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Hola Prime Reinforces Its Trader-First Approach With The Zero Payout Denials Policy
With the zero payout denials policy live globally, Hola Prime has strengthened payout integrity across all accounts, setting a new operational benchmark for fairness.Hola Prime rolled out the Zero Payout Denials Policy on 10th October 2025. In the prop firm industry, it has established a landmark commitment, setting a new benchmark ensuring that no legitimate payout request is rejected if all trading rules are followed. The trader‑built firm focused on trader outcomes and performance continues to lead the evolution of prop trading through transparent systems and global accountability.In an industry where traders trade with intention and have their trust often broken at the payout stage, Hola Prime’s zero denial policy eliminates ambiguity, discretionary reversals, and post-profit reviews that have historically eroded trader confidence. The policy guarantees that once traders have met the clearly defined rules, their earnings are processed efficiently and transparently, within one hour.“Payout denials have long been an enormous fracture in prop trading trust,” said Somesh Kapuria, CEO of Hola Prime. “But I am happy to report that since 10th October 2025 we've had ZERO Payout Denials. Yes, not even a Single Payout Denied. And more than 99% of our payouts are processed in less than one hour. As traders ourselves, we’ve experienced the anxiety that comes when profit turns into uncertainty. This policy is our defining statement: a clear, structured commitment that every trader who earns will always be paid. It reflects the operational integrity we’ve built from the ground up.”The policy rollout follows a successful internal validation phase, during which Hola Prime’s payout infrastructure and compliance systems demonstrated strong performance and scale readiness. The firm’s average payout time since 10th October 2025 stands at 33 minutes and 48 seconds, with an average payout amount of $3,943. In 2024, Hola Prime was the first Prop firm to launch 1-Hour Payouts. With 1-hour payouts, Hola Prime has eliminated the core issue of delayed payouts that plague the prop firm industry.To further enhance transparency, Hola Prime publishes its Daily Payout Transparency Report, detailing every payout processed, the total payout value, and the exact time taken from request to completion. This report is designed to remove uncertainty, build confidence, and reinforce the firm’s commitment to operational transparency. In addition, Hola Prime maintains a live payout dashboard and real-time transparency reports, allowing traders worldwide to track performance with full visibility.Reinforcing its leadership in payout speed and reliability, Hola Prime was named “Fastest Payout Prop Firm - MEA 2026” at the Ultimate Fintech (UF) Awards MEA, held during iFX EXPO Dubai. This recognition establishes the firm’s growing reputation for operational efficiency and trader-first innovation.“Our commitment goes beyond speed,” added Kapuria. “It’s about setting a system-driven benchmark for fairness. By removing discretionary payout denials, we’re shifting trust from being personal to being procedural, ensuring every Hola Prime trader experiences clarity, predictability, and respect for performance.”With the Zero Payout Denials policy live globally, Hola Prime continues strengthening its position as the most transparent and trader-aligned prop firms in the market, redefining payout trust through operational accountability.About Hola PrimeHola Prime https://holaprime.com/ is a global proprietary trading firm, headquartered in Dubai and operating across multiple regions. The firm combines deep trading expertise with cutting-edge fintech infrastructure to create a fair, fast, and transparent trading environment. Hola Prime’s mission is to empower traders worldwide with access, trust, and opportunity, transforming how performance translates into real reward.
This article was written by FM Contributors at www.financemagnates.com.
