullish outlooks for 2026,
viewing the current correction as a healthy consolidation rather than a trend
reversal.
A Reuters
poll of 39 analysts and traders published Monday showed the median
forecast for 2026 rising to $4,275 per ounce, up sharply from $3,400
projected just three months ago in July. This represents the first time annual
average gold forecasts have exceeded $4,000, reflecting analyst conviction that
structural demand drivers remain intact despite short-term profit-taking.
JP Morgan
delivered the most bullish update last Thursday, forecasting gold could
average $5,055 per ounce by Q4 2026, underpinned by expectations
that investor interest and central bank purchases will average approximately
566 tons each quarter throughout 2026. Natasha Kaneva, head of Global
Commodities Strategy at JP Morgan, stated: "Gold remains our conviction long
for the year. We see upside as the market enters the Fed rate-cutting
cycle."
JP Morgan
reaffirmed a long-term price target of $6,000 per ounce by 2028,
urging investors to adopt a multi-year perspective. Gregory Shearer, head of
Base & Precious Metals Strategy, noted that "the anticipated
combination of a Federal Reserve cutting cycle, along with fears of
stagflation, worries about Fed independence, and broader hedging against
currency debasement, bolsters gold's potential for growth".
According
to my technical analysis, first downside target sits at 50 EMA around $3,830
(3.4% further decline), with main support zone between $3,270-$3,440 (17%
downside) representing April-August historical highs coinciding with 200-day
EMA creating strong reaccumulation confluence, though Trading Economics
maintains Q4 forecast $4,157 and 12-month target $4,361 suggesting correction
not reversal.
Is gold correction over or
just starting?
Gold
experienced largest ETF outflows since May on Friday and first weekly decline
since second week of August following ten-week winning streak (+28% from
$3,400s to $4,380), with Monday's 3% plunge potentially marking capitulation
though Marek Rogalski (BossaFX) notes futures haven't retested October 22 lows
at $4,021 and prices remain "above $4,000 barrier" suggesting limited
technical damage thus far.
Should I sell gold now?
No. Despite
9.5% decline from October 19 peak at $4,381, gold remains +42.83% year-to-date
and +49.65% year-over-year, with my technical analysis identifying
$3,270-$3,440 zone (200 EMA confluence) as buying opportunity at attractive
prices rather than panic-selling zone since "everything above blue 200 EMA
is still an uptrend," while Fed rate cut Wednesday (98.3% probability) and
potential RSI reset to oversold would support buy signals.
Gold price plunged
below the psychologically critical $4,000 level on Monday, losing over 3% after
its steepest single-day decline since 2020, as investors reduced safe-haven
positions following breakthrough progress in US-China trade negotiations.
The
precious metal continues its retreat today (Tuesday), 28 October 2025,, down
another 1% to $3,963.53 per ounce, marking a three-week low and the first
sustained move below $4,000 since the October rally stalled.
In this
article, I explore why the price of gold is going down, conduct a technical
analysis of the XAU/USDT chart, and identify a key support zone, suggesting
that gold may correct by another 17%.
Why Gold Price Is Going
Down Today?
The selloff
accelerated over the weekend as US and Chinese negotiators meeting during the
ASEAN conference in Malaysia hammered out a framework agreement that eliminates
the threat of 100% US tariffs on Chinese goods and secures a one-year delay on
rare earth export restrictions.
Treasury
Secretary Scott Bessent stated the proposed tariffs are "off the
table," dramatically reducing the geopolitical risk premium that had
propelled gold to record highs above $4,380 just days earlier.
Gold
Price Decline Metrics
Data (Oct
28, 2025)
Current
Spot Price
$3,963.53/oz
Daily
Change
-$18.00
(-0.45%)
Monday's
Plunge
-3.0%
Year-High
(Oct 17-19)
$4,381.58/oz
Decline
from Peak
-9.5%
Year-to-Date
Gain
+42.83%
Support
Target
$3,830 (50
EMA)
"Gold
is losing due to decreasing risk regarding international trade, while
simultaneously reacting to recent moves from ETF funds,” Michał Stajniak, Deputy
Chief Analyst at XTB, explained the catalyst for gold's decline. “During the
ASEAN conference in Malaysia, a meeting between Chinese and American
negotiators produced a working agreement that eliminates the risk of 100%
tariffs on Chinese products and is meant to reduce rare earth export
restrictions from China to the USA."
