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Markets Swing on Politics as Study Flags Trump Era Extremes and Starmer Faces UK Pressure

Donald Trump’s Predecessors on Market VolatilityMarket research firms generally fly under the radar until they produce a piece of work that challenges deeply held beliefs. Fundstrat did just that recently when macro data scientist Alex Wang analysed the causes of the five best and worst market days during the last 12 US administrations dating from Ronald Reagan in 1981.Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!).The chart considers the impact of a range of factors from corporate earnings and foreign events to economic data and interest rate expectations. Unsurprisingly, government policy was the most common theme – but the really interesting finding was how it dominated the peaks and troughs of one president in particular.The research indicates that the current presidency was responsible for the five best and five worst market days since Trump took office for the second time. According to the analysis, this was not the case for any other president over the last 45 years.White House spokesman Kush Desai told MarketWatch that since president Trump took office, publicly listed companies have reported blockbuster earnings reports and clocked multiple all-time high stock valuations because of his pro-growth agenda of tax cuts, deregulation, energy abundance and fair trade deals.The best market day was 9 April 2025, when the S&P 500 rose almost 10% after the suspension of the so-called ‘liberation day’ tariffs. However, the unpredictability of Trump’s pronouncements is highlighted by the fact that one of the worst days came just 24 hours after these tariffs were announced.Indeed, all the sharpest stock market falls since January 2025 can be linked to tariff announcements, while the gains have been highly concentrated.Hardika Singh, an economic strategist at Fundstrat suggests that if the five best market days of the current administration were excluded, the S&P 500 would be down 2.7% since he took office instead of showing an 18.5% increase.Perhaps disappointingly for those who believe that government policy should move markets, the research concluded that the losses pretty much cancelled out the gains, suggesting that much of the noise that has emanated from the White House over the last year-and-a-bit has been just that – noise.Turmoil at the Top as Starmer TeetersThere’s a saying in football that you become a better player when you are out of the team – in other words, when those on the pitch are messing up the alternative can only be better.To carry on the footballing analogy, the UK Labour party spent 14 years on the substitutes bench toning down some the messaging that has traditionally alarmed financial markets in a bid to make it more appealing to the business community, particularly in financial services.Sadly for its supporters, since winning promotion to Downing Street, Keir Starmer has turned into the Ali Dia of British politics. A series of U-turns and poorly considered policies have shaken confidence in his leadership and he now stands on the brink after poor local election results prompted dozens of his members of parliament to call for his departure.David Morrison, senior market analyst at Trade Nation notes that yields on UK government bonds have soared, with the key 10-year gilt yield pushing up by around 12 basis points before steadying. Investors are selling UK bank stocks with significant drops in the share prices of Barclays and Lloyds.“Domestic political issues undermine sterling as Starmer desperately attempts to cling on to his position, for some reason,” says Morrison in a research note dated 12 May. “Yet despite weakness across the British pound and euro against the US dollar, both currencies found some support due to the prospect of higher interest rates.”Analysts currently expect the Bank of England to hike rates by around 75 basis points each before the end of the year.MarketWatch data indicates that 10-year gilt yields are currently around 5.1%, while 30-year gilt yields have risen to almost 5.8%. The Financial Times Stock Exchange 100 Index opened today in the red.One market analyst suggested that the turmoil at the top of the UK government would create more uncertainty in financial markets as analysts consider the potential impact on fiscal policy of a change of prime minister and perhaps more significantly, chancellor of exchequer.Politics, Populism and PortfoliosEarlier this year, Capital Group published a paper exploring the global rise of populism (defined as a political style that frames politics as a struggle between the ‘people’ and the ‘elites’) and its impact on financial markets.The authors note that populism reshapes politics and that its economic consequences are equally profound. They refer to research across 60 countries showing that after an initial wave of optimism, economic performance deteriorates with real GDP per capita growth slowing by roughly one percentage point per year in the first five years of populists taking power and remaining below trend even after 15 years.? BREAKING:???? PRESIDENT TRUMP WILL FLY TO CHINA ON WEDNESDAY, MAY 13SOURCES REPORT THAT TRUMP WILL PUT PRESSURE ON XI JINPING REGARDING THE WAR WITH IRANEXPECT HIGH MARKET VOLATILITY!! pic.twitter.com/iLAw53pFzw— ᴛʀᴀᴄᴇʀ (@DeFiTracer) May 10, 2026That said, the paper also acknowledges that the alternative to populist governance is not necessarily inclusive growth. In many countries, the pre-populist trajectory was already characterised by income inequality, low productivity, demographic headwinds, political fragmentation and difficulty delivering meaningful structural reform. Populism often emerges as a break in this stagnation.While evidence shows populist policies generally worsen long-term outcomes, they can disrupt entrenched inertia and create space for reform coalitions. This helps explain why some electorates view populism as a corrective to an underperforming status quo despite its economic risks.For investors, these political and economic dynamics translate into tangible market risks and opportunities. Historical trends and recent market behaviour indicate that populist regimes often disrupt traditional market dynamics, amplifying volatility and pressuring asset performance.While populism typically heightens uncertainty and risk premia, periods of volatility can also create compelling entry points for long‑term investors, particularly in markets with strong institutions or credible reform agendas.Moreover, episodes of financial repression (a common feature of populist policy frameworks, where interest rates are held below inflation or directed toward government financing) can temporarily support equity and realasset valuations by suppressing discount rates and limiting safer yield alternatives. This article was written by Paul Golden at www.financemagnates.com.

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B2BINPAY Expands Regulated Footprint With FSC Mauritius VASP Licenses

B2BINPAY Mauritius Ltd., a crypto payment processing solution for merchants, enterprises, and financial platforms, has obtained Virtual Asset Service Provider licenses from the Financial Services Commission, Mauritius (FSC Mauritius) under the country’s Virtual Asset and Initial Token Offering Services Act 2021 (VAITOS Act).The authorization marks a significant milestone for B2BINPAY, making it the first crypto payment company to receive a VASP license in the jurisdiction.A stronger regulated base for crypto paymentsThis new license expands B2BINPAY's regulatory footprint and reinforces its ability to serve businesses that require compliant, efficient crypto payment processing within recognized legal frameworks. The approval also positions the company to deepen its engagement with clients connected to international markets — including Africa — leveraging Mauritius' established financial and banking infrastructure.“Our goal is to make crypto payments more accessible, regulated, and efficient for businesses worldwide,” said Arthur Azizov, CEO of B2BINPAY. "Securing the FSC Mauritius VASP licenses is a significant achievement. It opens new market opportunities, allows us to serve clients more effectively, and gives us an operational base in a jurisdiction with a robust financial ecosystem."Why Mauritius?Mauritius has steadily built its reputation as a regulated financial hub with a dedicated legal framework for virtual assets. For crypto payment providers, this distinction carries real weight. Clients today demand more than fast settlement or broad coin support — they need providers that operate under clear regulatory rules, meet institutional compliance standards, and can sustain long-term relationships with financial counterparties.For B2BINPAY, the licenses strengthen the company’s position as it continues to expand its regulated footprint. The company already operates under a regulated framework in El Salvador and plans to pursue further licensing in other regions as part of its global strategy.About B2BINPAYB2BINPAY is a crypto payment processing solution for merchants, enterprises, and financial platforms. B2BINPAY acts as an infrastructure bridge, reducing payment friction and protecting margins by automating the flow of funds from crypto to fiat. The company has processed more than $5.1 billion in transactions. It supports USDT and USDC across 10 major blockchains and works with 350+ cryptocurrencies across its ecosystem.Regulatory noteThis announcement pertains to B2BINPAY Mauritius Ltd., authorized and regulated by the Financial Services Commission of Mauritius (FSC Mauritius) under the VAITOS Act 2021 (License Code: GB24203002). The authorization covers three regulated activities:Class "M" — Virtual Asset Broker-Dealer LicenseClass "O" — Virtual Asset Wallet Services LicenseClass "R" — Virtual Asset Custodian LicenseClient eligibility, service availability, and conduct obligations are governed by FSC Mauritius rules and applicable law. This article was written by FM Contributors at www.financemagnates.com.

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How AI Overload Affects Retail Traders’ Behaviour, Decisions, and Churn

In reference to Rupert Osborne’s article: “Everyone Talks About AI’s Power. Few Ask What It Does to Financial Decisions” from May 4th, 2026.Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!).The article raises an important question: what does AI actually do to financial decision-making? It is a question that deserves more attention, particularly when viewed through the lens of the end user—the retail trader, and is important for brokers who employ either A book or B book modelsThe financial industry is in the midst of an AI-driven transformation. From back-office automation to market analytics and marketing engines, brokers and traders now have access to an unprecedented range of tools, data, and insights. On the surface, this looks like clear progress. However, there is a less discussed consequence of this rapid evolution: cognitive overload.The Trader’s First Experience: A Cognitive BottleneckConsider a new trader logging into a trading platform for the first time. Within seconds, they are expected to make a series of complex decisions: which asset to trade, when to enter or exit, how much capital to allocate, and what level of leverage to use.At the same time, they are exposed to a constant stream of stimuli: promotional banners, pop-ups, trading signals and alerts, market analysis, data feeds, and notifications across multiple channels. AI tools can surface thousands of assets and opportunities instantly, but traders still need to process a significant amount of information per time unit.They need to decide which information is most relevant and reliable and which information is fake or irrelevant for every decision. The overwhelming stimulation and information processing may impair their ability to perform.An “opportunity-rich environment” can quickly feel like entering a candy store while being asked to make high-stakes financial decisions. Layered onto this is the natural psychological state of a beginner—uncertainty, fear of loss, and lack of confidence. The result is often the opposite of what brokers intend: doubt, confusion, and reduced decision quality, which can ultimately lead to higher churn rates. According to CPattern’s data, 32% of traders make less than 10 trades before quitting. AI as Both Solution and AmplifierAI is frequently positioned as a solution to complexity and, in many ways, it is. However, AI is also a major driver of information inflation: more chatbots, more signals, more insights, more recommendations, more content. The assumption is that more information leads to better decisions, but behavioral science suggests otherwise.Human attention is limited because cognitive resources are finite. When overwhelmed, individuals do not necessarily become more rational—they become more confused, more reactive, more hesitant, or disengaged altogether. This leads to an important shift in perspective:The bottleneck in trading is not only access to information, but the ability to process and prioritise it.Traders’ Attention is the New CurrencyIn this environment, attention becomes the most valuable—and scarce—resource. Every alert, banner, or recommendation competes for it. As attention is spread across a large number of stimuli, clarity of thought becomes more difficult, and the ability to make high-quality decisions deteriorates, along with the ability to cope with stress, losses, and disappointment.For traders, especially less experienced ones, this can result in hesitation, missed opportunities, overtrading driven by noise, reduced confidence, and faster churn rates. Traders’ ability to direct their attention needs to remain as free as possible to function properly.From Information Abundance to Decision ClarityDecision-making is not a “buy/sell” click, but rather a process of information processing. Brokers should not take responsibility for traders’ decisions or their outcomes, but rather provide each trader with the best environment for making the right decision for themselves.The next phase of innovation in trading platforms should therefore focus less on increasing information volume and more on improving the ease of processing it. This requires a shift from generic, feature-driven design to behaviour-aware personalization.In that context, brokers are challenged to maintain a balance between protecting traders from “too much information” and still allowing them to explore data at their own discretion. Delivering the right information at the right time, in the right context, for the right user is not trivial. It requires a strong understanding of cognitive theory and decision-making models, applied in real time to brokers’ data.The Business Case for ClarityTraders who are able to gather information responsibly, integrate it, and make informed decisions tend to remain active longer than those who consume data without control or structure. Brokers who can provide an optimal trading environment—personalised and “noise-free”—can create conditions for consistency in trading, enable learning from past decisions, build confidence over time, and ultimately resilience.In other words, clarity is directly linked to survivability and churn rates. This reframes personalisation from a UX feature into a core business issue. Data from CPattern shows a 75% increase in survivability rate when traders are given the right personalised information—highlighting its significance for both brokers and traders.Conclusion: Less Noise, Better DecisionsThe AI revolution will continue to increase the volume of available information. The central issue will not be who generates more data, but who helps traders make sense of it.In trading, as in many other domains, higher trading activity does not come from more inputs, but from better information processing, clearer thinking, and stronger focus—while also managing the often-overlooked emotional dimensions of trading, such as fear of loss, excitement, and stress. This article was written by Oded Shefer at www.financemagnates.com.