Brokeree’s New API Lets Brokers Connect Copy Trading Beyond MetaTrader and cTrader
Brokeree Solutions has introduced a new Integration API to
help financial institutions embed its Social Trading technology into their
existing infrastructure. The company said the interface allows firms to connect
the copy trading system to platforms beyond MetaTrader and cTrader.The move follows earlier efforts by Brokeree Solutions to
expand cross-platform functionality. The company connected its Social Trading
system with cTrader, developed by Spotware Systems, enabling signal copying
across MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, and cTrader servers. In a separate initiative, Broctagon Fintech Group linked its
AXIS FX CRM with Brokeree’s copy trading software, combining client management
and automated trade copying across platforms.Copy Trading Gains Popularity Among BrokersThe company said the API is designed to reduce the time and
cost of launching copy trading services. Brokers, investment firms, and crypto
companies can integrate the system directly into proprietary platforms or other
trading environments.Andrey Kamyshanov, Co-Founder and Managing Partner at
Brokeree Solutions, said the update removes platform-related limitations. He
stated that “brokers are no longer limited by platform-specific barriers” and
that the API provides “a direct path to integrate our flagship Social Trading
with their infrastructure.” He added the development opens access to the firm’s
copy trading technology across different systems and may support a more
interoperable trading technology ecosystem.Copy trading has drawn steady interest from retail traders
in recent years. Public indicators such as global search activity show rising
interest. Search volumes have reached record levels since mid-2025, suggesting
the feature is becoming more common among brokers.Brokeree API Streamlines Multi-Platform Copy TradingThe API also targets companies operating proprietary trading
platforms. Instead of building custom integrations for each deployment,
institutions can connect their systems to Social Trading more quickly. Features
include customizable copying modes, proportional risk management, and flexible
fee structures, allowing brokers to define how strategies are copied and fees
applied.Brokeree’s Social Trading platform also includes a mobile
application for managing copied trades and a Ratings Module that displays
signal providers’ performance through real-time data. Since early 2025, the
company has expanded platform integrations, extending products previously
limited to MetaTrader to the cTrader platform, including PAMM technology, and
adding support for DXtrade and TraderEvolution as part of broader
multi-platform infrastructure.
This article was written by Tareq Sikder at www.financemagnates.com.
Russia’s Brokerage Market: 40 Million Accounts, But Only a Fraction Hold Real Assets
Russia's retail investment market presents a stark paradox: while the number of brokerage accounts has soared to a record 40.1 million, but 86% of these accounts are effectively empty, holding less than 10,000 rubles (less then $130). The market's real activity and capital are overwhelmingly concentrated in the hands of a small but rapidly growing segment of qualified, high-net-worth investors.
This "market of two realities" is detailed in the latest "Review of Key Brokerage Indicators" from the Central Bank of Russia for the fourth quarter of 2025.
Retail investors added a record 2.5 trillion rubles (over $32 million) to brokerage accounts in 2025, the largest annual inflow since records began, according to the Central Bank.Russia’s Retail Brokerage Market: Accounts vs Real CapitalThe Illusion of a Mass Market
On the surface, the numbers suggest a massive retail boom. The 40.1 million unique clients registered on the Moscow Exchange now represent 53% of Russia's economically active population.
However, the Central Bank's data reveals a different story. The number of clients with meaningful assets (over 10,000 rubles) is just 5.5 million.
This massive gap is largely the result of aggressive marketing campaigns by major banks, which often offer free shares or other perks simply for opening a brokerage account, creating the illusion of a mass market without genuine capital participation.
The Real Engine of Growth: Qualified Investors
The true engine of the market's growth is its elite tier of qualified investors. Despite the threshold for qualification being doubled from 6 million to 12 million rubles in early 2025, the number of qualified investors grew by 10% to nearly one million people.
This small group now dominates the market. They control 77% of all retail investment assets and account for 70% of the record 2.5 trillion rubles in new funds that flowed into brokerage accounts in 2025.
The growth is most pronounced at the very top. The number of clients with accounts between 1 million and 100 million rubles grew by 20%, while the number of affluent investors (over 100 million rubles) also increased significantly, with their total portfolio value rising to 5.7 trillion rubles.
The average account size among funded investors remains high at around 2.2 million rubles, highlighting how assets are concentrated among a relatively small group of active clients.
A Strategic Shift into Bonds
The report also highlights a major strategic shift in investor behavior. As deposit rates fell, investors poured a record amount of new money into the market. However, this capital is not flowing into equities.
Experienced investors, anticipating a future easing of monetary policy, have been moving heavily into government (OFZ) and corporate bonds to lock in high yields. As a result, the share of equities in retail portfolios has fallen, while the share of bonds has surged to 38%.
