Article

IBKR vs Swissquote, Saxo & PostFinance: Chart-Review & Export Fit

Compare IBKR, Swissquote, Saxo, and PostFinance on chart review, export, and AI-readable workflow fit for Swiss technical traders — not fees or account promotions.

Little Bird Trading logo

Author: Little Bird Trading

Created JULY 6, 2026 | Last updated JULY 6, 2026

  • Topic: IBKR vs Swissquote Saxo PostFinance chart review workflow
  • Audience: Swiss technical traders, SIX and SMI traders, IBKR Switzerland users
Trading Platforms & ToolsSwiss technical tradersSIX and SMI tradersIBKR Switzerland usersIBKR vs Swissquote Saxo PostFinance…

Swissquote, Saxo, and PostFinance are among the platforms most Swiss retail traders already use for SIX Swiss Exchange execution. IBKR is the platform MyLinedChart connects to. The question that matters for a chart-review workflow is not which broker is "best" — it is which setup lets a trader capture drawings, levels, and notes as structured, exportable, AI-readable data across both the SIX day session and the US session that lands in the evening and night in CET.

The Two-Session Reality: SIX and SMI by Day, US Markets Overnight in CET

A Swiss technical trader typically works two sessions: SIX Swiss Exchange names, including the twenty SMI blue-chip constituents, during the roughly 9:00 AM to 5:30 PM CET day session, then US equities, ETFs, or futures that trade the US regular session, landing somewhere around 3:30 PM to 10:00 PM CET depending on how the US and Swiss/EU daylight-saving calendars line up in a given week. The chart reasoning built during the SIX session — a support level on a Nestlé or Novartis chart, a breakdown label on a UBS or Roche name — has to survive into whatever review happens after the US close, and the same holds in reverse.

The problem is not remembering that a level existed. It is remembering why it mattered, what would have invalidated it, and whether the same setup label was used consistently across both sessions. Without a structured record, that context gets rebuilt from memory at review time, and memory reliably favors the outcome over the original reasoning.

What an AI-Readable Chart Record Actually Is

A screenshot freezes what a chart looked like. It does not reliably preserve why a drawing was made, what a label meant, or what would have invalidated the setup. An AI-readable chart record is different: it captures drawings, price levels, notes, and labels as structured fields, not just pixels, so the reasoning behind a setup survives past the session it was drawn in.

That structure matters twice: once when a trader reviews their own week, and again if an AI tool is asked to help with that review. An AI model can inspect a structured export of levels and notes far more usefully than it can inspect a PNG of a candlestick chart.

Where Swissquote, Saxo, and PostFinance Charting Stops

Swissquote's trading platform, Saxo's SaxoTraderGO, and PostFinance's e-trading service each provide charting built to support SIX and cross-border order execution, and each is a reasonable choice for account management and order routing. Swissquote is Switzerland's largest online bank and broker, regulated by FINMA; Saxo is a Danish bank offering a multi-asset professional platform available to Swiss residents; PostFinance is the financial-services arm of the Swiss postal service, offering its e-trading service to retail customers alongside its core banking business. For a chart-review workflow, though, the built-in charting on any of the three is usually built around the trade ticket, not around structured export or an AI write-channel.

That is a workflow gap, not a criticism of the platforms. Brokerage charting exists to support order entry, and it generally does that well. The gap shows up later, when a trader wants to export drawings and notes as structured data, or wants an AI agent to read chart context and propose an annotation in natural language. That is a separate layer, and it is the layer MyLinedChart is built for.

What Each Platform Is Built For

Comparing these platforms is more useful as a workflow-fit table than as a ranking. None of the three brokerage platforms below is the market-data source behind MyLinedChart's charts, and IBKR's own Swiss and international access runs through its own regulated entities, subject to the trader's own account setup and eligibility — details worth confirming directly rather than assuming.