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Bitcoin Price Stuck Below 200 EMA at $82,000 in a 2% Volatility Cage. How High Can BTC Go?

Bitcoin traded near $81,400 on Wednesday, May 13, 2026, stuck inside a 2% range just below the 200-day exponential moving average at roughly $82,000. The cryptocurrency cleared the upper boundary of its February–April consolidation in early May, breaking above the November 2025 lows around $80,500. That move was supposed to mark a regime change. Instead, BTC has spent the last two weeks pressed against the 200 EMA, the single technical line that still separates the current bear trend from a genuine recovery.Follow me on X for real-time market analysis: @ChmielDk.What's Pushing Bitcoin Right Now?The recovery from the March crash lows near $61,000 has been a slow grind. April spot Bitcoin ETF flows hit $2.44 billion, total US spot BTC ETF assets crossed $100 billion, and BlackRock's IBIT alone now manages more than $63 billion. The Strait of Hormuz reopened to US-escorted commercial traffic, and Fed Chair Jerome Powell hands the gavel to Kevin Warsh on Friday, May 15. The institutional forecast range, as the FinanceMagnates.com 2026 BTC outlook detailed, still spans $75,000 to $225,000."Crypto majors such as Bitcoin, Solana, Ethereum, are proving resilient and have demonstrable long term value," said Paul Howard, Senior Director at Wincent. Howard noted that crypto majors are absorbing macro pressure better than tech equities under the weight of tariff headlines, energy costs, and China's grip on chip-grade rare earths.Bitcoin Technical Read: A 2% Cage Below the 200 EMABitcoin broke out of its February–April consolidation at the start of May, clearing the upper boundary near $80,500 that aligned with the November 2025 lows. The technical message looked clean: a multi-month accumulation range giving way. Then the chart hit its next wall almost immediately.The 200-day exponential moving average is currently riding just above $82,000 (the 200-day SMA prints higher in the $83,000s depending on the data source). Since the breakout, BTC has been trapped between the broken consolidation top below and that moving average above, a band of roughly 2%.In line with the rules I've followed for 15-plus years as an analyst and trader at FinanceMagnates.com, I treat a market below its 200 EMA as bearish until proven otherwise. That blue line is the single technical divider between the current downtrend and a sustainable recovery. Until BTC closes daily above it, the path of least resistance tilts down, and the lack of distance from the $80,500 breakout level means a failed retest is firmly on the table.How Low Can Bitcoin Go?If $80,500 cracks on a daily close, the structural target moves straight back to the consolidation floor near $61,000, where the February–March 2026 lows sit. As I wrote in my March 24 crash analysis, that band was where the bull-market framework was last defended; losing it on follow-through would be the deepest bear sequel since the April 2024 halving cycle began.The bull scenario is technically possible but starved of room. A clean daily close above the 200 EMA opens a short corridor to the November–December 2025 lows just under $85,000, where buyers tried to defend the breakdown last quarter. As I noted in my May 6 analysis when Bitcoin first tested this 200 EMA wall, the resistance ladder above $85,000 gets dense fast: $90,000, then $97,000 (the January peaks), the psychological $100,000 level, then $107,000 to $108,000 (the August–September 2025 lows that flipped to resistance), and finally the entire ATH resistance zone between $120,000 and $126,000 that defined July through October 2025.Each of those steps is a sell-side magnet for trapped longs from earlier in the cycle. As my April 17 analysis of the Hormuz surge flagged, the $94,000 to $96,000 corridor was where the bullish path opened on a clean break above $80,000, and that view still holds only if the 200 EMA gives way.My bias here is unchanged. The trend remains bearish, the cage is tightening, and I am still hunting for downside opportunities targeting a retest of this year's $61,000 lows. A daily close above $82,000 forces a rethink. A daily close below $80,500 confirms it.Follow me on X for live BTC level updates: @ChmielDk. This article was written by Damian Chmiel at www.financemagnates.com.

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Interactive Brokers UK Profit Jumps 150% to £34 Million as Client Count Tops 86,000

Interactive Brokers (U.K.) Limited posted pre-tax profit of £34 million for the year ended December 31, 2025, more than double the £13.6 million it reported a year earlier, with the FCA-regulated unit adding clients at a steady clip and pulling in higher commission and interest income, according to a filing lodged with Companies House.After-tax profit came in at £26 million, up from £10.5 million. Turnover, which the company says is derived entirely from commissions on order execution and clearing, increased to £46.2 million from £36 million. The numbers cover only the UK subsidiary of Nasdaq-listed Interactive Brokers Group, which reports separately on a consolidated basis. At the group level, the parent company closed the fourth quarter of 2025 with revenue of $1.64 billion and earnings per share of $0.65, beating analyst expectations.Client Growth Slows From Prior Year but Stays in Double DigitsThe company said it was the carrying broker for 86,798 clients at year-end, up 35% from 64,146 in 2024. That is a slower pace than the 142% jump recorded the year before, when client numbers more than doubled from a smaller base. Net commissions, which the filing identifies as the company's sole revenue line, climbed in step with the higher account count.The growth follows last year's filing, when the British arm reported a 142% jump in client accounts and a more modest 15% revenue increase.Administrative expenses rose to £67 million from £59.4 million, while other operating income reached £10.8 million. The operating line still showed a £9.96 million loss, though that was narrower than the £16.2 million operating loss recorded in 2024. The company relies on finance income, primarily interest earned on client balances and margin lending, to drive profitability.Finance income reached £147.6 million, with £51.5 million coming from bank deposits, £47.9 million from interest on client balances, and £48.2 million from intercompany balances. Of the interest on client balances, £34.2 million came from margin lending. Finance costs rose marginally to £103.6 million.UK Retail Broker Field Shows Wide Performance GapThe London broker reported its results into a market where competitors operating different business models have posted varied results. IG Group, the FTSE 100 retail trading platform, recorded record total revenue of £1.12 billion for calendar year 2025 on a comparable basis, with the firm launching a strategic review that could reshape its corporate structure. CMC Markets, another London-listed peer, closed its fiscal 2025 with net operating income of £340.1 million and a 33% jump in pre-tax profit to £84.5 million.IBKR UK’s client money rose to £1.22 billion from £896.6 million, the filing showed. The broker has also expanded its product line into cryptocurrency trading through a Paxos partnership and more recently allowed transfers of existing crypto holdings into linked accounts. This article was written by Damian Chmiel at www.financemagnates.com.

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FM Singapore Summit 2026 Day 1 Wrap-Up: A Strong Debut in Asia’s Leading Financial Hub

The FM Singapore Summit 2026 officially opened its doors at the Suntec Singapore Convention & Exhibition Centre, marking the first-ever edition of the event in Singapore. Launching at a time when the Asia-Pacific region continues to see rapid growth in fintech, online trading, payments, and digital finance, the summit brings together key players from across the financial services industry in one of the world’s most important financial hubs.Day 1 featured a strong conference agenda with industry leaders and experts including David Jenkins, Christopher Forbes, Chris Knight, and many more, who shared insights on some of the most relevant topics shaping today’s financial services industry.From the moment doors opened, the venue was filled with energy as brokers, fintech companies, liquidity providers, payment firms, banks, and technology innovators gathered for a full day of networking, meetings, and discussions. The exhibition floor remained fully packed throughout the day, highlighting the strong interest and engagement surrounding the summit’s Singapore debut.Attendees were welcomed into an environment focused on connection and collaboration. Booths and meeting spaces remained active across the venue, with participants taking the opportunity to build new partnerships, reconnect with industry peers, and explore new business opportunities. The atmosphere throughout the day reflected the growing importance of the Asia-Pacific region within the global financial services landscape.The exhibition floor featured a strong lineup of leading companies from across the industry, including sponsors such as LMAX Group and Equiti Capital, alongside exhibitors including Match-Trade Technologies, oneZero, and many more, all contributing to the vibrant atmosphere seen throughout Day 1. Their presence created valuable opportunities for discussions around innovation, technology, payments, trading solutions, and the future of financial services in the region.Alongside the busy exhibition floor, the conference agenda delivered insightful discussions led by respected industry figures and market experts. Attendees had the opportunity to hear from leading voices across fintech, online trading, payments, and digital assets, with sessions covering some of today’s most relevant industry topics, trends, and challenges.Beyond business, the summit also delivered a lively and engaging experience with the networking party, where attendees continued conversations in a more relaxed setting while building meaningful professional relationships. The strong turnout and level of engagement throughout the venue demonstrated the industry’s enthusiasm for FM Singapore Summit’s launch in the region.Day 2 Ahead: More Insights, Networking, and OpportunitiesWith a successful opening day completed, attention now turns to Day 2 of FM Singapore Summit 2026, which is expected to bring even more networking opportunities, discussions, and business connections.The conference agenda will continue with more expert discussions focused on fintech, trading, payments, technology, and the future of global finance, featuring speakers including Jakub Roz, Aeby Samuel, Alice Chen, and many more.As conversations continue and new partnerships take shape, Day 2 is set to build on the strong momentum created during the summit’s opening day.For more information, visit:https://events.financemagnates.com/event/fmsingapore26/home This article was written by FM Contributors at www.financemagnates.com.

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When The “House” Always Wins, It’s Time To Get Rid Of The House, Says PRED’s Amit Mahensaria

