Royal Trust Futures Review

Updated: May 7, 2026
Royal Trust Futures
Views47

Fast Facts

Contact Info and Support

Traffic information

CategoryMetricsMeaning
RatingsGlobal Rank5889484
Country Code-
Country Rank-
Category Rank-
Engagement metricsVisits696
Bounce Rate0.28
Pageviews per Visit4.66
Avg. Visit Duration131.57
Estimated monthly visitsJanuary 20263010
February 2026770
March 2026696
Top countriesIndonesia (ID)100%
Traffic sourcesSearch63.1%
Direct21.5%
Referrals7.72%
Social5.61%
Paid Referrals1.94%
Mail0.12%
Top keywordsroyale fx30 ◦ $30
alasan mengapa trader stagnan310 ◦ $10
pt. royal trust futures130 ◦ $10
trading crude oil indonesia160 ◦ $0

About Royal Trust Futures

Royal Trust Futures, operating via the domain royalfx.co.id, is regulated in Indonesia by the Commodity Futures Trading Regulatory Agency (BAPPEBTI) under license number 922/BAPPEBTI/SI/08/2006 (). The broker offers trading in asset classes such as Forex pairs, commodities, energies, and precious metals via MetaTrader 4 (MT4) and mobile platforms, supports base currencies including AUD, EUR, GBP, NZD, and USD, allows automated trading (EAs), and provides swap-free/Islamic account types with a minimum deposit of USD 100 and maximum leverage up to 1:200 ().

Concerns have been raised regarding the reliability of Royal Trust Futures. Regulatory review indicates that while BAPPEBTI is the relevant authority for forex services in Indonesia, claims of additional regulation by entities such as the Jakarta Futures Exchange (JFX) and the Indonesian Derivatives Clearing House (KBI) are unsupported, raising caution about the scope of oversight ().

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Regulated by Indonesia’s BAPPEBTI with a verifiable license number ().
  • Supports a variety of asset classes: forex, commodities, energies, metals; multiple base currencies; MT4 and mobile platforms; swap-free/Islamic accounts; automated trading; and accessible minimum deposit of USD 100 ().

Cons

  • No credible regulation beyond BAPPEBTI; references to other Indonesian institutions (JFX, KBI) are unfounded ().
  • Investor protection may be limited due to relatively less stringent enforcement compared to tier‑1 regulators in major jurisdictions ().

Page loaded in 438.00 ms