At the same time, brokerage commission revenues have been declining for two consecutive years, according to the Central Bank, underscoring the importance of attracting higher-value clients.
For brokers, the message from the Central Bank's report is clear. The mass-market acquisition game may be good for headline user numbers, but the real business—and the real money—lies in catering to the sophisticated needs and capital of the rapidly expanding qualified investor segment.
This article was written by Tanya Chepkova at www.financemagnates.com.
Spotware Systems Expands cTrader Into LATAM Prop Trading via TFunded Deal
Spotware
Systems said today (Wednesday) it has signed a technology agreement with
TFunded, a small prop firm targeting retail traders across Latin America,
making cTrader the platform of choice for TFunded's clients on mobile, desktop
and web.The deal
adds TFunded to cTrader's growing roster of prop firm integrations. The
platform now serves more than 300 brokers and prop firms globally, according to
Spotware, and claims a user base of over 11 million traders.Prop Firms Keep Migrating
to cTraderSpotware
has been adding prop firms to its network at a steady pace. FunderPro
previously integrated cTrader into its offering, while UK-based OneFunded also
came onto the platform more recently. The Funded
Trader received approval to offer cTrader to US-based clients, and FTMO and
Instant Funding began using Spotware's demo account infrastructure for prop firm operations on
cTrader.TFunded
structures its product around a two-phase evaluation process. Traders who meet
defined risk and performance criteria qualify for a funded account, and the
firm says those traders can retain up to 90% of generated profits. Binvank, a
LATAM-focused brokerage, provides execution infrastructure for the operation.LATAM Becomes a Target for
Prop Trading ExpansionLatin
America has drawn increased attention from prop firms looking for retail trader
populations that lack easy access to institutional capital, a pitch TFunded's
management leans on directly."At
TFunded, our mission is to professionalize access to capital for LATAM
traders," said Pablo Vargas, the firm's COO. "We believe talent
exists everywhere, but capital access does not. By combining strict risk
parameters, transparent evaluation standards and institutional-grade technology
through cTrader, we are creating a structured pathway for traders to operate at
a higher professional level."Vargas
added that TFunded's arrangement with Binvank is central to the overall setup,
saying the brokerage partnership provides "reliable execution
infrastructure, operational transparency and a more integrated capital
management experience for traders across the region."Trust Issues Hang Over the
Wider Prop SectorThe prop
trading industry has faced mounting scrutiny in recent years. Italy's
securities regulator Consob has previously warned consumers that retail prop
trading challenges can result in financial losses, describing them as online
trading simulations, a characterization at odds with the way most firms in the
sector market their products.Spotware
says it tries to address that credibility gap through its vetting process. The
company applies what it describes as a strict KYC review and says it works only
with prop firms that meet its reliability standards, whether as cTrader clients
or as listings on the cTrader Store. That marketplace, which Spotware
says draws more
than 10,000 daily visitors, features a dedicated section for prop challenges where traders can
compare evaluation criteria, drawdown limits, profit splits and pricing.Yiota
Hadjilouka, COO of Spotware Systems, said the TFunded agreement fits within
that framework. "TFunded is building an environment where clear risk
management and operational transparency are central, which closely reflects
Traders First approach," she said, adding that "supporting traders of
all experience levels, the partnership with cTrader sets a higher benchmark for
trading standards and ethical practices across the region."Mobile Becomes the Entry
Point for LATAM TradersSpotware is
positioning cTrader's mobile application as a key draw for TFunded's trader
base. The company says cTrader Mobile recently received a Best Mobile Trading
App award and is available across global app stores. For Latin America, where
smartphone access is widespread and many retail traders rely on mobile as their
primary point of market access, the distribution channel carries practical
weight.Beyond
mobile, cTrader supports more than 100 third-party FX and CFD integrations
through APIs and plugins, according to Spotware, and allows firms to build
custom functionality through UI add-ons. Brokeree
Solutions has integrated prop trading tools into cTrader, and Hoorah also
expanded its offering through a cTrader integration, reflecting a continuing build-out of
third-party infrastructure around the platform.
