Who Actually Holds Your Trade (And Your Money)
Let me start where I always start: who is the legal entity behind the screen? For South African clients, you are onboarded under Raw Trading Ltd (Seychelles, licence SD018) or IC Markets Ltd (Bahamas). Not the ASIC Australian entity, not the CySEC European one. You will not find IC Markets on the FSCA’s FSP register—I checked. That means no FSCA ODP authorisation, no local ombudsman, and no statutory investor-compensation fund like the EU’s €20,000 scheme. Funds are held in segregated accounts per broker policy, but policy is not law here. Verify the exact entity name on your client agreement before you fund. Every time.
What Real Protection Do You Actually Have?
The honest answer: less than you might hope. The Seychelles FSA is a mid-tier offshore regulator. It does not enforce the same capital adequacy or conduct rules as the FSCA or ASIC. The broker itself was founded in 2007, is headquartered in Sydney, and is among the largest true-ECN brokers by volume—that’s a point of comfort in terms of operational stability. But for you in SA, the regulatory safety net is thin. At the time of this review, the FSCA has not placed IC Markets on a public warning list. That’s good. But the absence of a warning is not the same as a licence. Check the FSCA’s Media Releases yourself before trading.
Account Types and Real Costs (What You’ll Actually Pay)
Three account types, and I’ve tested all three:
| Account | Spread (EUR/USD) | Commission | Total Cost (1 lot round turn) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard | ~1.0–1.2 pips | None | ~$10–$12 |
| Raw Spread MT4/MT5 | 0.0–0.1 pips | $3.50 per side | ~$7.00 |
| Raw Spread cTrader | from 0.0 pips | $3.00 per side | ~$6.00 |
The cTrader Raw Spread is the cheapest by a clear margin. Minimum deposit: $200 (roughly ZAR 3,757). On the Standard account, the spread is the cost; on the Raw accounts, you pay near-zero spread plus a flat commission. The cost is transparent, which I prefer. Just note that spreads widen during volatile news—check live pricing before you trade.
The ZAR Problem: No Local Currency Account (And the Hidden 2-3% Fee)
Here’s a practical observation that surprises many SA traders: IC Markets does not offer a ZAR-denominated account. Your account base currency will be USD. When you deposit ZAR, your bank or payment provider converts it to USD at their rate, typically costing you 2–3% on the way in and another 2–3% on the way out. That’s a real, recurring cost that is not part of the spread. Local payment methods: bank wire, credit/debit card (Visa/Mastercard), Skrill, Neteller, PayPal, UnionPay, and Poli. There is no direct ZAR Instant-EFT rail (like Ozow or Capitec Pay) confirmed—check the client portal for updates. Card and e-wallet deposits are instant; wires take 1–3 business days. Withdrawals go back to the original method: 2–5 days for cards, 3–5 for wires.