How Low Can Gold Go? Technical
Breakdown Below $4,000 Triggers Selloff
According
to my technical analysis, gold is realizing profits after testing historical
maximums around the $4,380 per ounce level, where it remained from October 17
to 19. On October 19, there was a strong single-day correction, the strongest
since 2020, which triggered a wave of selling and ultimately pushed prices
below the psychological threshold of $4,000 per ounce, after gold slid sharply
again on Monday, losing over 3%.
Tuesday's
session brings a continuation of declines, with gold currently down 1% and
testing the $3,942 level. Where can gold head from here? According to my
forecasts based on technical analysis, the first target level for declines will
be the 50 EMA located currently around the $3,830 level.
The main
technical support, however, remains the zone of historical highs drawn from
April through the end of August, between $3,270 and $3,440 per ounce.
Simultaneously, the 200 EMA falls in this location, creating a strong
reaccumulation zone and confluence of supports. Gold has approximately 17%
downside to the lower boundary of this range from current levels.
And
although this would be a strong correction that we haven't seen in a long time,
I would use this as an opportunity to buy at more attractive prices, rather
than as a reason to panic. Everything above the blue 200 EMA is still an
uptrend.
How low can gold price go now? Source: Tradingview.com
Such a
decline would also allow the RSI indicator to reset, which has been moving in
the overbought zone for a long time and hasn't been in the oversold zone for
many long months, which would support a buy signal in the range I've marked in
green on the chart.
ETF Outflows Amplify
Profit-Taking Pressure
Stajniak
highlighted the role of institutional flows in accelerating the decline:
"Friday also saw the largest gold sales on the market among ETF funds
since May. Last week also brought the first weekly decline since the second
week of August." The combination of reducing geopolitical risk premiums
and institutional profit-taking after gold's extended rally to record highs
created powerful selling pressure that overwhelmed traditional support levels.
However, Marek
Rogalski, Chief FX Analyst at BossaFX, noted that the technical damage remains
limited thus far: "Nevertheless, declines in precious metal futures are
not that large, the market has not retested the lows from October 22 at $4,021.
At the same time, we remain above the $4,000 barrier."
This
suggests the correction may represent healthy profit-taking rather than a
fundamental reversal of gold's long-term bull market.
In the
coming days, an interesting topic for gold will be the Fed's announcement on
Wednesday, according to Rogalski. "The rate cut is certain, and the
Reserve will most likely also deliver a 'dovish' message boosting expectations
for further reductions. This traditionally helped gold prices. Similarly, one
could interpret potential news about the end of the government shutdown, which
has already lasted 27 days (we are therefore decidedly closer to its
end)."
Markets are
pricing a 98.3% probability of a 25-basis-point rate cut at
Wednesday's Federal Reserve meeting, with another reduction expected in
December. Lower interest rates typically support gold by reducing the
opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets and weakening the dollar. The
dollar index showed minimal strength at -0.1%, indicating the precious metal's
decline stems primarily from reduced safe-haven demand rather than currency
dynamics.
Gold Price Prediction
Technical Targets Point to
$3,830 and $3,270-$3,440 Zone
Based on my
technical projections, the immediate downside target sits at the 50-day
exponential moving average around $3,830, representing
approximately 3.4% further decline from current levels. This moving average has
provided dynamic support during previous pullbacks and would represent the
first meaningful technical test during this correction.
The more
significant support zone stretches from $3,270 to $3,440, the range
of historical highs established from April through August before gold's final
surge to record levels. This zone coincides with the 200-day exponential moving
average, creating a powerful confluence of technical, psychological, and
historical support. A decline to this range would represent approximately 17%
downside from current $3,963 levels.