For decades, sports bettors have been fighting an uphill battle against a model that does everything in its power to ensure the house always wins. For a successful sports bettor, traditional sportsbooks are not your friend – they’re adversaries, notorious for kneecapping those who win too often, either by limiting them to betting no more than a few cents or banning them entirely. Their model is to punish excellence. But a structural change is coming. Amit Mahensaria, co-Founder and CEO of PRED, is leading bettors away from the smoke-and-mirrors of traditional bookies, introducing them to the concept of the high-speed “sports exchange” that’s modeled on its counterparts in the traditional financial world. An EdTech pioneer and investment manager, Mahensaria has hit on a way to apply the rigor of Wall Street orderbooks to the adrenaline of live sports. If he gets his way, punters will no longer be forced to fight the enormous resources of the “house,” but instead be able to trade their knowledge and insights on a peer-to-peer exchange where the only thing that limits them is their personal analytical edge. 1. You spent years working in EdTech, focusing on structured, institutional learning. How did your long experience in that industry lead to your decision to switch focus to decentralized sports prediction markets? I mean, it’s hard to identify a real link between the two industries.I spent years in EdTech learning how to make complex products approachable. How to make simple products that are engaging. Sports trading has the same shape from a product perspective. There's a thing people care about deeply, and the existing infrastructure underserves them.The link most people miss is that in both categories, the user has more analytical capacity than the system gives them credit for. Schools treat students as passive recipients. Sportsbooks treat bettors as marks to be managed. PRED starts from the opposite assumption, that the user is a participant who can think for themselves. That's the through-line.I've also spent years around markets where pricing matters. Sports outcomes have been priced badly for decades because the dominant model needs the bettor to be wrong for the operator to make money. Moving to an exchange model is the structural correction. I wanted to be on the side, building it.2: Before moving into EdTech, you were an investment manager. Has that background influenced the way you have structured PRED and its prediction markets?Yes, directly. When you've sat on the buy side, you internalize a few things that change how you think about any market. Order books are how serious traders price things. Information should flow to participants, not be gated. The platform shouldn't trade against you. Spreads tell you the truth about a market's depth.PRED is built around those assumptions. We run an order book, not a book that the house balances. Every match has another trader on the other side. Liquidity is visible. Spreads are real. None of that is unusual in finance; it's table stakes. What's strange is that none of it existed for sports outcomes at any scale until exchanges started entering the category, and even then, most operators are still running variants of the old book model.Coming from investment management, the design decisions are obvious. You build the thing you'd want to use yourself.3: Why did you create PRED? What are the problems with traditional sportsbooks, and how does PRED’s prediction markets solve themCategory matters here. Crypto rails alone don't make something an exchange. Plenty of offshore sportsbooks accept crypto deposits and still run a traditional book against the user. We're not that, and we're not a generic prediction market that added sports as one category among many. Pred is a sports-first order book exchange built on Base, where settlement is on-chain, and matching is peer-to-peer. Architecture is the differentiator. The rails are how we settle it.We are creating PRED to give live sports traders the trading experience that moves at the speed of a live match. Traders should have the assurance of the best odds and a larger variety of markets in a live match, which general-purpose prediction markets will find it tough to offer.4: Those coming from sportsbooks are used to seeing the “house” always winning, due to the way they carefully balance the odds in their favor. How does PRED’s alternative model of charging fees for order matching change the user experience and enhance long-term engagement?The fee model isn't a marketing line; it's the actual mechanism. The exchange charges a fee when two users match a position. We don't care which side wins. We care that volume happens.For the user, this changes the experience in a few practical ways. Spreads are tighter because they're set by competition between traders rather than by an operator pricing in a margin. Pricing is more accurate because anyone with a sharper view can post a better quote and capture the spread. Limits aren't a defensive tool because we don't lose money to good traders.Long-term, this matters because the user can build a track record without being shut down. That's the part most people coming from sportsbooks haven't experienced. You actually get to keep playing the game you got good at.5: Traditional sportsbooks are notorious for banning successful bettors or, at best, limiting them. But you’ve publicly stated that PRED won’t do this, claiming that they’re the platform’s most valuable users. How does the peer-to-peer model help pro traders become an asset and help to grow your platform?In a sportsbook, a winning bettor is a liability. The operator paid them, and the operator's profit comes from losing bettors, so winners get throttled. Limits, account closures, and slow pay are all standard.On an exchange, a winning trader is a counterparty. They're the person taking the other side of someone else's losing trade. The exchange doesn't pay them; another user does. So the more accurate the trader is, the more useful they are to the platform, because their pricing pulls the rest of the market toward fair value and gives less experienced traders something real to trade against.Sharp traders bring three things. Liquidity, because they post quotes. Price discovery, because their quotes incorporate information faster. And volume, because they trade more often than recreational users. We want them on the exchange, posting quotes, taking flow, building positions. That's the engine.The position we've taken publicly is straightforward. Winners are welcome here. We don't limit accounts for being good, we don't close accounts, and we don't have a book to protect.6: PRED enables its users to earn yield on capital sitting in their accounts on the platform. Why did PRED introduce this feature, and what impact will it have on your users?Capital sitting in your account shouldn't sit dead. Most exchange users carry balances between trades, and on a traditional sportsbook, that balance earns nothing. We pass yield through on total net worth, whether it's idle cash or capital tied up in open positions, so users earn on everything they hold on the platform.This isn't a separate yield product. It's a feature of the exchange, the same way a brokerage pays interest on your cash balance.7: You say PRED is best suited for those who approach sports with the same analytical discipline as financial market traders. Do you envision sports trading becoming a legitimate form of investment, similar to something like options trading, instead of a casual hobby?I'd push back on the binary in the question. You don't need to call something an investment to take it seriously, and you don't need to call something a hobby to enjoy it. People play poker professionally and recreationally on the same platforms. The same is true here.What's changing is the infrastructure. Order book exchanges, transparent pricing, real spreads, no house. That's the toolkit a serious analytical trader needs to do work that compounds. You can build a model, post quotes, run a position, see your PnL, and iterate. None of that has been available for sports outcomes at any scale until recently.Whether sports trading becomes a category like options trading depends on how the analytical layer develops around it. Options got serious when the math, the data, and the execution all matured. Sports trading is earlier on that curve. PRED’s role is to be the venue that makes the analytical work possible. That's the part we control.8: How will PRED evolve on the social side? Is there potential for things like copy trading and community-based liquidity pools that will allow users to bet on the expertise of top traders? How will PRED approach this?The social layer is something we're thinking about carefully rather than building publicly. An exchange where positions are visible has an obvious social product surface area. Friends see each other's positions during a live match. Group leaderboards. Markets that develop their own communities of traders. Mechanisms for users who want exposure to a strategy without running the model themselves.Whether and how each of those gets built is a product decision the team will make over time. I'd rather not commit to specifics from the marketing side. What I'll say directionally is that an exchange is a multiplayer product by design. Every trade has another trader on the other side. Building social layers on top of that core is a natural extension, and we'll have more to share as those decisions get made.Conclusion: A New Asset Class for the Digital AgeMahensaria is building a future where sportsbooks won’t be welcome. It’s the dawn of a new era, in which sports outcomes are priced with the same mathematical precision as options and futures markets, and it will shift the category from a “vice” to a legitimate financial asset class. Bettors won’t be bettors anymore – instead, they’ll be traders, leveraging their knowledge, sub-second execution, and a platform that actually wants them on it. Because PRED earns from volume rather than users’ losses, their incentives are aligned. The result is a global, open market that enables capital to be productive and skills to be rewarded. As decentralized platforms like PRED mature and successful punters get the rewards they deserve, it’s hard to imagine there’ll be much runway left for the opaque bookmakers of today. This article was written by FM Contributors at www.financemagnates.com.

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TradeLocker Opens Its Demo to All Users, Joining a Path Already Cleared by cTrader and MetaQuotes

TradeLocker has launched a free demo account that any retail trader can open without first signing up to a partner broker or prop firm, a move the platform provider says will create a shared acquisition funnel for the firms on its network. Traders can now register a TradeLocker profile, receive $100,000 in virtual funds, and try the interface before deciding where to deposit real money.Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)Demo accounts themselves are not new. CFD brokers have offered free demo environments for two decades, and MetaQuotes built broker-side demo onboarding into the MT5 web terminal years ago. However, what TradeLocker is pitching is structural: a single trader profile that sits at the platform level, before any broker selection, and that follows the trader into any partner on the network.The platform, owned by Deus X Capital and run by former IG Group regional technology head Dom Bradley, declares more than 60 partner brokers and prop firms."We've made it significantly easier for traders to access TradeLocker and start trading," Bradley said in the announcement, adding that traders can "explore the platform, use our tools, and build confidence before choosing a broker."The Platform-Level Funnel PitchThe company describes the launch as the most significant change to its trading journey since the platform's 2023 debut, claiming traders who arrive at a broker through the demo will be better prepared and less likely to churn. Alex Skolar, TradeLocker's chief product officer, framed the launch in infrastructural terms: "What we have built is not just a demo account. It is a platform-level onboarding layer for the entire industry."Whether platform-level demos meaningfully reduce churn compared with broker-level demos is an open question. The novelty here is the shared profile and the in-platform comparison layer, called TradeLocker Hub, where users can review partner brokers, prop firms, fees, and spreads before connecting.How the Competition Has Approached the Same ProblemTradeLocker is moving into territory rivals have already mapped. Spotware introduced dedicated demo accounts for prop firms on cTrader in October 2025, with FTMO, Instant Funding, and Vision Trade adopting them for time-limited trials and competitions. cTrader's broker and prop firm client base passed 300 earlier this year, according to Spotware.Free demos at native prop firms have also produced visible traction. TTT Markets, the brokerage arm of The Trading Pit, said in March that it drew more than 200 sign-ups across 15 countries within 24 hours of launching a free MT5 trial. The differentiator TradeLocker is pushing is the comparison hub that follows the demo. The Hub functions as a marketplace and places partner offers in front of traders at what the company calls the moment of highest intent.Where Converted Traders Actually LandThe composition of TradeLocker's partner network tilts the demo-to-live conversion story. The platform lists Alpha Capital Group, Blueberry Funded, and Top One Trader among its prop firm partners, and Eightcap, GatesFX, and HeroFX among its brokers. Eightcap, regulated in Australia, the UK, and Cyprus, became the first major regulated CFD broker to add TradeLocker in early 2026. The rest of the broker list draws largely from smaller offshore-licensed firms.That mix matters because the funnel will channel traders not only into regulated CFD environments but also into prop firms and prop-firm-owned brokerages. The trend of prop firms launching their own broker entities for regulatory and platform control has accelerated over the past 18 months, with The5ers' CySEC-licensed TSG. and The Trading Pit's Seychelles-regulated TTP Markets among the recent additions.TradeLocker has historically built most of its momentum on the prop side. The platform gained significant share among prop firms following the MetaQuotes regulatory crackdown in February 2024, with US-based Top Tier Trader fully migrating off MetaTrader onto TradeLocker the same month. FunderPro, owned by the same parent group as TradeLocker, has been a steady source of integrations.TradeLocker has not disclosed conversion data, cost-per-acquisition figures, or churn metrics from earlier partner-level demos. The company said additional features will roll out on the platform in the coming months, without specifying which. This article was written by Damian Chmiel at www.financemagnates.com.

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YaMarkets Shuts Down Following Regulatory Pressure and Operational Strains

Offshore forex and CFD broker YaMarkets has shut down operations, bringing an abrupt end to a brokerage that had focused heavily on India and other eastern markets.Its B2B brand, YaPrime, also appears to have ceased operations, with the company’s website no longer accessible.The broker was run from Dubai, with additional service offices in India, and was led by co-founder and chief executive Lalit Matta, previously India Country Manager at INFINOX. Matta had also held roles at ContinueFX and FXGia. Warning Signs Preceded the Closure In a statement posted on LinkedIn, the broker attributed the closure to worsening business conditions.“This decision was not easy,” the broker wrote. “The changing business environment and operational challenges over time made it increasingly difficult to continue in the way we always wanted to serve our community.”What precisely those operational challenges involve remains unclear. The broker did not respond to requests for comment from Finance Magnates.There were, however, signs of strain in recent months. Roughly three months ago, YaMarkets was actively seeking outside investment as part of what it described as an “ongoing rebranding and international expansion” strategy.At the time, the company was looking for equity participation, strategic partnerships and growth capital.Regulatory pressure may also have played a role. In March, the UAE’s Securities and Commodities Authority added YaMarkets to its warning list. Meanwhile, online review forums such as Trustpilot contained a growing number of complaints related to withdrawals and client fund access. While such platforms can offer an incomplete picture – and complaints against brokers are not uncommon in the retail trading business – persistent withdrawal allegations tend to attract closer scrutiny. The collapse may also have been linked with the recent bout of volatility in gold markets, which has placed additional strain on some brokers, forcing them to either halt gold trading or impose strict margin restrictions. This article was written by Adonis Adoni at www.financemagnates.com.