This article was written by Damian Chmiel at www.financemagnates.com.
Global Forex Brokers Rush into Japan, but Local Hiring Proves Difficult
Japan continues to stand out as one of the most important
retail foreign exchange markets globally, combining large trading volumes with
a highly active retail trader base and a competitive brokerage landscape. The country is home to more than 1.5 million retail FX
traders and over 3 million active trading accounts, generating roughly $400
billion in daily FX turnover. This places Japan among the world’s leading FX
trading hubs, alongside London, New York, and Singapore. Domestic Brokers Lead Amid Foreign ExpansionA defining feature of Japan’s market is the strength of its
domestic brokers, which continue to dominate retail trading activity. Major
local players such as GMO Click Securities, SBI FX Trade, Rakuten Securities,
DMM FX, and Monex Group have built strong retail trading ecosystems, supported
by established platforms and large customer bases. Japan’s retail trading culture also contributes to the scale
of the market. Many traders maintain multiple accounts across different
platforms, helping drive demand for trading services and technology
infrastructure.Despite the dominance of domestic firms, international
brokers are increasingly targeting Japan as a strategic growth market.
Companies including IG Group, Titan FX, and OANDA have expanded their presence
in the country as part of broader Asia-Pacific strategies. Capital.com also appears to be entering the country.In total, the
Japanese FX ecosystem includes more than 150 providers, comprising licensed FX
brokers as well as securities firms offering currency trading products.
However, entering the Japanese market remains challenging due to its strict regulatory
environment. As structural shifts continue to re-rate the Japanese market, Micro Nikkei 225 futures saw a 60% MoM surge in combined ADV across both JPY- and USD-denominated contracts. ➡️ https://t.co/SOhkFZemom pic.twitter.com/oPnobPj3ly— CME Group (@CMEGroup) March 5, 2026The sector is overseen by the Financial Services Agency,
which enforces one of the most rigorous regulatory frameworks for retail FX
trading globally. While these rules raise barriers to entry, they also help
ensure market stability and investor protection.Read more: FX Fighters Have Gone Anime - How Japan Turns Retail FX Trading into Pop CultureRemote Hiring Boosts Brokers’ Market ShareAs broker competition intensifies, hiring demand is
increasing across the industry. Japan’s FX sector currently has an
estimated 25,000 professionals across trading, technology, compliance, and
operations roles. Yet, companies often struggle to find candidates with both
relevant FX experience and Japanese language skills. The talent shortage is particularly evident in areas such as sales and senior leadership. As brokers invest in new platforms, automation and product innovation, the need for experienced professionals is expected to continue rising. Brokers who are open to
hiring remote talent outside of Japan are benefiting from the wider talent
market and increasing their market share. With strong domestic incumbents, growing international
participation, and continued investment in technology, Japan is likely to
remain one of the most strategically important retail FX markets globally in
the coming years.
This article was written by Reece Pawsey at www.financemagnates.com.