While
gold's near-term decline has captured headlines, not everybody believes the
precious metal's bull market has ended. Major financial institutions released
updated forecasts last week maintaining strongly bullish outlooks for 2026,
viewing the current correction as a healthy consolidation rather than a trend
reversal.
A Reuters
poll of 39 analysts and traders published Monday showed the median
forecast for 2026 rising to $4,275 per ounce, up sharply from $3,400
projected just three months ago in July. This represents the first time annual
average gold forecasts have exceeded $4,000, reflecting analyst conviction that
structural demand drivers remain intact despite short-term profit-taking.
JP Morgan
delivered the most bullish update last Thursday, forecasting gold could
average $5,055 per ounce by Q4 2026, underpinned by expectations
that investor interest and central bank purchases will average approximately
566 tons each quarter throughout 2026. Natasha Kaneva, head of Global
Commodities Strategy at JP Morgan, stated: "Gold remains our conviction long
for the year. We see upside as the market enters the Fed rate-cutting
cycle."
JP Morgan
reaffirmed a long-term price target of $6,000 per ounce by 2028,
urging investors to adopt a multi-year perspective. Gregory Shearer, head of
Base & Precious Metals Strategy, noted that "the anticipated
combination of a Federal Reserve cutting cycle, along with fears of
stagflation, worries about Fed independence, and broader hedging against
currency debasement, bolsters gold's potential for growth".
According
to my technical analysis, first downside target sits at 50 EMA around $3,830
(3.4% further decline), with main support zone between $3,270-$3,440 (17%
downside) representing April-August historical highs coinciding with 200-day
EMA creating strong reaccumulation confluence, though Trading Economics
maintains Q4 forecast $4,157 and 12-month target $4,361 suggesting correction
not reversal.
Is gold correction over or
just starting?
Gold
experienced largest ETF outflows since May on Friday and first weekly decline
since second week of August following ten-week winning streak (+28% from
$3,400s to $4,380), with Monday's 3% plunge potentially marking capitulation
though Marek Rogalski (BossaFX) notes futures haven't retested October 22 lows
at $4,021 and prices remain "above $4,000 barrier" suggesting limited
technical damage thus far.
Should I sell gold now?
No. Despite
9.5% decline from October 19 peak at $4,381, gold remains +42.83% year-to-date
and +49.65% year-over-year, with my technical analysis identifying
$3,270-$3,440 zone (200 EMA confluence) as buying opportunity at attractive
prices rather than panic-selling zone since "everything above blue 200 EMA
is still an uptrend," while Fed rate cut Wednesday (98.3% probability) and
potential RSI reset to oversold would support buy signals.
Damian's adventure with financial markets began at the Cracow University of Economics, where he obtained his MA in finance and accounting. Starting from the retail trader perspective, he collaborated with brokerage houses and financial portals in Poland as an independent editor and content manager. His adventure with Finance Magnates began in 2016, where he is working as a business intelligence analyst.
Trust Wallet Reviews Claims After $7M Extension Hack as Industry Flags “Structural Tension”
Featured Videos
How does the Finance Magnates newsroom handle sensitive updates that may affect a brand?
How does the Finance Magnates newsroom handle sensitive updates that may affect a brand?
How does the Finance Magnates newsroom handle sensitive updates that may affect a brand?
How does the Finance Magnates newsroom handle sensitive updates that may affect a brand?
Yam Yehoshua, Editor-in-Chief at Finance Magnates, explains the approach: reaching out before publication, hearing all sides, and making careful, case-by-case decisions with balance and responsibility.
⚖ Balanced reporting
📞 Right of response
📰 Responsible journalism
#FinanceMagnates #FinancialJournalism #ResponsibleReporting #FinanceNews #EditorialStandards
Yam Yehoshua, Editor-in-Chief at Finance Magnates, explains the approach: reaching out before publication, hearing all sides, and making careful, case-by-case decisions with balance and responsibility.