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TP ICAP Q1 Revenue Rises 13% to Record £689 Million as Broking and Commodities Lead

TP ICAP Group reported record first-quarter revenue of £689 million today (Wednesday) in trading update, an increase of 13% at constant currency, as the London-listed interdealer broker capitalized on volatile markets and higher trading volumes across rates, credit, and energy products.Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)The group's Global Broking arm, its largest revenue contributor, led the quarter with a 15% gain, while the Energy and Commodities division rose 13%. Together, the two units accounted for the bulk of the year-on-year improvement, with TP ICAP saying execution held up across asset classes and regions against a backdrop of macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainty.The result extends a run of record quarters at the world's largest interdealer broker. In Q1 2025, TP ICAP posted what was then a record £629 million in revenue, with growth of 10% at constant currency, driven largely by trading activity tied to US trade policy turbulence. The Q1 2026 print pushes that bar higher again, with broader contributions across the group's four divisions.Global Broking and Commodities Carry the QuarterGlobal Broking's 15% gain reflects continued activity in rates, foreign exchange, and credit, where dealers have leaned on TP ICAP for execution as central bank policy paths in the US, UK, and euro area remain in flux. Energy and Commodities, which struggled through late 2025 amid broker departures to rivals, returned to firmer ground in Q1, with revenue up 13%.The rebound follows a period in which the commodities unit fell 3% over the first nine months of 2025, weighed down by personnel losses. Management had flagged a pipeline of replacement hires expected to contribute from 2026 onwards. Electronic Rivals Set a Higher Growth BarThe TP ICAP result lands against a backdrop in which electronic trading venues are posting steeper growth rates than the traditional voice-broking model. Tradeweb Markets reported a 21.2% rise in Q1 revenue to $617.8 million in late April, with average daily volume crossing $3 trillion for the first time and rates revenue alone climbing nearly 30%. Net income at the Nasdaq-listed platform rose 38.5% to $233 million in the same period.MarketAxess has also reported double-digit ADV growth in its credit and rates businesses through 2026, underlining the migration of OTC flow to electronic venues. The pressure has been a structural concern for years, prompting TP ICAP to acquire Liquidnet for $700 million in 2021 and, more recently, to combine Liquidnet with bond data platform Neptune Networks in a deal that gave nine major investment banks a 30% stake.Rival BGC Group has pushed deeper into data and benchmark services. In January, BGC's UK subsidiary secured FCA authorization as a registered benchmark administrator for EUR and GBP interest rate swaps and inflation products, positioning the firm in direct competition with TP ICAP's Parameta Solutions, which holds nine FCA-administered benchmarks. Liquidnet Builds Out, Parameta LagsLiquidnet posted a 9% revenue increase in Q1, with the company saying its core equities platform and multi-asset agency execution business both expanded. The platform has been one of TP ICAP's bigger growth bets since the 2021 acquisition, though the 9% pace runs behind the double-digit expansion at Tradeweb and MarketAxess in comparable quarters.Parameta Solutions, the group's OTC data and analytics arm, added 4% in Q1. The company said recently hired sales representatives are beginning to contribute, with the unit focused on buy-side engagement, new logos, upselling, and retention. The pace is slower than the 9-10% growth Parameta has delivered in some recent quarters and well below Tradeweb's international revenue growth of more than 29%.The board has continued to assess a potential minority public listing of Parameta Solutions in the United States, though no timeline has been disclosed and the matter was not addressed in the Q1 update.TP ICAP said the board "remains comfortable with the outlook for the remainder of the year at current FX rates," with approximately 60% of group revenues and 40% of costs denominated in US dollars. The company will report interim results for the six months ended 30 June on 6 August 2026. This article was written by Damian Chmiel at www.financemagnates.com.

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Acuity Trading Partners with WNSTN to Co-Integrate AI Chatbot for Brokers

Acuity Trading has signed a co-integration deal with US-based AI engagement firm WNSTN, the companies said today (Wednesday), putting Acuity's market and event data inside WNSTN's conversational chatbot and compliance monitoring tools for brokers and trading platforms.Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)The partnership lands one day after Acuity disclosed a separate equity investment in MarketReader, a New York startup that generates real-time explanations for market moves. Together, the two deals make Acuity's playbook clearer: the London-based provider is wiring third-party AI components into its existing intelligence stack rather than building each piece in-house.Two AI Deals in a Week as Acuity Builds Out the StackAcuity already runs Trade Intelligence, Market Intelligence and Event Intelligence products through MT4, MT5, cTrader, widgets and APIs. The WNSTN tie-up bolts a chat-first interface and a compliance officer module on top of that distribution.It is the second new component plugged in within days. The MarketReader investment, announced yesterday (Tuesday), brought real-time market attribution into the same toolkit.A month earlier, the company added automated chart pattern recognition, a move that put it head-to-head with long-standing rival Autochartist after years of ceding that segment.Andrew Lane, CEO of Acuity Trading, said in a statement that "brokers and platforms are looking for ways to give traders more clarity at the point decisions are made." He described the deal as combining "Acuity's market intelligence with WNSTN's personalized engagement layer."WNSTN Brings Chatbot Layer to a Market-Intelligence ProviderWNSTN, co-founded by Roy Michaeli and Jamie Rakover, markets a multi-agent financial AI system that brokers can deploy as a branded in-platform chatbot. Its pitch leans on a proprietary compliance officer module trained on financial regulations, which the company says monitors AI outputs for regulatory issues.The firm is not new to the brokerage segment. WNSTN integrated with Chicago-based Avant Garde Trading Securities in March 2025 and was selected in January 2026 by South Korea's Meritz Securities, which is building a retail investing platform around WNSTN's infrastructure.Under the new arrangement, brokers will be able to deliver Acuity Trading's content, signals and event data through WNSTN's chat interface. "We believe AI in financial services must do more than generate answers," Michaeli said. "It needs to deliver relevant insights in a way that is secure, responsible and practical for regulated firms."Crowded Field for Broker-Facing AI AssistantsThe combined offering enters a category that has been gathering competitors for several years. Devexperts launched Devexa, an AI-powered chatbot, inside its DXtrade web terminal in 2023, pitching it to brokers as a unified support, sales and trading-assist layer.Tiger Brokers introduced TigerGPT the same year, an in-house AI assistant built on OpenAI's models for users in Australia, New Zealand and Singapore. Leverate has rolled out its own Chatbot Assistant aimed at broker customer service, and a growing list of CRM and marketing-tech vendors are positioning conversational assistants as table stakes for retail brokerages.Compliance Pitch Targets Regulated BrokersBoth companies emphasized regulatory framing in the announcement, with WNSTN's compliance module positioned as a way for brokers in tightly regulated markets to deploy generative AI without weakening oversight obligations. That angle echoes Acuity's broader push into broker integrations, which has emphasized multilingual delivery and white-labelling.Neither company disclosed commercial terms, the expected timeline for joint deployments, or which brokers are first in line to use the integrated product. This article was written by Damian Chmiel at www.financemagnates.com.

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Cyprus Diaspora Forum 2026 sets a New Global Benchmark for Cyprus

In a landmark four-day gathering that has firmly established itself as the premier and only event of its kind offering a truly comprehensive, cross-sector outlook on the major industry and economic pillars of Cyprus, the Cyprus Diaspora Forum 2026 delivered an extraordinary convergence of global influence, opportunity, prestige, and visionary leadership.Held in the world-class surroundings of Limassol’s luxury AMARA Hotel, the Forum exceeded expectations on every level, uniting high-net-worth individuals, global investors, government leaders, innovators, entrepreneurs, academics, cultural ambassadors, and influential diaspora figures from around the world.The Cyprus Diaspora Forum attracted an impressive 1,800 attendees over four days, including 250+ investors, 180 distinguished speakers, and a powerful local and international media presence represented by more than 30 organisations. This remarkable scale of participation underscored the Forum’s growing global significance, bringing together influential leaders, investors, entrepreneurs, policymakers, and media voices from Cyprus and around the world to foster strategic collaboration, innovation, and international opportunity.More than a conference, the Cyprus Diaspora Forum proved itself to be Cyprus’ definitive global gateway, where the future of the nation’s economy, innovation ecosystem, investment strategy, talent repatriation, and international partnerships were actively shaped.A Forum unmatched in Scope, Prestige, and ImpactFrom fintech, finance, regulation, and digital assets to education, technology, startups, wealth management, tourism, culture, real estate, diplomacy, research, and entrepreneurship, the Forum delivered the most comprehensive strategic showcase of Cyprus’ economic and industrial landscape assembled under one roof.This singular platform positioned Cyprus not merely as a Mediterranean destination, but as a serious international business, innovation, and investment powerhouse.The event attracted a distinguished roster of exceptional participants, led by Irene Piki, Deputy Minister to the President of the Republic of Cyprus, alongside Nicodemos Damianou, Deputy Minister of Research, Innovation and Digital Policy; Kostas Koumis, Deputy Minister of Tourism; Theo Paphitis, renowned entrepreneur, philanthropist, and television Dragon; Demetrios Mallios, international business leader; John Kiriakou, former CIA officer, geopolitical commentator, and thought leader; Demetris Skourides, Chief Scientist of Cyprus; Phanos Theophanous, Founder of Cypriots in the City; Dr. Linda Papadopoulos, renowned psychologist, author, and broadcaster; Peter Abraam, Chief Strategy and Growth Officer; James Demetriou, internationally recognised e-commerce entrepreneur; Chris Christofi, Founder and CEO of Reventon; Angela Gerekou, architect, actor, and politician; and Dr. Panteli Theocharous, globally recognised biotech executive and patient advocate, among many other highly reputable leaders, innovators, policymakers, and influential figures from across business, government, academia, and the global diaspora.Alongside prominent representatives from leading universities, multinational organisations, private enterprise, investment agencies, diplomatic missions, and government institutions, their presence elevated the Forum into a rare and powerful global assembly where influence, wealth, innovation, and leadership converged in service of national purpose, while simultaneously bridging the gap between local and international communities for the collective advancement of Cyprus.Strategic National Support and World-Class SponsorshipThe 2026 edition was strengthened by the exceptional support of Cyprus’ leading institutional pillars, including the Research and Innovation Foundation, Invest Cyprus, Minds in Cyprus, the Cyprus Chamber of Commerce and Industry, University of Cyprus, as well as prestigious local and international corporations, private investment groups, leading strategic organisations committed to Cyprus’ future, and a range of supportive private entities.These partnerships underscored a unified national commitment to driving Cyprus forward as an emerging European and global innovation hub.Notably, the Research and Innovation Foundation’s powerful presence highlighted Cyprus as a strategic EU gateway for technology, research commercialisation, startup funding, and international expansion.Read More: The Cyprus Diaspora Forum welcomes the Research and Innovation Foundation (RIF) as a Main Sponsor of the 2026 ForumMajor Business Development, MOU Signings, and New Economic OpportunitiesOne of the Forum’s most significant outcomes was the facilitation of Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) and strategic collaborations that are expected to generate tangible new business opportunities for Cyprus across sectors.These agreements represent not only symbolic diplomatic achievements but also practical pathways for foreign direct investment, startup acceleration, cross-border partnerships, trade expansion, wealth migration, technology transfer, and diaspora-led enterprise development. The Forum served as a catalyst for action—transforming dialogue into tangible economic opportunity and measurable impact.Dynamic Programme: From VIP Opening to Strategic RoundtablesBeginning with an elegant and unforgettable VIP Opening Cocktail Reception in the outdoor gardens of the luxurious AMARA Hotel, guests were welcomed through a spectacular launch event that seamlessly blended luxury networking, cultural celebration, and world-class entertainment. The evening featured an exclusive fashion presentation by Michalis Pantelidis, alongside distinguished performances by the Cyprus Choral Association, critically acclaimed soprano Aliki Chrysochou, and singer-songwriter Evangelia, creating a refined and contemporary atmosphere that reflected the prestige of the occasion.Throughout the Forum’s expansive programme, delegates engaged in a dynamic series of high-level keynote speeches, strategic investment panels, fintech and digital asset sessions, interactive workshops, startup launchpads, private investor roundtables, SME showcase presentations, family office and wealth migration sessions, research commercialisation opportunities, and sector-specific innovation programming. Together, these diverse offerings positioned the Forum as a premier platform for global collaboration, investment, and forward-thinking enterprise development.Standout initiatives included the RIF-Powered Session, where attendees explored funding programmes offered by the Research and Innovation Foundation, discovered opportunities for strategic collaboration between the diaspora and organisations in Cyprus, and gained insight from real-life success stories of companies and projects already benefiting from this support.The Cyprus Chamber of Commerce and Industry’s SME Showcase further highlighted the island’s entrepreneurial depth and economic promise, with six promising businesses presenting their ventures to investors and key stakeholders. Complementing this, the Cyprus Diaspora Forum Startup Launchpad provided a dynamic platform for five innovative startups to showcase their initiatives through engaging, fast-paced presentations, reinforcing Cyprus’ position as an emerging hub for entrepreneurship, innovation, and investment.Government PresenceThe Forum benefited from visible support from the Republic of Cyprus, reinforcing national recognition of the event’s strategic importance. Senior officials, policymakers, and institutional leaders contributed directly to discussions shaping Cyprus’ economic future, signalling clear governmental commitment to diaspora engagement, innovation policy, and international competitiveness.The Prestigious Cydia Awards 2026: A Grand Finale of Global Cypriot ExcellenceA standout moment of the Cyprus Diaspora Forum 2026 was the prestigious CYDIA Awards 2026, which honoured exceptional individuals whose achievements, leadership, and influence have elevated Cyprus on the global stage.Held in the presence of Her Excellency Irene Piki, Deputy Minister to the President of the Republic of Cyprus, representing H.E. President Nikos Christodoulides, alongside Ambassadors, High Commissioners, dignitaries, and foreign representatives, the awards ceremony served as a powerful celebration of global Cypriot excellence.The 2026 Diaspora Ambassador Lifetime Achievement Award was presented to Theo Paphitis, the renowned British Cypriot retail entrepreneur, television Dragon, and philanthropist.Among the evening’s other distinguished honours, the Diaspora Ambassador Award was awarded to Despina Panayiotou Theodosiou, Joint CEO of Tototheo Global and President of the Board of the Association of Cypriot Professionals in Greece. The Cyprus Chamber of Commerce and Industry Diaspora Entrepreneur Award was presented to Christos A. Poullaides, a prominent Bahrain-based construction industry leader with operations across the Middle East and Europe. The Diaspora Ambassador Legacy Award was awarded to Panos A. Panay, President of The Recording Academy, home of the Grammy Awards, while the Diaspora Ambassador Honorary Award was bestowed upon Demetrios Mallios, Founder and CEO of AEON Group and Greece’s TV Dragon, recognising his exceptional achievements, leadership, and enduring contribution to the global diaspora.The CYDIA Awards 2026 took place on Saturday 9 May 2026 at the prestigious Parklane Resort & Spa in Limassol, Cyprus, during an elegant gala dinner that delivered an extraordinary evening of celebration, culture, and world-class entertainment.A spectacular opening performance, choreographed by acclaimed choreographer Antigoni Tasouri, paid tribute to Cypriot culture and heritage through an innovative fusion of modern and traditional dance, inspired by the intricate artistry and historical significance of Lefkara lace. The visually stunning production set an exceptional tone for the evening and was met with widespread acclaim from attendees. The performance was narrated by Christos Gregoriades and featured music by renowned Cypriot composer Costas Cacoyannis.The gala’s entertainment programme continued with outstanding performances from Vienna-based soprano Chryso Makariou, Sofia Patsalides, the Amalgamation Choir, Alexandros Tsangarides, and Savvas Mouskos, culminating in a highly anticipated live concert by celebrated Greek Cypriot artists Stavros Konstantinou and Antri Karantoni.The Event was hosted by Emilia Papadopoulos and Dr. Yanna Darilis.Complete List of CYDIA Awards 2026 WinnersAdvocating CyprusEffie Athanassiou (Australia)‘Artemis Pouroulis’ Culture and Arts AwardEvi Pourgoura (United Kingdom)Contribution to SocietyLucy Loizou (United Kingdom)‘University of Cyprus’ Education AwardAndroulla Poutziouris (United Kingdom, Cyprus)Finance and CommerceDr. Constantinos Zamboglou (UAE)‘George Michael’ Entertainment AwardDaphne Alexander (United Kingdom)HealthDr. Eleni Toumarides (USA)Impact AwardDr. Maria Krambia-Kapardis (Australia, Cyprus)LiteratureSoulla Christodoulou (United Kingdom)Marketing and MediaRafaella Mehmet (UAE, Cyprus)Movement for ChangeCharalambos Toumazis (United Kingdom)Real EstateAnastasia Yianni (Russia, Cyprus)Social and PhilanthropyChris Christofi (Australia)SportsKyrenia Nautical Club (Cyprus)Startups and InnovationConnie Christofi (United Kingdom, Cyprus)Special HonoursDiaspora Ambassador AwardDespina Panayiotou Theodosiou (Greece)CCCI Diaspora Entrepreneur AwardChristos A. Poullaides (Bahrain)Diaspora Ambassador Legacy AwardPanos A. Panay (USA)Diaspora Honorary AwardDemetrios Mallios (USA, Greece)Diaspora Ambassador Lifetime Achievement AwardTheo Paphitis (United Kingdom)The CYDIA Awards 2026 represented far more than an awards ceremony—they stood as a defining global platform celebrating Cypriot excellence, unity, and leadership while inspiring future generations to continue shaping Cyprus’ international legacy.A Defining Moment for Cyprus’ Global FutureThe Cyprus Diaspora Forum 2026 was not simply an event—it was a national and international statement.It showcased:Cyprus as an investment destinationCyprus as a fintech and innovation hubCyprus as a global family office centreCyprus as a startup ecosystemCyprus as a cultural and diaspora powerhouseCyprus as a strategic bridge between Europe, MENA, the Gulf, India, Central Asia, and global marketsFor attendees, it was an unparalleled opportunity to witness the future of Cyprus being actively built.Looking ahead to 2027: New Partners WelcomedFollowing the overwhelming success of the 2026 Forum, organisers are now setting their sights on an even more ambitious Cyprus Diaspora Forum 2027, with plans to welcome an expanded network of strategic sponsors, international investors, government delegations, corporate leaders, universities, financial institutions, private family offices, legal firms, health and biotech leaders, startups, SMEs, real estate companies, and diaspora organisations, among many others.As its momentum continues to accelerate, the Cyprus Diaspora Forum is further solidifying its position as the foremost global platform connecting Cyprus with the international community—driving investment, innovation, entrepreneurship, healthcare advancement, legal and financial collaboration, and long-term strategic growth on a global scale. This article was written by Finance Magnates Staff at www.financemagnates.com.