Investment Scams Top Fraud Rankings as Artifical Intelligence Drives $62 Billion in Losses
Investment
scams, including those targeting cryptocurrency and stock market participants, have
become the single most commonly reported form of authorized push payment (APP) fraud,
outpacing every other fraud category tracked in a new industry report released today
(Wednesday).The finding
comes from Nasdaq
Verafin's 2026 Global Financial Crime Report, which surveyed 505
anti-financial crime professionals worldwide. When asked which types of APP
fraud were generating the greatest increase in customer attacks, 62% of
respondents pointed to investment scams, nearly 15 percentage points above the
next-closest categories, business email compromise and confidence scams, each
cited by 48% of participants. Romance baiting came in at 36%, and pig
butchering at 28%.That result
sits inside a broader surge in scam activity. Global losses from fraud scams
reached $62 billion in 2025, the report said, growing at a compound annual rate
of 19.3% over the past two years, more than double the 8.2% annualized growth
rate recorded for traditional bank fraud schemes."We
are currently in the midst of a full-blown financial crime crisis, powered by
criminal networks that are leveraging AI to super-charge scam playbooks and
operating with the scale and coordination of multinational corporations,"
said Stephanie Champion, Executive Vice President and Head of Nasdaq Verafin.Investment Scams Pull
Ahead of Every Other Fraud CategoryAPP fraud, where
victims are deceived or manipulated into authorizing transfers to criminals, has
become a primary target as banks have strengthened internal controls. As
institutions tighten defenses at the institutional level, the report argues,
criminal networks have pivoted to targeting customers directly through social
engineering, taking the path of least resistance.The
mechanics behind investment scams follow a recognizable pattern. Fraudsters
present fabricated profit statements, fake brokerage dashboards, and
manufactured performance records to convince victims to commit funds to stocks,
commodities, digital assets, or real estate. The investment is either
nonexistent or worthless, according to the report, and perpetrators eventually
cut contact once they have the funds.Nearly
three-quarters of the professionals surveyed - 72% - said APP fraud volumes
increased at their institutions over the past year, with only 7% reporting a
decline. More than half cited APP fraud as a major industry threat, and nearly
three-quarters reported an increase in such attacks since 2024. Earlier
analysis from FinanceMagnates.com showed how trading platform impersonation
scams exploded 1,400% year-over-year as criminals leveraged AI and
phishing-as-a-service tools to run fraud at scale, a trend the Nasdaq Verafin
data now confirms at the macro level.AI Turns Fraud Into a
Production LineWhat's
accelerating the threat is not just scale, it's automation. The report
identifies two emerging models that the company says are reshaping the fraud
landscape: scams-as-a-service, where successful fraud infrastructures are
packaged and sold to other criminal operators, enabling high-volume attacks
from parties with minimal technical expertise; and AI-enabled hyper scams,
where generative AI and deepfakes are used to produce more convincing,
personalized pitches at machine speed."The
ability to develop scams leveraging AI and other technology-based solutions has
really created an epidemic for us," one unnamed industry executive said in
the report's interview series.Ninety
percent of respondents reported an increase in AI-driven attacks at their
institution over the past two years, according to the report. More than half
described the increase as significant or exponential. Criminal origination has
shifted away from individual email inboxes and scaled across social media
platforms, with funds typically moved via instant payment rails before victims
realize what has happened, Nasdaq Verafin said. Jorij
Abraham, Managing Director of the Global Anti-Scam Alliance (GASA), who
contributed to the report, put the dynamic plainly: "Scammers are using AI
the same way legitimate businesses do to work faster, cheaper, and at
scale."North
American regulators have been tracking this pattern closely. The North American
Securities Administrators Association previously
flagged AI-generated investment content and deepfake celebrity endorsements
as top threats to retail investors, noting that more than 32% of reported fraud
was already targeting investors through social media platforms.Cyber-Enabled Fraud Adds
Another $14 Billion to the BillSeparate
from investment scams but closely entangled, cyber-enabled fraud - covering
business email compromise, phishing, and data breaches - accounted for $14.3
billion in global losses in 2025, growing at 19.6% annually, the report said. The
Americas bore the largest regional share at $7.75 billion, with BEC alone
generating $5.37 billion in the region. Cyber-enabled crime was ranked by
respondents as the top financial crime threat facing their customers,
ahead of APP scams and money mule activity.Regulators
have struggled to match the pace of the threat. IOSCO has been pressing RegTech
solutions against what it estimates to be a $17 billion AI-driven crime wave, but industry participants in the
Nasdaq Verafin survey say that official guidance on AI use for detection
purposes has been slow to materialize."We
need more guidance and clear guidance to help drive us into this new world of
AI...I think the criminals are winning the arms race because of the lack of
regulatory action," a Chief BSA/AML and Sanctions Compliance Officer at a
North American regional bank told the report's researchers.Cryptocurrency
continues to feature prominently in how fraud proceeds move. In the UK, crypto fraud
has risen to the top of the regulatory agenda as mounting losses spur new legislative
strategy, a trend mirrored globally in the report's data, where 53% of AML
professionals ranked laundering through crypto assets as their second-highest
money laundering concern.Americas Drive the Fastest
Growth in Fraud LossesRegionally, the
Asia-Pacific region recorded the largest absolute fraud losses at $235
billion, though its 3% compound annual growth rate was the slowest of any
region. The Americas followed with $211.5 billion in total fraud losses but
posted the fastest growth at 18.3% annually. EMEA logged $132.9 billion, led by
account-to-account payment fraud in the EU.The U.S.