⚖ Balanced reporting
📞 Right of response
📰 Responsible journalism
#FinanceMagnates #FinancialJournalism #ResponsibleReporting #FinanceNews #EditorialStandards
Yam Yehoshua, Editor-in-Chief at Finance Magnates, explains the approach: reaching out before publication, hearing all sides, and making careful, case-by-case decisions with balance and responsibility.
⚖ Balanced reporting
📞 Right of response
📰 Responsible journalism
#FinanceMagnates #FinancialJournalism #ResponsibleReporting #FinanceNews #EditorialStandards
Yam Yehoshua, Editor-in-Chief at Finance Magnates, explains the approach: reaching out before publication, hearing all sides, and making careful, case-by-case decisions with balance and responsibility.
⚖ Balanced reporting
📞 Right of response
📰 Responsible journalism
#FinanceMagnates #FinancialJournalism #ResponsibleReporting #FinanceNews #EditorialStandards
Executive Interview | Kieran Duff | Head of UK Growth & Business Development, Darwinex | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Kieran Duff | Head of UK Growth & Business Development, Darwinex | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Kieran Duff | Head of UK Growth & Business Development, Darwinex | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Kieran Duff | Head of UK Growth & Business Development, Darwinex | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Kieran Duff | Head of UK Growth & Business Development, Darwinex | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Kieran Duff | Head of UK Growth & Business Development, Darwinex | FMLS:25
Here is our conversation with Kieran Duff, who brings a rare dual view of the market as both a broker and a trader at Darwinex.
We begin with his take on the Summit and then turn to broker growth. Kieran shares one quick, practical tip brokers can use right now to improve performance. We also cover the rising spotlight on prop trading and whether it is good or bad for the trading industry.
Kieran explains where Darwinex sits on the CFDs-broker-meets-funding spectrum, and how the model differs from the typical setups seen across the market.
We finish with a look at how he uses AI in his daily workflow — both inside the brokerage and in his own trading.
Here is our conversation with Kieran Duff, who brings a rare dual view of the market as both a broker and a trader at Darwinex.
We begin with his take on the Summit and then turn to broker growth. Kieran shares one quick, practical tip brokers can use right now to improve performance. We also cover the rising spotlight on prop trading and whether it is good or bad for the trading industry.
Kieran explains where Darwinex sits on the CFDs-broker-meets-funding spectrum, and how the model differs from the typical setups seen across the market.
We finish with a look at how he uses AI in his daily workflow — both inside the brokerage and in his own trading.
Here is our conversation with Kieran Duff, who brings a rare dual view of the market as both a broker and a trader at Darwinex.
We begin with his take on the Summit and then turn to broker growth. Kieran shares one quick, practical tip brokers can use right now to improve performance. We also cover the rising spotlight on prop trading and whether it is good or bad for the trading industry.
Kieran explains where Darwinex sits on the CFDs-broker-meets-funding spectrum, and how the model differs from the typical setups seen across the market.
We finish with a look at how he uses AI in his daily workflow — both inside the brokerage and in his own trading.
Here is our conversation with Kieran Duff, who brings a rare dual view of the market as both a broker and a trader at Darwinex.
We begin with his take on the Summit and then turn to broker growth. Kieran shares one quick, practical tip brokers can use right now to improve performance. We also cover the rising spotlight on prop trading and whether it is good or bad for the trading industry.
Kieran explains where Darwinex sits on the CFDs-broker-meets-funding spectrum, and how the model differs from the typical setups seen across the market.
We finish with a look at how he uses AI in his daily workflow — both inside the brokerage and in his own trading.
Here is our conversation with Kieran Duff, who brings a rare dual view of the market as both a broker and a trader at Darwinex.
We begin with his take on the Summit and then turn to broker growth. Kieran shares one quick, practical tip brokers can use right now to improve performance. We also cover the rising spotlight on prop trading and whether it is good or bad for the trading industry.