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Phoenix Group Bets on Lyon to Anchor $8 Billion AI Push as BTC Mining Slump Deepens

Phoenix Group is pushing deeper into artificial intelligence after a 43% revenue slide in 2025, signing French developer DC Max to build an 18-megawatt AI data center in Lyon, the first European deployment in what the Abu Dhabi-listed firm says will scale to more than one gigawatt of capacity.Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)The Lyon facility is the inaugural site under what Phoenix is calling its European Data Center Platform, a partnership structured around DC Max's pipeline that the firms value at roughly $8 billion. Phoenix said it has acquired the land, secured permits and lined up grid access, with construction set to begin in July 2026 and handover scheduled for the fourth quarter of 2027 or the first quarter of 2028.The move follows a now-familiar playbook in the Bitcoin mining sector. Full-year revenue at Phoenix (ADX: PHX) fell to $117.7 million from $205.7 million the year before, while the firm reported a $271.7 million loss attributable to shareholders against a $167.4 million profit in 2024. Like Wall Street peers Core Scientific, Riot Platforms and Bitfarms, Phoenix is steering its power-hungry infrastructure toward AI tenants willing to pay several times more per megawatt than current coin economics support.From Mining Losses to AI SitesThe 2025 annual report Phoenix published last month showed the scale of the decline. Trading revenue dropped 69% year on year, hosting revenue fell 62% and self-mining revenue slipped 21%, dragging full-year revenue below $118 million. Earnings per share swung from a profit of $0.028 to a loss of $0.045, with unrealized fair value losses of $223.3 million on digital asset holdings driving most of the bottom-line damage.The pivot has been telegraphed in steps. Last summer, Phoenix unveiled a digital asset treasury holding Bitcoin and Solana, becoming the first ADX-listed company to formalize such a structure as an operational buffer against mining cash-flow volatility. Around the same time, it disclosed internal recruitment for AI divisions and began scouting sites for AI and high-performance computing capacity. The Lyon deal turns that scouting into the company's first hard commitment outside the Gulf.Co-founder and Group CEO Munaf Ali described the announcement as more than incremental, calling it "a genuine inflection point" for the firm. He added that "the 1GW ambition is not a ceiling; it is a starting point."Bitcoin Miners Crowd Into AI Real EstateThe repositioning across the listed mining sector has accelerated through 2025 and into 2026 as post-halving margin pressure squeezed coin economics. Analysts have estimated up to 20% of the industry's power capacity could be repurposed for AI and HPC by the end of 2027, with Goldman Sachs forecasting U.S. data center power demand to grow at a 15% compound annual rate through 2030.Nasdaq-listed Core Scientific recently secured a financing facility from Morgan Stanley of up to $1 billion to fund its conversion from crypto mining to high-density colocation. Riot Platforms appointed three new board members with data center and AI experience, including a former Meta executive. Bitfarms went further, renaming itself Keel Infrastructure and halting all new Bitcoin mining investment.The financial logic is straightforward. Bitcoin miners typically trade at 6 to 12 times EBITDA, while data center operators trade between 20 and 25 times. A clean operational pivot, with long-term tenant contracts replacing volatile coin revenue, can support a meaningful multiple re-rating over time.France Targets the Hyperscaler BacklogDemand for AI compute in Europe has run ahead of supply, with hyperscalers and large enterprises booking capacity years in advance. Traditional new-build timelines of 36 to 48 months leave most operators struggling to keep pace.Lyon offers several advantages for developers willing to move quickly. France's second-largest city has an industrial base, dense electrical infrastructure and land prices well below those around Paris, which has emerged as Europe's most contested data center market. DC Max also brings existing permits and grid agreements on some of its sites, which Phoenix said allows it to compress the typical timeline."The demand is there. The sites are there," DC Max Chief Executive Romain Fremont said in a statement, adding that the tie-up gives the French developer access to capital and operational depth that would have been difficult to assemble alone.A 1GW Ambition Meets Execution RiskThe Lyon site joins roughly 550 megawatts of capacity Phoenix already operates across the UAE, Oman, North America and Ethiopia, infrastructure originally built for Bitcoin mining and now being repositioned for AI and HPC workloads. The firm also holds a 13.9% stake in Bitzero, a data-center-focused company that listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange last year, while Ali himself has been buying shares to back the pivot strategy.DC Max, for its part, claims a roughly two-gigawatt portfolio and says it is backed by a group with more than €6 billion in investment experience. Phoenix Group debuted on the ADX at the end of 2023, and since then its share price has fallen 60% to the current level of AED 0.90. This article was written by Damian Chmiel at www.financemagnates.com.

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“Our Job Is to Educate, Not Dictate”: FM Singapore Summit 2026 Begins Sessions