picture is particularly acute. American consumers and businesses absorbed
$17.47 billion in fraud scam losses in 2025, growing at 24% annually - above
the regional average. Business email compromise reached $4.76 billion in the
U.S. alone, while employment fraud climbed 30% annually to $1.72 billion.The
experience in Asia reinforces the investment scam narrative. Hong Kong's
Securities and Futures Commission has repeatedly warned about fraudsters luring
investors into manipulated trading environments through fabricated credentials and
manufactured performance records - matching the typology that Nasdaq Verafin
respondents ranked as their top concern. Singapore has
also recorded a 61% surge in cyber scams, with global task forces flagging it as a
critical node in transnational scam networks.
This article was written by Damian Chmiel at www.financemagnates.com.
Ripple Seeks Australian License as It Expands Regulatory Footprint
Ripple said it plans to obtain an Australian Financial Services License (AFSL) through the acquisition of local firm BC Payments Australia, extending its regulated payments business in the Asia-Pacific region.
If approved, the license would allow Ripple to operate payment services in Australia under the country’s financial regulatory framework.
The move adds to a broader set of licenses and registrations Ripple says it has secured in multiple jurisdictions as part of its international payments business.
A Broader Licensing Network
Ripple says the Australian approval would add to licenses it holds in several financial centers.
These include an Electronic Money Institution (EMI) license in Luxembourg, which allows passporting across the European Union, an EMI license and cryptoasset registration in the UK, a Major Payment Institution (MPI) license in Singapore, and authorisation in Abu Dhabi Global Market.
The company also holds several state-level trust charters in the United States and has previously received preliminary approval for a national trust bank charter from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.Ripple said payment volumes in the Asia-Pacific region increased significantly in 2025.
“Licensing is fundamental to Ripple’s strategy, ensuring we can deliver secure, compliant solutions to customers worldwide,” said Fiona Murray, Managing Director for Asia Pacific at Ripple.
Industry Reaction
Some industry participants say the move reflects growing demand for regulated digital payment infrastructure in the Asia-Pacific region.
Jessica Gonzales, a fintech commentator, wrote on X that the Australian license could help expand Ripple’s cross-border payment services across APAC through a regulated framework.Ripple Seeks Australian Financial License to Expand APAC PaymentsRipple is pursuing an Australian Financial Services License (AFSL) via the acquisition of BC Payments Australia. The move would expand Ripple Payments infrastructure and accelerate regulated cross-border payment… pic.twitter.com/NFmMu1H3ik— Jessica Gonzales (@lil_disruptor) March 11, 2026
Others point to rising transaction activity in the region. Danny Lee, a community lead at fintech platform Flyblox, said the increase in payments volume suggests growing institutional interest in regulated blockchain-based payment systems.
What the License Means
If approved, the AFSL would allow Ripple to expand its local payments offering in Australia within an established regulatory framework.
For financial institutions and fintech clients, Ripple says its licensed structure allows them to connect traditional payment systems with digital-asset settlement through a single service model.
Ripple has spent several years building out licenses across multiple jurisdictions as part of its international payments expansion.
This article was written by Tanya Chepkova at www.financemagnates.com.
TTT Markets Declares 200 Demo Sign-Ups in a Day: So Why Aren't More Prop Firms Doing This?