This table is workflow context, not a broker ranking or recommendation.
PlatformCommon Role for Swiss TradersChart/Export Workflow Note
SwissquoteSwitzerland's largest online bank and broker, regulated by FINMANamed here as market context, not a MyLinedChart data source
SaxoDanish bank offering a multi-asset professional-grade platform (SaxoTraderGO) to Swiss residentsNamed here as market context, not a MyLinedChart data source
PostFinanceFinancial-services arm of the Swiss postal service, offering retail e-trading alongside core bankingNamed here as market context, not a MyLinedChart data source
IBKRSIX and international market access through IBKR's own regulated entitiesThe platform MyLinedChart's Connector is built against

The IBKR + MyLinedChart Workflow

MyLinedChart is a desktop charting app that connects to a trader's own IBKR session (TWS or IB Gateway) through a local Connector — the market data and account connection stay on the trader's machine, not routed through MyLinedChart's servers. It does not compete with Swissquote, Saxo, or PostFinance as a broker; a trader can keep those accounts for SIX execution and still use MyLinedChart's chart-review layer against a separate IBKR connection, most directly for the US leg of their workflow.

Inside that workflow, drawings, levels, labels, and notes export to structured XLSX, JSON, or CSV, not a flattened image. Use MCP toolkit to see the natural-language write-channel: an AI agent reads the current chart context and proposes a drawing or indicator in plain language, and every change still needs the trader's confirmation before it lands on the chart.

A Practical Way to Test the Workflow

Before treating this as a permanent workflow, run it against a small watchlist for a week: a handful of SMI names plus whatever US symbols already get reviewed overnight. Confirm the IBKR connection reflects the right session times, that drawings and labels survive an export round-trip, and that the exported fields actually answer the review questions that matter — why a level was drawn, what invalidated it, and what session it belongs to.

This test is deliberately small. The goal is not to migrate an entire trading process in one step. It is to confirm that the chart-review layer holds up before it becomes the default way SIX and US chart work gets recorded.

From Chart to Review: Journaling, AI Review, and Handoff

The exported record is the input to whatever review process a trader already runs: a journal, a spreadsheet, an AI-assisted weekly review, or a custom internal system. Because the export is structured rather than a picture, the same setup label, level, and invalidation note can be compared across SIX and US sessions without re-typing anything.

That is the practical payoff of an AI-readable format: the review step, human or AI, can ask why a level mattered, not just what the chart looked like. Use TradingView vs TrendSpider vs MyLinedChart: Structured Chart Exports for Real Trading Processes for the full list of exportable fields, and Switzerland workflow hub for the wider workflow hub.

Limits and Claims to Keep Clear

This article compares chart and export workflow fit. It does not recommend Swissquote, Saxo, PostFinance, IBKR, or any brokerage account, and it is not investment, trading, tax, or financial advice.

MyLinedChart's own market data and connectivity are IBKR-based only. Data availability, timing, history, exchange entitlements, and export behavior depend on the user's own IBKR account, provider permissions, and market-data subscriptions, as well as FINMA and other Swiss rules that apply to their specific account. MyLinedChart does not guarantee SIX or US data, does not recommend brokers, and does not place trades automatically. See /pricing?currency=chf when you are ready to evaluate plans.

FAQ

Does MyLinedChart connect to Swissquote, Saxo, or PostFinance?

No. MyLinedChart's market data and account connectivity are IBKR-based only, through the local Connector. Swissquote, Saxo, and PostFinance are named here as workflow context, not as data sources.

Is this article recommending a Swiss broker?

No. It compares chart-review and export workflow fit. It does not recommend brokers, accounts, or trading strategies.

Do I need to close my Swissquote, Saxo, or PostFinance account to use MyLinedChart?

No. MyLinedChart works against a trader's own IBKR connection. Other brokerage relationships are unaffected and outside MyLinedChart's scope.

Sample Structured Chart-Data Exports

Review how chart drawings, annotations, OHLC, volume, and execution context become reusable structured data.

Related Articles

More Video Guides