The Finance Magnates Singapore Summit 2026 has opened at the Suntec Singapore Convention & Exhibition Centre after a networking launch held at Paulaner Brauhaus the previous evening. The event moved into its first full day of activity today (Wednesday), with the exhibition floor in Hall 405 active from 10:00 SGT.Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!).The exhibition area, which had been largely set up the day before, became a busy meeting point for delegates. Participants included retail brokers, institutional banks, and fintech companies.Exhibition Floor ActivityThe expo floor reflected several clear themes. One of the most visible was prop trading infrastructure. A large section of booths focused on tools and services supporting proprietary trading firms. This reflected ongoing changes in retail trading behaviour over the past year.Liquidity and execution providers also had a strong presence. Several tier-1 firms presented low-latency systems designed for fragmented Southeast Asian markets. The focus was on execution speed and regional connectivity.A third cluster centred on artificial intelligence. Booths working on AI-driven onboarding and automated risk systems attracted consistent foot traffic during the morning. These companies presented tools aimed at reducing manual processes in client management and compliance workflows.Market Professionals Share Trading Floor TalesThe “Trading Tales: Stories from The Floor” session featured experienced financial markets professionals reflecting on their careers across sales and trading environments.Speakers shared perspectives on the evolution of trading practices, moving from voice and ticket-based systems to screen-based execution. The discussion highlighted changes in Singapore’s FX market over time, along with regional characteristics that have shaped trading behaviour and career paths. The session also included personal accounts from trading floors, offering context on how market culture has developed in the region. Participants included Spencer Campbell, Director at SE Asia Consulting, George Ng, Managing Director at FP Energy, and Jonathan Fine of Finance Magnates Group.Tokenised Finance Faces Adoption and RegulationThe “The Future of Finance Will be Tokenised” session examined the development of tokenised assets and the infrastructure required to support broader adoption across both retail and institutional markets. Speakers discussed how tokenisation is being applied across asset classes, including bonds and debt instruments, while noting that adoption challenges vary between institutional and retail use cases.The discussion focused on core infrastructure questions around ownership, settlement, and interoperability, as well as the operational and compliance considerations for brokers offering tokenised products. Regulatory positioning across APAC was also addressed, particularly in relation to tokenised securities frameworks. Participants included David Jenkins, Chief Product & Technology Officer at Openmarkets Group, Christopher Forbes, Head of Asia and Middle East at CMC Markets, Justin Christopher, Head of Asia at Calastone, Amos Song, Chief Business Officer at DigiFT, and Leeny Luong, Head of APAC at Partisia Foundation.Retail Brokers Eye Prediction Market Growth The “Outrageous Predictions? Retail Brokers & Event Contracts” session examined the growing interest in prediction markets and event-based trading products across retail brokerage platforms.Speakers discussed the potential for “super-cycle” growth in event contracts, alongside questions around regulation and product structure as brokers consider integrating instruments that resemble betting-style markets. The discussion focused on how established exchanges, retail brokers, and prediction platform providers are approaching collaboration and product development. It also addressed expected volume growth in 2026 and the expansion of new contract categories tied to political, economic, and cultural events. Participants included Jakub Roz, CEO of For Traders, Leon Okun, Founder and CEO of Plaee, Professor Edward Tay of National University of Singapore, and Jorden Tan, Subcommittee Lead at ACCESS Singapore.Thailand and Vietnam Shape Broker ExpansionThe “Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam” session examined the operational realities of building brokerage businesses in two of Southeast Asia’s fast-developing trading markets.Speakers discussed how Bangkok is emerging as a regional hub for broker expansion into CLMV markets, while Vietnam’s rising trading volumes are increasingly shaping regional strategy discussions at headquarters level. The panel focused on the practical requirements for market entry, including entity structures, regulatory timelines, and common setup challenges faced by first-time operators. It also covered how offshore broker models interact with domestic restrictions in both jurisdictions, along with differences in client onboarding, distribution, and talent acquisition. The discussion highlighted that language, culture, and acquisition channels in both markets differ significantly from broader APAC assumptions. Participants included Won Tien Ching, CEO of ACCM, Janis Baltalksnis, Regional Director Thailand & Laos at Versus Trade, and Jonathan Fine of Finance Magnates Group.Precious Metals Rally Tests Trading InfrastructureThe “Precious Insights: APAC’s Bullion Market amid Record Volatility” session examined how the recent rally in precious metals is affecting market structure, pricing dynamics, and trading behaviour across the Asia-Pacific region. Speakers discussed how volatility in gold and other bullion assets is influencing hedging strategies among brokers and liquidity providers, as well as increasing interest from regional banks in physical gold distribution.The discussion also highlighted Southeast Asia’s growing retail demand for bullion, driven by both central bank accumulation and store-of-value preferences. Panelists further examined Singapore’s role as a regional bullion hub, alongside operational challenges such as kilogram-based pricing, local delivery systems, and the integration of CFD and physical bullion markets. Participants included Judy Goh, Managing Director for APAC at Integral, John Murillo, Chief Business Officer at B2Broker, Alex Ho of CMC Markets, Tan Kway Guan, Central Banks and Public Policy Lead at World Gold Council, and Alexander Fergusson, CEO of Woodside.Trust and Liquidity Shape Trading ConditionsThe “License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil” session examined liquidity conditions across Asian markets and the structural factors shaping execution during periods of volatility. The discussion focused on regional market characteristics, including connectivity, asset preferences, and differences in liquidity provision compared with other global regions. Speakers also addressed diversification strategies versus concentration in single assets, along with the role of trust in liquidity relationships as trading becomes more automated.The panel brought together participants from across the liquidity chain, including Mohammad Isbeer, Group Chief Institutional Officer at Equiti Capital, Alex Mackinnon, CEO Asia at Finalto, Stavros Economides, Chief Operations Officer at Match-Prime Liquidity, Yoann Turpin, Co-founder of Wintermute, Grace Chan, Executive Director at Phillip Nova, and Vinay Trivedi, CEO of SGX CurrencyNode.Premium Clients Drive Broker Revenue StrategiesThe “Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want” session focused on the role of high-net-worth traders in retail brokerage revenues and how firms across Asia are building and managing premium client segments.Speakers discussed how brokers define premium clients beyond deposit size, placing emphasis on engagement, trading activity, and long-term value. The panel also examined which services and product features help build trust and improve client retention, while remaining scalable from a cost and operations perspective. Participants included Desmond Leong, CEO of Returning.AI, Shane Syed, Strategic Sales Advisor and Co-Founder at USAM Group and PitchFintech, Oriano Lizza of CMC Markets, Q Tan Chuen Kiat of Orient Futures Singapore, Qin Lang of eToro, and Jaycee Lai of IG Group.Retail Trading Trends Shape Market PlatformsThe “Key Trends Shaping Modern Trading Behavior” session focused on how trading activity and user expectations are changing across global markets. The discussion examined shifts in retail trader behaviour, including increased demand for faster execution, more transparent pricing, and improved access to data and analytics. Speakers also considered how platform providers are adapting product design and distribution strategies to match these expectations. The panel highlighted the role of social and data-driven trading environments in shaping decision-making processes. Participants included Edmund Lee, Growth Manager (Singapore) at TradingView, and Kenny Wan Yaoming, Head of Sales at Penguin Securities.Digital Asset Adoption Faces Market PressureThe “Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond” session focused on how institutional investors and market infrastructure firms are approaching digital assets during an extended market downturn.Speakers discussed the impact of lower crypto asset prices on adoption strategies, capital allocation, and operational readiness across the region. The discussion also examined gaps in custody, connectivity, and settlement infrastructure that continue to affect institutional participation in Asia-Pacific markets.Panelists reviewed how stablecoins, tokenisation, and broader on-chain market infrastructure are developing despite cautious investor sentiment. The session featured David Jenkins, Chief Product & Technology Officer at Openmarkets Group, Chris Knight, Managing Director at LMAX Digital, Andrew Leelarthaepin, Head of Business Product at Maybank Investment Banking Group, Luke Boland, Head of Fintech at Standard Chartered, Karl Mohan, EVP of Financial Services at Crypto.com, and Zann Kwan, Managing Partner and Chief Investment Officer at REVO.Panel Discusses Funding and Liquidity StrategiesThe “Funding & Exit in Singapore from Pre-Seed to Liquidity” session examined Singapore’s role in capital formation and exit planning for startups and high-growth firms.Speakers discussed the breadth of the city-state’s investment ecosystem, including sovereign-backed capital, venture funding, family offices, and public market access through the Singapore Exchange. The discussion also covered alternative exit channels such as private secondary markets, strategic acquisitions, and digital marketplace exits. Panelists focused on how founders and investors can preserve exit flexibility throughout different growth stages. The session was held in partnership with 8 Circle and featured speakers including Vidushan Premathiratne of 8 Circle and Techt Labs, Luca Zorzino of Illuminate Financial, Zongxi Sia of Cocoon Capital, and Thom Abbott of London Stock Exchange.Brokers Debate AI Adoption and RiskThe “AI Getting Real for Brokers” session focused on how brokerage firms are moving beyond experimental use of artificial intelligence and treating AI tools as part of their core business infrastructure.Speakers from brokerage firms, AI providers, and trading technology companies discussed how large language models are affecting client acquisition, operational efficiency, and risk management. Panelists also examined how institutional adoption of AI is raising expectations among retail clients. Another major topic was liability and accountability when AI-generated recommendations contribute to trading losses. The discussion featured participants including Vince De Castro of Acuity Trading, Adam Philips of FXTRADING.com, Carney Mak of FXHB Asset Management, Tuvshin Tug of Pixel Nexus Global, Thomas Kareklas of BridgeWise, and Yaki Razmovich of eToro. This article was written by Tareq Sikder at www.financemagnates.com.

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Pepperstone, Capital.com, and Trade Nation Establish Rare Collective Voice in Bahamas

A group of forex and CFD brokers has launched a new industry body in the Bahamas, aiming to improve coordination among firms and strengthen engagement with regulators in a growing offshore market.Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)Trying to “Institutionalise” the Bahamas?The Bahamas Institute of Forex and CFD Issuers (BIFCI) has been established by Pepperstone, Capital.com, and Trade Nation. According to Tamas Szabo, the Group CEO of Pepperstone, the initiative has been under development since April 2023 and is now operational.Szabo said that the idea emerged from shared challenges across licensed firms in the jurisdiction. These include regulatory expectations, capital requirements, and market conduct standards.“We have been working on developing this Bahamas industry body www.bifci.com since April 2023 and now it has finally come to fruition. Looking forward to working with other industry participants and if you are already in the Bahamas or looking at the Bahamas as a jurisdiction of choice please feel free to reach out.”The latest development can be seen as a case of three onshore‑regulated heavyweights trying to “institutionalise” the Bahamas. Pepperstone, Capital.com and Trade Nation already answer to the FCA, ASIC and CySEC, yet they’re now importing that governance mindset offshore by creating a formal trade body around their SCB‑licensed entities.There are strong industry bodies in big hubs, for example, trade associations and working groups in the UK, EU and Australia that interface with the FCA, ESMA or ASIC. However, those are onshore markets where the political economy has long supported such structures.IC Markets, FxPro and Eightcap MissingAlthough BIFCI has opened membership to all licensed brokers, the most interesting part is who is missing. Some of the largest SCB‑licensed brokers in the Bahamas, including IC Markets, FxPro, Eightcap, ActivTrades and Infinox, are not in the founding trio. This raises questions about whether they declined to join or were never approached.“All these firms were invited and I have spoken with all of them in quite a bit of detail. No one has declined and many of them are keen and we have been on a number of meetings together. I just think it is going to take a bit of time to formally expand the membership base. But informally, there are a lot more firms involved,” Szabo exclusively told Finance Magnates.“One thing I think is important to make clear is that we are not excluding anyone from joining, it’s about building a better and stronger base in the Bahamas which benefits everyone, we really do put any competitive pressures aside.”Continue reading: Pepperstone UK Profit Jumps 81% to £18 Million in FY25Generally, the FX and CFD industry in the Bahamas has shifted from a light‑touch offshore hub to a costlier but more structured jurisdiction, with tighter rules and a growing cluster of internationally regulated brokers. The Securities Commission of The Bahamas oversees forex and CFD brokers under a regime that has tightened significantly since 2020. The Securities Industry (Contracts For Differences) Rules 2020, which came into force in May 2021, introduced leverage caps of up to 200:1 for retail, a ban on binary options, negative balance protection and stricter marketing limits, including curbs on cold calling and aggressive acquisition tactics.Unusual for Offshore JurisdictionsUnlike most offshore centres, where brokers typically operate independently under local rules, this move brings together three multi‑jurisdiction brokers to create a formal, broker‑led association, making the development a notable outlier among rival offshore hubs.This structure gives Bahamas‑licensed brokers a collective platform that does not really exist in comparable jurisdictions such as Seychelles, Belize or Vanuatu, where regulators and broad business chambers usually dominate the conversation rather than product‑specific industry bodies.BIFCI is a small structural change with a big signal: three multi‑licensed brokers are trying to give an offshore booking center onshore‑style industry plumbing, which suggests that “offshore” is being slowly institutionalized rather than quietly ring‑fenced. What to watch now is whether the Securities Commission of The Bahamas chooses to formally recognize or actively use the Institute as a consultative counterparty, whether large absentees such as IC Markets and FxPro decide to join, and whether other booking hubs like Seychelles or Vanuatu feel compelled to copy the trade‑body model. This article was written by Jared Kirui at www.financemagnates.com.