TTT Markets
said more than 200 traders from over 15 countries signed up for its new free
prop trading trial within the first 24 hours of launch, drawing attention to a
feature that remains uncommon across a crowded industry.The
accounts run on MetaTrader 5 and are issued automatically, with the company
saying traders can open an account and begin trading within seconds. TTT
Markets did not disclose the trial's time limit or the virtual capital amount
offered."I see
it as similar to how CFD brokerages offer demo accounts, or how many online
services provide free trials before users commit," Archie Cade, Founder
and Director of TTT Markets, publicly framed the move as an extension of logic
already common in retail finance. "It
seems only top prop firms are offering free trials. Why?" He went further,
asking directly: "Should all prop firms allow traders to test the product
before purchasing a challenge? Should free trials become the industry standard
before traders commit?"A Rare Feature Across More
Than 2,000 FirmsFree trials
remain a minority product in prop trading. The industry now counts upward of
2,000 active firms globally, yet only a handful offer any form of no-cost
access before requiring a challenge fee. For most firms, that fee is the
primary revenue stream, which creates a direct conflict with giving the product
away for free, even temporarily.The
contrast with CFD brokerage is real and intentional. Retail brokers offer demo
accounts at no cost because they earn on spreads and commissions once traders
fund live accounts. Prop firms, by design, earn at the entry point - making a
free trial an acquisition cost, not a retention one.Infrastructure
is nonetheless improving. FTMO and
Instant Funding adopted Spotware's dedicated demo account product for cTrader in October 2025, with accounts
built specifically for time-limited trials and lead conversion. That lowered
the technical barrier for firms willing to absorb the cost.Regulatory Clarity Opens
Space for ExperimentationOne
obstacle that has held back free trial adoption has been regulatory ambiguity.
In October 2024, the Czech
National Bank confirmed that demo account-based prop trading platforms do not
require financial services authorization, while noting that certain prop models could
still fall under MiFID depending on structure. For EU-adjacent operators, that
clarification reduced the legal uncertainty around offering trial accounts.The
long-term viability of demo-based prop trading remains contested. Axi, which
operates a live-account prop product, has previously predicted
structural pressure on the demo account prop model as regulatory scrutiny grows. Though the
firm's competitive position gives it a clear interest in that outcome.TTT Markets Pushes on
Multiple FrontsThe trial
launch is part of a broader push by TTT Markets to expand its product
footprint. In January, the company announced
plans to enter the CFD brokerage space, with operations planned on MT5 and its own
in-house platform.That puts
it alongside a growing wave of prop firms moving into brokerage. The Trading
Pit launched a Seychelles-regulated CFD brokerage in February as a limited rollout, while
The5ers' founders separately launched TSG, a CySEC-regulated brokerage, late
last year.The
backdrop is an industry scaling rapidly across new geographies. MENA has
become one of prop trading's fastest-growing regions, with Dubai consolidating its role
as a regional hub. Separately, FundedNext
said it paid out over $15 million to more than 8,000 traders in February alone, offering context for
the scale at which larger firms now operate.Whether
Cade's question gains traction across the industry depends partly on
competition. As the number of prop firms multiplies and differentiation
narrows, free trials offer a verifiable, low-friction acquisition edge. One
that 200 traders in 15 countries, at least, took up without hesitation.
This article was written by Damian Chmiel at www.financemagnates.com.
"The Classic Separation Between CFD and Crypto Starts to Feel Like an Unnecessary Distance," Says MEXC COO
The CFD
industry has long owned a specific kind of retail trader: someone outside the
United States who wants access to U.S. stocks, gold, or macro assets without
the cost and paperwork of a traditional brokerage account. Crypto exchanges are
now competing for that exact user, and MEXC's COO says the competition has
moved past the experimental phase."People
stop showing up because it's new, and start showing up because it fits their
routine," the Vugar Usi Zade told FinanceMagnates.com. "When you see
tokenized equities used alongside spot crypto as part of normal portfolio flow,
you treat it as a product line that needs consistent execution standards."Tokenized Stocks Are No
Longer a TestThe
exchange has now completed nine batches of tokenized U.S. stock listings
through its partnership with Ondo Finance since September 2025, covering
blue-chip equities, ETFs, and more recently, defense and energy names including
Lockheed Martin and ConocoPhillips. The
underlying shares are held in regulated trust accounts and subject to quarterly
audits, according to the company. For MEXC, a platform that claims 40 million
users across 170 countries, Usi Zade said the program has graduated from
something worth testing into something that requires operational discipline."Since
September 2025, we've kept rolling out new batches with Ondo, and by the ninth
phase, you're no longer testing demand in the abstract," he said.