Kieran explains where Darwinex sits on the CFDs-broker-meets-funding spectrum, and how the model differs from the typical setups seen across the market.
We finish with a look at how he uses AI in his daily workflow — both inside the brokerage and in his own trading.
Here is our conversation with Kieran Duff, who brings a rare dual view of the market as both a broker and a trader at Darwinex.
We begin with his take on the Summit and then turn to broker growth. Kieran shares one quick, practical tip brokers can use right now to improve performance. We also cover the rising spotlight on prop trading and whether it is good or bad for the trading industry.
Kieran explains where Darwinex sits on the CFDs-broker-meets-funding spectrum, and how the model differs from the typical setups seen across the market.
We finish with a look at how he uses AI in his daily workflow — both inside the brokerage and in his own trading.
Why does trust matter in financial news? #TrustedNews #FinanceNews #CapitalMarkets
Why does trust matter in financial news? #TrustedNews #FinanceNews #CapitalMarkets
Why does trust matter in financial news? #TrustedNews #FinanceNews #CapitalMarkets
Why does trust matter in financial news? #TrustedNews #FinanceNews #CapitalMarkets
Why does trust matter in financial news? #TrustedNews #FinanceNews #CapitalMarkets
Why does trust matter in financial news? #TrustedNews #FinanceNews #CapitalMarkets
According to Yam Yehoshua, Editor-in-Chief at Finance Magnates, in a world flooded with information, the difference lies in rigorous cross-checking, human scrutiny, and a commitment to publishing only factual, trustworthy reporting.
📰 Verified reporting
🔎 Human-led scrutiny
✅ Facts over noise
According to Yam Yehoshua, Editor-in-Chief at Finance Magnates, in a world flooded with information, the difference lies in rigorous cross-checking, human scrutiny, and a commitment to publishing only factual, trustworthy reporting.
📰 Verified reporting
🔎 Human-led scrutiny
✅ Facts over noise
According to Yam Yehoshua, Editor-in-Chief at Finance Magnates, in a world flooded with information, the difference lies in rigorous cross-checking, human scrutiny, and a commitment to publishing only factual, trustworthy reporting.
📰 Verified reporting
🔎 Human-led scrutiny
✅ Facts over noise
According to Yam Yehoshua, Editor-in-Chief at Finance Magnates, in a world flooded with information, the difference lies in rigorous cross-checking, human scrutiny, and a commitment to publishing only factual, trustworthy reporting.
📰 Verified reporting
🔎 Human-led scrutiny
✅ Facts over noise
According to Yam Yehoshua, Editor-in-Chief at Finance Magnates, in a world flooded with information, the difference lies in rigorous cross-checking, human scrutiny, and a commitment to publishing only factual, trustworthy reporting.
📰 Verified reporting
🔎 Human-led scrutiny
✅ Facts over noise
According to Yam Yehoshua, Editor-in-Chief at Finance Magnates, in a world flooded with information, the difference lies in rigorous cross-checking, human scrutiny, and a commitment to publishing only factual, trustworthy reporting.
📰 Verified reporting
🔎 Human-led scrutiny
✅ Facts over noise
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @Exness , a global multi-asset broker operating since 2008, known for fast withdrawals, flexible account types, and strong regulatory coverage across multiple regions.
We break down Exness’s regulatory framework, supported trading platforms including MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, Exness Terminal, and the Exness Trade App, as well as available account types such as Standard, Pro, Zero, and Raw Spread.
You’ll also learn about Exness’s leverage options, fees and commissions, swap-free trading, available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, stocks, and cryptocurrencies, and what traders can expect in terms of execution, funding speed, and customer support.
Watch the full review to see whether Exness aligns with your trading goals and strategy.
👉 Explore Exness’s full broker listing on the Finance Magnates Directory:
https://directory.financemagnates.com/multi-asset-brokers/exness/
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Exness #ExnessReview #Forex #FinanceMagnates #ForexBroker #BrokerReview #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #MarketInsights
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @Exness , a global multi-asset broker operating since 2008, known for fast withdrawals, flexible account types, and strong regulatory coverage across multiple regions.