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WxTrade Launches Its First Mobile Trading App for Brokerages

A unified Flutter codebase, runtime brand customization, and ten integrated feature modules will deliver a full mobile brokerage operation under each broker's own identity.WxTrade (https://www.wxtrade.com/), a brokerage technology provider serving operators across Asia-Pacific and expanding markets, is excited to announce that it will soon offer the WxTrade Mobile App, its first native mobile trading application built for brokerages and their clients. This forthcoming release will mark WxTrade's entry into mobile within its broader brokerage technology stack.The app will run on a single Flutter codebase for iOS and Android, delivered as a fully branded, white-label product that consolidates trading, account management, funding, notifications, and client support into one seamless experience.The Trader Experience Problem Brokers FaceRetail traders increasingly judge brokerages by their mobile app quality, yet generic white-label apps often cause:Chart lag and sluggishness during volatile markets, hurting trader responsivenessSlow order execution and delayed quotes, reducing confidence and execution qualityWeak authentication and session security, raising concerns as mobile dominates tradingFragmented funding and account management, forcing clients to external portalsGeneric, unbranded interfaces that fail to build trust or differentiate brokersThese issues fragment client experience and impact deposit conversion, retention, and lifetime value - core brokerage economics.Why Brokers Need a Custom-Built App on a Unified SaaS PlatformOff-the-shelf mobile shells force brokers to choose between limited customization or costly bespoke builds with long timelines.The WxTrade Mobile App aims to resolve this trade-off with runtime brand customization — logos, colors, icons, and assets will load dynamically, allowing brokers to deploy under their own brand and update assets without full rebuilds.Under the hood, the app is engineered for trader performance:Clean Architecture with Riverpod state managementFlutter Isolates for heavy computation, keeping UI responsiveExponential backoff reconnection for unstable networksA hybrid WebSocket and API data model for real-time quotes and ordersThe result will be a mobile experience brokers can confidently brand.Ten Modules Across Four Capability AreasThe planned v1.0 release will feature ten modules across four areas, unified under a modular architecture for operational efficiency and scalability:1. Full Trading CapabilityAdvanced mobile chartsFull Buy/Sell order ticket with granular risk settings (spreads, leverage, swaps, margin rules)Real-time quotes via hybrid data pipelinePersonal watchlist and symbol browserFive-tab navigation: Home, Market, Trade, Positions, ProfileSupports Forex, commodities, stocks, indices, cryptocurrencies2. Unified Account & Fund ManagementNative account creation and leverage configurationMulti-account switchingIn-app deposits and withdrawals via integrated payment gatewaysFull transaction history without external redirectsFinance module integrates with trading and risk management for real-time P&L and reconciliationEntity formation support guiding new brokerages through licensing pathways3. Real-Time Alerts & Client SupportPush notifications for trade executions, margin events, promotions, price alertsIn-app notification centerIntegrated support: live chat, FAQ, ticket submissionTimely, personalized notifications and educational content boost engagement and retention4. Authentication & Profile ControlJWT-based session management, PIN, biometric login (Face ID, Touch ID, Android biometrics)Profile module for KYC document upload, security preferences, notification controlsBuilt-in compliance with KYC and AML regulations, generating audit-ready records to ease regulatory processes, especially in Asia-PacificSecure user data management supporting compliance and personalized outreach with enterprise-grade securityUnified data model ensures consistent identity and seamless operationDeployment and App Store ConsiderationsThe WxTrade Mobile App will undergo standard Apple App Store and Google Play Store approvals, which brokers should factor into launch planning. Runtime customization will enable ongoing brand and configuration updates without full rebuilds, though native updates will remain subject to store reviews.Mobile-first solutions are essential in today’s competitive market, and WxTrade’s app will support rapid deployment and continuous updates.Positioning Within the Broker Technology MarketThe WxTrade Mobile App is designed to deliver a full mobile brokerage operation, trading, funding, account management, support, and security — branded for each broker on iOS and Android from a unified codebase.The WxTrade platform supports multiple trading platforms simultaneously, letting brokers offer clients a choice of trading environments tailored to preferences. This multi-platform capability enhances user satisfaction and simplifies account and risk management by consolidating operations into a single system.This announcement fills a persistent market gap: a mobile-first, multi-account, runtime-customizable trading app integrated as part of a unified brokerage stack, not a third-party bolt-on.About WxTradeWxTrade is a B2B SaaS provider delivering a unified brokerage ecosystem for financial firms. Its infrastructure supports FX and CFD brokerages with trading platforms, CRM, client portals, risk management, and mobile apps. Continuous innovation keeps WxTrade at the forefront of brokerage technology.WxTrade’s partner network expands its ecosystem and enables seamless third-party integrations. The platform supports deployment under each brokerage’s brand with customization and rapid onboarding.Serving brokers and proprietary trading firms across Asia-Pacific and beyond, WxTrade provides the infrastructure to launch, operate, and scale modern brokerages. More details at wxtrade.com. This article was written by FM Contributors at www.financemagnates.com.

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FM Singapore Summit 2026 Kicks Off Three-Day Agenda with Networking Session

Retail brokers, liquidity providers, fintech firms and institutional trading groups are gathering in Singapore today as the FM Singapore Summit begins its 2026 edition.Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!).The opening day includes networking events alongside the conference programme. These meetings take place ahead of the scheduled panels and discussions across the three-day event, with an opening gathering being held at Paulaner Brauhaus Singapore.Finance Magnates Opens Singapore Trading SummitThe event, officially titled the FM Singapore Summit 2026, is being held from 12–14 May 2026 at the Suntec Singapore Convention & Exhibition Centre.The summit brings together participants from across the Asia-Pacific brokerage and financial trading sector, including brokers, banks, hedge funds, asset managers, payment companies and infrastructure providers.@financemagnates FM Singapore Summit 2026, 12–14 May in Singapore.Online registrations are now closed - but you can still register on-site at Suntec Singapore and join us for FM Singapore Summit 2026! ?Kick things off at the Opening Networking #Event at Paulaner Brauhaus… pic.twitter.com/IyRGt0u3wQ— Market Recap (@forexforum) May 12, 2026Singapore Summit Focuses on Market StructureThe agenda focuses on structural changes shaping the region’s markets. Discussions are expected around liquidity distribution, brokerage growth strategies, regulatory developments across APAC, and the role of digital assets and tokenisation in institutional finance.Artificial intelligence is also expected to feature in discussions around execution efficiency, client onboarding and trading infrastructure automation.The event is part of a global conference series organised by Finance Magnates, which hosts industry gatherings across multiple markets.The Singapore edition continues the series’ focus on financial market activity and industry participation across the Asia-Pacific region. This article was written by Tareq Sikder at www.financemagnates.com.

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Ant International Steps Up AI Push for SMEs and Emerging Markets

Ant International has tied management performance reviews to sustainability metrics for the first time, the company said yesterday (Monday) as it published its second annual sustainability report alongside fresh disclosures on its small-business reach and artificial intelligence push.The report broke out reach across the firm's main services. Alipay+ and Antom, under Global Payment pillars, now connect 2 billion user accounts globally to over 150 million merchants. This ecosystem of interoperability links up more than 10 national QR systems and supports 300+ payment methods in over 220 markets, including all card schemes, and 50 digital wallets, bank apps and BNPL apps, the company said. Ant International also noted that its Global Account and Embedded Finance services - WorldFirst and Bettr, support over 1.6 million SMEs, and provide credit access to about 30 million micro- and small-sized businesses and underserved users.Executive Pay Linked to Sustainability TargetsChairman Eric Jing said the firm has folded sustainability outcomes into the framework used to evaluate management's performance, putting them alongside revenue growth and operational efficiency."Accountability must be structural, not aspirational," Jing said in the report.The disclosure goes further than most global payments rivals on linking executive pay to ESG outcomes, including Wise, which has built its B2B platform around SME and freelancer clients but has not made similar pay-link commitments.CEO Peng Yang and President Douglas Feagin said in a joint statement that "doing great by doing good should be our strategic differentiator."AI Push Centers on Small Business ToolsA large portion of the report is given over to artificial intelligence products. Antom released an updated version of its Copilot tool to automate payment integration, onboarding and chargeback work, and launched an agentic payment product that the firm says lets AI agents initiate card and alternative-method transactions through a mandate model.Other launches include the GenAI Cockpit, a FinAI-as-a-Service platform that Ant International said has been adopted by Malaysia's TNG eWallet and Pakistan's easypaisa.According to the company, its open-sourced AI foreign exchange tool delivers forecasts with up to 93% accuracy across volatile currency pairs.EPOS360, an AI-powered platform covering finance and business operations for micro-merchants, has been rolled out in Southeast Asia, the firm said.Compliance Build-OutAnt International said it spent 2025 building out compliance and security infrastructure, citing a transformer model called SHIELD that the firm says has 7 billion parameters and identifies high-risk transactions with more than 95% precision. The tool also lifts payment success rates by up to 13.5%. Singapore's Personal Data Protection Commission cited Alipay+'s Privacy Enhancing Technology program in its practical guidance for industry, Ant International noted.The firm has also been using digital platforms to drive public participation in sustainability projects. AlipayHK, which runs a digital donation portal that lets users contribute to relief efforts, channeled HK$200 million from 450,000 users in three days after a Tai Po fire, the report said.Alipay+ began supporting New York Liberty, the WNBA champion team on Liberty Sneaker Drives for underprivileged groups, Math Hoops project to build youth skills, and Threes for Trees project in NYC and Brooklyn. This article was written by FM Contributors at www.financemagnates.com.

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What Is the CLARITY Act? The US Crypto Bill That Could Reshape Digital Asset Regulation This  Week

