ZenithFX is committed to fair, transparent, and consistent order execution. We aim to deliver the best available price at the moment your order reaches the market, with reliable speed and clear rules around slippage, liquidity, and order handling.
Your order is handled with a best-execution approach designed to prioritize speed, fair pricing, and reliable settlement. We do not “requote” prices — orders are filled at the best available price in the market when execution occurs.
Trades are executed using market execution logic, meaning the final fill price may differ from the quote you saw moments earlier due to movement in the underlying market.
We do not send you a “new price” pop-up after you click buy or sell. If market conditions change, the order fills at the nearest available price.
Slippage can be positive or negative. In volatile conditions, your fill may improve or worsen versus the last quote — depending on liquidity and price movement.
“Best execution” means considering multiple factors — not only price. Depending on market conditions and your order type, different factors may matter more at the moment of execution.
Our execution workflow is designed to be fast, consistent, and transparent.
| Scenario | What You May See | What It Means | How to Trade Smarter | Risk Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal Liquidity | Stable fills | Market is liquid and spreads are usually steadier | Use limit orders for precision entries | Still apply stop loss on every trade |
| High Volatility | Fast movement / slippage | Price can change between click and fill | Reduce size, widen stops, avoid overleveraging | News releases can cause gaps |
| Thin Liquidity | Wider spreads | Fewer available quotes and lower market depth | Trade major sessions, stick to liquid pairs | Large orders may fill in parts |
| Market Gaps | Fill at next available price | Pending orders may trigger beyond the requested level | Risk plan for weekends/major events | Stop orders are not guaranteed exact price |
Different orders behave differently during fast markets. Here’s what each type is best used for.
Enters or exits at the best available price right now. Fastest execution, but price can shift during volatility.
Targets a specific better price. Helps precision entries, but may not execute if price never reaches your level.
Triggers when price reaches your level. Useful for breakouts, but may fill beyond the trigger during gaps.
Watch how price moves across sessions and learn how volatility can impact execution and spreads.
Quick answers to the most common execution questions.