We break down Exness’s regulatory framework, supported trading platforms including MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, Exness Terminal, and the Exness Trade App, as well as available account types such as Standard, Pro, Zero, and Raw Spread.
You’ll also learn about Exness’s leverage options, fees and commissions, swap-free trading, available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, stocks, and cryptocurrencies, and what traders can expect in terms of execution, funding speed, and customer support.
Watch the full review to see whether Exness aligns with your trading goals and strategy.
👉 Explore Exness’s full broker listing on the Finance Magnates Directory:
https://directory.financemagnates.com/multi-asset-brokers/exness/
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Exness #ExnessReview #Forex #FinanceMagnates #ForexBroker #BrokerReview #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #MarketInsights
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @Exness , a global multi-asset broker operating since 2008, known for fast withdrawals, flexible account types, and strong regulatory coverage across multiple regions.
We break down Exness’s regulatory framework, supported trading platforms including MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, Exness Terminal, and the Exness Trade App, as well as available account types such as Standard, Pro, Zero, and Raw Spread.
You’ll also learn about Exness’s leverage options, fees and commissions, swap-free trading, available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, stocks, and cryptocurrencies, and what traders can expect in terms of execution, funding speed, and customer support.
Watch the full review to see whether Exness aligns with your trading goals and strategy.
👉 Explore Exness’s full broker listing on the Finance Magnates Directory:
https://directory.financemagnates.com/multi-asset-brokers/exness/
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Exness #ExnessReview #Forex #FinanceMagnates #ForexBroker #BrokerReview #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #MarketInsights
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @Exness , a global multi-asset broker operating since 2008, known for fast withdrawals, flexible account types, and strong regulatory coverage across multiple regions.
We break down Exness’s regulatory framework, supported trading platforms including MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, Exness Terminal, and the Exness Trade App, as well as available account types such as Standard, Pro, Zero, and Raw Spread.
You’ll also learn about Exness’s leverage options, fees and commissions, swap-free trading, available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, stocks, and cryptocurrencies, and what traders can expect in terms of execution, funding speed, and customer support.
Watch the full review to see whether Exness aligns with your trading goals and strategy.
👉 Explore Exness’s full broker listing on the Finance Magnates Directory:
https://directory.financemagnates.com/multi-asset-brokers/exness/
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Exness #ExnessReview #Forex #FinanceMagnates #ForexBroker #BrokerReview #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #MarketInsights
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @Exness , a global multi-asset broker operating since 2008, known for fast withdrawals, flexible account types, and strong regulatory coverage across multiple regions.
We break down Exness’s regulatory framework, supported trading platforms including MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, Exness Terminal, and the Exness Trade App, as well as available account types such as Standard, Pro, Zero, and Raw Spread.
You’ll also learn about Exness’s leverage options, fees and commissions, swap-free trading, available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, stocks, and cryptocurrencies, and what traders can expect in terms of execution, funding speed, and customer support.
Watch the full review to see whether Exness aligns with your trading goals and strategy.
👉 Explore Exness’s full broker listing on the Finance Magnates Directory:
https://directory.financemagnates.com/multi-asset-brokers/exness/
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Exness #ExnessReview #Forex #FinanceMagnates #ForexBroker #BrokerReview #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #MarketInsights
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @Exness , a global multi-asset broker operating since 2008, known for fast withdrawals, flexible account types, and strong regulatory coverage across multiple regions.
We break down Exness’s regulatory framework, supported trading platforms including MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, Exness Terminal, and the Exness Trade App, as well as available account types such as Standard, Pro, Zero, and Raw Spread.
You’ll also learn about Exness’s leverage options, fees and commissions, swap-free trading, available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, stocks, and cryptocurrencies, and what traders can expect in terms of execution, funding speed, and customer support.
Watch the full review to see whether Exness aligns with your trading goals and strategy.