With the Senate Banking Committee releasing a new 309-page draft of the CLARITY Act this week ahead of Thursday’s markup, now is the time to break down what the bill would actually do. What CLARITY Actually Is The CLARITY Act (H.R. 3633) is a US crypto market structure bill designed to create clearer federal rules for digital assets and resolve years of conflict between the SEC and the CFTC over who regulates the industry. Passed by the House in 2025, the bill would formally divide oversight between securities regulators and commodity regulators, ending much of the legal uncertainty that has shaped the US crypto market for years. The SEC/CFTC Jurisdictional Split Right now, two regulators - the SEC and the CFTC - both claim authority over crypto, and nobody has been sure which rules apply to which assets. For years, the two agencies have taken overlapping positions on digital assets, with the SEC arguing that many tokens function as securities while the CFTC has pushed for a larger role overseeing commodity-style crypto markets. In practice, the overlap often left exchanges and trading platforms facing competing interpretations and potentially duplicative compliance obligations. The CLARITY Act is designed to formally divide responsibilities between the two agencies, giving the SEC oversight of digital asset securities while expanding the CFTC's authority over digital commodity spot markets. The bill also requires the two agencies to jointly define key terms, determine how mixed platforms should be regulated, and establish rules for delisting assets. Digital Commodity vs. Security: Where the Line Gets Drawn In practice, the classification question comes down largely to how a token derives its value. Under §103 of the bill, a digital commodity is a digital asset whose value is "intrinsically linked" to the use of the blockchain to which it relates. If a token instead depends mainly on the efforts of a central team - the model covered by §201, which defines investment contract assets - it is more likely to be treated as a security. A project does not become a digital commodity simply by calling itself decentralised. The bill introduces a "maturity" test designed to measure how much control the founding team still has over the network. To qualify for the CFTC framework, no insider group can control more than 20% of voting power or hold more than 20% of the token supply. For older blockchains that already existed before the bill, at least half of all tokens must be held outside the founding team. The bill also allows crypto projects to raise money under securities rules without automatically classifying their tokens as securities forever. In practice, this means a project could initially sell tokens to investors under SEC oversight, while later allowing those same tokens to qualify as digital commodities if the network becomes sufficiently decentralised. Which Companies Are Directly Affected by the CLARITY Act The bill mainly targets the companies that sit between crypto users and the market: exchanges, brokers, trading platforms, and stablecoin firms. Crypto trading platforms such as Coinbase and Kraken would have to register with the CFTC as digital commodity exchanges and follow new rules around customer asset protection, market surveillance, reporting, and anti-money-laundering controls. Futures commission merchants (FCMs) and designated contract markets (DCMs) - the futures-focused firms already regulated by the CFTC - would also be brought into the updated digital commodity framework under the bill's Commodity Exchange Act amendments. For alternative trading systems (ATSs), the bill takes a lighter approach: under §304, SEC-registered ATSs may trade digital commodities upon notification to the CFTC rather than full dual registration, provided oversight across the two agencies remains consistent. Broker-dealers, custodians, and ETF issuers could find it easier to expand crypto-related products under a clearer regulatory framework. The bill focuses mainly on centralised intermediaries rather than ordinary wallet users, blockchain validators, or many open-source software developers, which are largely carved out of the framework. What Changes for Stablecoin Issuers The CLARITY Act will define how stablecoins fit into the broader crypto market structure, affecting operations of stablecoin issuers such as Circle, Tether, and Paxos. The bill largely leaves stablecoin issuance rules to the separate GENIUS Act enacted in 2025. CLARITY instead focuses on how stablecoins are traded and used across regulated crypto platforms. One of the biggest debates around the bill involves yield-bearing stablecoins that pay users interest simply for holding a token. On May 1, 2026, Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks proposed a compromise that would restrict crypto firms from offering returns that function too much like traditional bank deposits. In practice, that could force stablecoin companies to rethink some business models built around passive yield products. Instead of paying users simply for holding a stablecoin, firms may need to tie rewards more closely to trading activity, liquidity provision, or other on-chain services. Coinbase and other crypto firms have also pushed back against parts of the proposed stablecoin framework, particularly around restrictions tied to yield-bearing products and reserve requirements. We submitted our response to the @USOCC’s proposed rules for permitted payment stablecoin issuers (PPSIs). We appreciate the work that the Administration is doing to ensure that GENIUS stablecoins gain broad adoption, and the US leads in digital innovation. To that end, we made… pic.twitter.com/ho8qJkQ9o8— Faryar Shirzad ?️ (@faryarshirzad) May 6, 2026Where It Sits in the Legislative Pipeline The CLARITY Act still faces several major hurdles before it can become law. The immediate question is not a final Senate vote, but whether the bill can first advance through committee markup. Despite the remaining hurdles, some lawmakers argue momentum is building. Senator Cynthia Lummis described the latest compromise language on stablecoin yield as "the culmination of months of hard work," adding that lawmakers were "closer than ever to getting the CLARITY Act across the finish line." This finalized, bipartisan text is the culmination of months of hard work to deliver a compromise on yield we can all live with. We are closer than ever to getting the Clarity Act across the finish line. https://t.co/8vF7tzpxpy— Senator Cynthia Lummis (@SenLummis) May 4, 2026Supporters of the bill argue that clearer market structure rules are necessary to keep crypto activity inside the United States rather than pushing it offshore. Faryar Shirzad, chief policy officer at Coinbase, described the planned Senate markup as a "big step forward," adding that "clear market structure rules are essential for protecting consumers, supporting innovation, and ensuring this technology develops in the United States rather than offshore." Big step forward. Appreciate @SenatorTimScott and the Senate Banking Committee moving toward markup of the CLARITY Act on May 14. Clear market structure rules are essential for protecting consumers, supporting innovation, and ensuring this technology develops in the United… pic.twitter.com/ngqCOZmJZi— Faryar Shirzad ?️ (@faryarshirzad) May 8, 2026Here is where it actually stands as of May 12, 2026:House: Passed 294-134 in July 2025.Senate Banking Committee: Released a new 309-page draft on May 12, 2026. Committee members have until close of business May 13 to file amendments, with a markup scheduled for Thursday, May 14.Senate Agriculture Committee: Passed its own related bill, the Digital Commodity Intermediaries Act, out of committee on January 29, 2026.Reconciliation: The two Senate committee versions must be merged, then that merged bill must pass the full Senate with a 60-vote threshold.House re-vote: Any Senate-approved text that differs from H.R. 3633 must go back to the House.Earlier versions of the Senate draft also faced criticism from Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, particularly around stablecoin rewards and SEC authority, although he later welcomed compromise talks on the legislation. We agree. Thank you @SecScottBessent for saying it. It's time to pass the Clarity Act.Grateful for all the bipartisan work among Senators and staff over the past several months to make this a strong bill. https://t.co/jHoZ1bfLVZ pic.twitter.com/YBKebDkq8B— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) April 10, 2026 What the CLARITY Act Would Not Do The CLARITY Act would still leave several major areas of crypto regulation unresolved. It would not determine how digital assets are taxed. Even if a token qualifies as a digital commodity under the bill, the IRS could still apply separate tax rules. The bill also does not directly regulate most decentralised finance (DeFi) protocols, particularly those operating without centralised custodians or issuers. It would not replace existing state-level crypto licensing rules, meaning companies could still face overlapping federal and state requirements. The SEC could also continue pursuing enforcement cases involving conduct that took place before the law's effective date, or against assets that continue to be treated as securities. NFTs and digital collectibles are largely outside the bill's focus and are excluded from the digital commodity definition. The bill also includes a separate provision preventing the Federal Reserve from issuing or testing a central bank digital currency (CBDC), although that is not central to the broader market structure framework. FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)Does this mean Bitcoin and Ether are officially commodities?Not yet. The bill creates a process for determining which assets qualify as digital commodities under the §103 criteria, but regulators would still need to finalize the rules. Bitcoin would very likely meet the maturity thresholds - no single group controls 20% of voting power or supply. Ether's status remains more debated. When is the actual vote?There is no confirmed Senate floor vote yet. The next major step is a Senate Banking Committee markup, which had been targeted for May 2026 but was not officially scheduled at publication time. Does CLARITY replace the need to register with the SEC?Only partly. Some crypto trading activity would move under CFTC oversight, while token fundraising could still fall under SEC rules. What happens if the bill fails?The current system would remain in place: overlapping oversight, state-level licensing, and regulation through enforcement actions. Does this affect crypto held in personal wallets?Not directly. The bill largely protects self-custody and peer-to-peer transfers. What is the connection to the GENIUS Act?GENIUS focuses on stablecoin issuance parameters, including reserves, licensing, redemption rights. CLARITY focuses on how digital assets, including stablecoins, trade across the broader crypto market. The two bills are designed to interlock, but the stablecoin yield question has been the main source of friction between them. This article was written by Tanya Chepkova at www.financemagnates.com.

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Why Is Silver Rising Today? Inverted Head and Shoulders Pattern Activates $120 ATH Price Target

Silver traded at $84 per ounce on Tuesday, May 12, 2026, pulling back 2% after testing $87 intraday following Monday's 7.3% one-day surge, the metal's largest single-session gain since February 20. Monday's close at $85.485 per ounce on COMEX marked the highest settlement since March 10, capping five consecutive winning sessions that lifted XAG/USD more than 18% from early-May lows. The metal is now sitting at its first two-month high, with hedge fund demand, a softer dollar, and a shift away from Indian gold buying as the immediate catalysts.Follow me on X for real-time silver and metals analysis: @ChmielDkWhy Silver Is Rising Today? Five Sessions, +18%, $87 IntradayThree independent forces converged on silver this week. Monday's break above the early-April highs near $80 attracted systematic flows that had been waiting on the sidelines through six weeks of consolidation. John Caruso of RJO Futures framed the move as a rotation into growth metals from fear metals, writing in a Monday client note that "silver has a foot in both camps."The hedge fund bid is the second leg. Ryan McKay, senior commodity strategist at TD Securities, attributed the rally to "rising interest from hedge funds and other leveraged investors" that had been sidelined through the consolidation, with trend followers piling in once the $80 ceiling cracked.Silver's six-week range between $70 and $80 had pushed positioning to multi-month lows by late April, leaving room for a one-way move once technical buyers re-engaged.The third leg is geopolitical. President Donald Trump rejected Iran's latest peace proposal as "a piece of garbage" on Monday, killing the prospect of a near-term Strait of Hormuz reopening and keeping Brent above $115 per barrel. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi separately asked citizens to pause gold purchases for a year to defend the rupee, a move that could redirect retail flow toward silver in one of the world's largest precious metals consumer markets.The drivers behind Monday's $87 print stacked like this:Technical breakout above the early-April $80 ceiling triggered systematic buyingHedge fund re-entry after six weeks of cleared positioning, per TD SecuritiesIran peace talks collapsing following Trump's rejection of Tehran's proposalModi's anti-gold appeal rotating Indian retail demand toward silverBrent above $115 keeping the inflation-hedge bid intactSilver Technical Analysis: Inverted Head and Shoulders ActivatesIn more than 15 years charting precious metals as a senior analyst at FinanceMagnates.com, the cleanest silver setups I have seen come after multi-week consolidations resolve in the direction of the prior trend, and Monday's session looks like one of them. My chart shows silver breaking out of the consolidation zone that had bracketed price action since the March crash, with the lower boundary anchored at $64-$66 on the 200-day exponential moving average and the upper boundary defined by the 50 EMA near $77 plus the early-April highs just above $80.The breakout confirms the path of least resistance is now appreciation, not a retest of the $54 October 2025 historical highs that would have served as the next major support below the range. The first measured target for bulls is the end-February peak just shy of $94 per ounce, which capped every relief rally during the March-April correction. A clean break above $94 followed by a successful retest from above as new support, the polarity-exchange logic that defines most clean breakouts, opens the path to $117-$120 per ounce, the zone of the January 26-30 all-time highs.The setup is reinforced by a slightly skewed inverted head-and-shoulders pattern drawn on the corrective phase since February. The left shoulder formed in early February, the head printed at the mid-March $72 crash low, and the right shoulder is developing right now in early May. The neckline I have drawn in green runs across the February and April highs near $80-$82, and Monday's session delivered the first sustained close above it in the cycle. The pattern projects a measured move back toward the prior all-time high.DM BOŚ analyst Marek Rogalski called silver "turbo-gold" in my April 8 analysis, and the label fit Monday's tape. Silver's 7.3% gain against gold's flat session marked one of the widest positive divergences of 2026 and pushed the gold-silver ratio below 56 from a March peak above 65.Key levels on my XAG/USD chart:Silver Price Predictions 2026: From $79.50 to $309The institutional forecast range for silver in 2026 is the widest of any major liquid asset, and every name on the table has been forced to revise at least once since January. The Reuters analyst poll consensus sits at $79.50 per ounce as the 2026 average, a level silver has now traded above for most of the year. As my April COMEX deep-dive detailed, the same poll projected just $50 in October 2025, showing how fast this market has repriced.JPMorgan and UBS anchor the conservative end at $81 average and $85 year-end respectively. Both forecasts now look stale against current price action, with my $94 first target already exceeding JPMorgan's Q4 high. Commerzbank's $90 year-end call is closer to where the metal is trading, but still treats $90 as a destination rather than a station on the way higher.The mid-range bullish camp is led by Citigroup at $110 for the second half of 2026 and TD Securities at a $118 year-high. Citi's call, first detailed in my January coverage when the bank labeled silver "gold on steroids," lines up with my upper scenario if the COMEX physical squeeze persists. TD's $118 is the closest institutional number to my ATH retest call.Bank of America's Michael Widmer maintains the extreme bull case at $135-$309, anchored on gold-silver ratio compression toward the 1980 Hunt Brothers 14:1 extreme. As my late-April analysis noted, that target requires a ratio collapse my chart does not yet support. Macro strategist David Hunter put a directional marker on X on Monday: "Silver will likely outperform gold into the top this year but both will do well."https://x.com/DaveHcontrarian/status/2053889920821821594Silver Price FAQWhy is silver rising today? Silver is rising because three drivers converged on Monday May 11: a technical breakout above the $80 consolidation ceiling that triggered systematic buying, hedge fund re-entry flagged by TD Securities, and Trump's rejection of Iran's peace proposal that reignited the safe-haven bid. The 7.3% Monday surge was the biggest one-day move since February 20. Tuesday saw $87 tested intraday before a 2% profit-taking pullback to $84.Can silver reach $120 per ounce in 2026? Yes, and my chart projects it as the measured move from the active inverted head-and-shoulders pattern. The path requires a clean break and retest of $94 as new support first. TD Securities targets $118 as the 2026 high, Citigroup sees $110 by H2, and Bank of America's Michael Widmer maintains the extreme $135-$309 bull case if the gold-silver ratio compresses toward historical extremes.What does the inverted head and shoulders mean for silver? The pattern formed across the February-May corrective phase: left shoulder in early February, head at the mid-March $72 crash low, right shoulder in early May. Monday's session delivered the first sustained neckline break of the cycle. If confirmed by a retest, the pattern's measured move projects silver back toward the $117-$120 January all-time high zone. This article was written by Damian Chmiel at www.financemagnates.com.

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