Slippage and order rejections from poorly designed trading infrastructure significantly erode traders' theoretical profits, becoming the critical factor separating viable strategies from failures over time. Brokers are increasingly evaluate
Every trader has experienced it: a clear entry signal arrives, the entry point looks perfect, and the order executes flawlessly on the chart. But when the actual price comes back, it's slipped by a few pips—or the order never filled at all. There's no obvious reason, no market news, just the silent friction of an order execution environment never designed to operate at peak efficiency in those critical seconds when you need it most.
The problem is most traders evaluate brokers based on visible features like advertised spreads or platform appearance, without questioning whether those conditions actually hold during live trading. Yet research on retail execution quality has long shown that slippage and order rejection rates can significantly erode traders' theoretical advantages, particularly for high-frequency and news-driven strategies.
When accumulated over a year of trading, the difference between consistent fills and slipped prices is no longer a negligible figure. It becomes the single variable that determines whether a strategy actually scales or not. This is why experienced traders view execution quality as the primary factor when evaluating brokers.
Volatility is the real test.
Almost every broker performs adequately in calm markets with tight liquidity and orderly price movement. The true measure of an order execution system is how it behaves during central bank announcements, CPI releases, non-farm payroll data, and geopolitical shocks—periods when liquidity fragments and quote delays spike across the market.
During these times, the price impact hidden in a single order multiplies rapidly. Brokers that built their infrastructure on the assumption of calm markets typically push that burden onto traders through wider spreads, requotes, and order rejections.
Inki Cho, senior financial markets strategist at Exness, explains: "The 30-second window around major economic data releases is where execution infrastructure separates from execution marketing. That's when order books thin out and every broker's order routing logic is tested in public."
Designing systems for the worst case
Historically, industry responses to volatility have been reactive—widening spreads or tightening rejection criteria to protect brokers rather than clients. A more prudent approach starts from the opposite assumption: the most difficult conditions should form the basis of design, not be treated as exceptions.
This is where Exness comes in. In unstable market conditions, the critical question isn't just how fast a broker can display prices, but whether prices, liquidity, and order execution remain coordinated enough to keep markets genuinely tradable when volatility rises. In such an environment, what matters is how well the displayed price, available liquidity, and final order execution remain aligned under pressure.
This becomes especially important during high-impact news periods, when execution quality typically deteriorates across the industry. In those moments, even well-timed entries can be undermined if spreads widen significantly.