👉 Explore Exness’s full broker listing on the Finance Magnates Directory:
https://directory.financemagnates.com/multi-asset-brokers/exness/
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Exness #ExnessReview #Forex #FinanceMagnates #ForexBroker #BrokerReview #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #MarketInsights
FINANCE MAGNATES LONDON SUMMIT 2025
FINANCE MAGNATES LONDON SUMMIT 2025
FINANCE MAGNATES LONDON SUMMIT 2025
FINANCE MAGNATES LONDON SUMMIT 2025
FINANCE MAGNATES LONDON SUMMIT 2025
FINANCE MAGNATES LONDON SUMMIT 2025
The FMLS:25 highlights video is now live - a look back at the conversations, the energy on the floor, and the moments that shaped this year’s summit.
While that’s still fresh, the next launches across the FM Events portfolio are already taking shape.
FM Singapore takes place on the 12-14 of May, connecting the APAC market with its own distinct audience and priorities. FMAS:26 heads to Cape Town on 26–27 May shortly after, bringing the focus to Africa’s trading and fintech ecosystem.
Different regions. Different audiences. Same commitment to building the right rooms for meaningful conversations.
More details coming very soon. The launches are imminent. - here you go
The FMLS:25 highlights video is now live - a look back at the conversations, the energy on the floor, and the moments that shaped this year’s summit.
While that’s still fresh, the next launches across the FM Events portfolio are already taking shape.
FM Singapore takes place on the 12-14 of May, connecting the APAC market with its own distinct audience and priorities. FMAS:26 heads to Cape Town on 26–27 May shortly after, bringing the focus to Africa’s trading and fintech ecosystem.
Different regions. Different audiences. Same commitment to building the right rooms for meaningful conversations.
More details coming very soon. The launches are imminent. - here you go
The FMLS:25 highlights video is now live - a look back at the conversations, the energy on the floor, and the moments that shaped this year’s summit.
While that’s still fresh, the next launches across the FM Events portfolio are already taking shape.
FM Singapore takes place on the 12-14 of May, connecting the APAC market with its own distinct audience and priorities. FMAS:26 heads to Cape Town on 26–27 May shortly after, bringing the focus to Africa’s trading and fintech ecosystem.
Different regions. Different audiences. Same commitment to building the right rooms for meaningful conversations.
More details coming very soon. The launches are imminent. - here you go
The FMLS:25 highlights video is now live - a look back at the conversations, the energy on the floor, and the moments that shaped this year’s summit.
While that’s still fresh, the next launches across the FM Events portfolio are already taking shape.
FM Singapore takes place on the 12-14 of May, connecting the APAC market with its own distinct audience and priorities. FMAS:26 heads to Cape Town on 26–27 May shortly after, bringing the focus to Africa’s trading and fintech ecosystem.
Different regions. Different audiences. Same commitment to building the right rooms for meaningful conversations.
More details coming very soon. The launches are imminent. - here you go
The FMLS:25 highlights video is now live - a look back at the conversations, the energy on the floor, and the moments that shaped this year’s summit.
While that’s still fresh, the next launches across the FM Events portfolio are already taking shape.
FM Singapore takes place on the 12-14 of May, connecting the APAC market with its own distinct audience and priorities. FMAS:26 heads to Cape Town on 26–27 May shortly after, bringing the focus to Africa’s trading and fintech ecosystem.
Different regions. Different audiences. Same commitment to building the right rooms for meaningful conversations.
More details coming very soon. The launches are imminent. - here you go
The FMLS:25 highlights video is now live - a look back at the conversations, the energy on the floor, and the moments that shaped this year’s summit.
While that’s still fresh, the next launches across the FM Events portfolio are already taking shape.
FM Singapore takes place on the 12-14 of May, connecting the APAC market with its own distinct audience and priorities. FMAS:26 heads to Cape Town on 26–27 May shortly after, bringing the focus to Africa’s trading and fintech ecosystem.
Different regions. Different audiences. Same commitment to building the right rooms for meaningful conversations.
More details coming very soon. The launches are imminent. - here you go