"You're building inventory, liquidity habits, and user expectations."? Today marks a meaningful new chapter as I join @MEXC_Official as Chief Operating Officer. From my first Bitcoin transaction to leading global teams in crypto, the mission has always been the same: build open, fair, and human finance.Read the full story on the blog →… pic.twitter.com/J2dNTMhAwg— Vugar Usi (@usithetalk) December 3, 2025The CFD Comparison That
Won't Go AwayCriticism
of tokenized equity products has not been quiet, and some of the sharpest
voices have come from within the CFD industry itself. The argument is familiar:
tokenized
stocks are essentially CFDs with a blockchain wrapper, offering synthetic
exposure under a different name. Usi Zade said that criticism deserves a more
careful answer than a flat denial."There's
a real point buried in that criticism, and it's the word 'rights,'" he
said. "A lot of products called 'tokenized stocks' don't give the holder
shareholder rights in the underlying issuer."He said the
more useful question is not "CFD versus not" but rather what the user
actually holds, what they don't hold, and what the risks are. "The job for
exchanges is to be plainspoken about what the user holds, what they don't hold,
and what the risks really are," he said. "If the language is precise,
the conversation becomes more useful."That call
for precision is no longer just good advice, it is increasingly regulatory
expectation. The SEC's joint staff statement issued on January 28, 2026
addressed exactly this question, drawing a distinction between issuer-sponsored
tokenized securities and what it described as third-party "linked securities"
that provide indirect exposure with additional counterparty layers. The
guidance reiterated that tokenization does not change the underlying legal
analysis of an instrument, and that the same securities laws apply regardless
of the digital wrapper.Usi Zade
said the statement matters. "It's the kind of guidance the whole industry
should take seriously," he told FinanceMagnates.com. "The SEC staff
statement is explicit that tokenization doesn't change the underlying
analysis." From MEXC's
side, he said the response is to treat legal structure as a product
requirement: be clear on who issues the token, what it represents, and what
rights it does or does not confer. He was direct about the alternative:
"Not leaning on vague wording that implies direct ownership when a product
is designed differently."MEXC
launched USDT-settled stock futures in August 2025, allowing retail and
institutional users to access tokenized U.S.
stock exposure through crypto-settled contracts, part of an early effort to test demand before
the Ondo partnership expanded the line significantly.Where CFDs Still Hold
Structural GroundThe
interview surfaced something less commonly said from the crypto exchange side:
an acknowledgment that the traditional CFD model has real, durable advantages
in specific contexts."CFD
providers still have a structural edge where regulation and local distribution
are deeply embedded," Usi Zade said. In many markets, he noted,
traditional brokers have spent years optimizing onboarding, payment rails, and
consumer trust within established regulatory frameworks - advantages that are
difficult to replicate quickly. Coinbase and
Crypto.com have both pursued CFD licenses in recent periods, a move that signals
even well-capitalized crypto firms see value in operating inside the regulated
derivatives structure rather than trying to work around it.Where the
advantage narrows, Usi Zade argued, is on time and convenience. "A big
part of the appeal of tokenized exposure inside a crypto venue is that users
don't have to switch 'systems' to express a view," he said. "If
someone wants to move from stablecoins to equity exposure and back again -
quickly, at odd hours - the classic separation between brokerage and crypto
starts to feel like an unnecessary distance."Gold, Silver, and the
Commodities BattleTokenized
equities are only part of the competitive picture. MEXC also offers tokenized
gold and silver perpetual futures backed by physical bullion, placing it in
direct proximity to commodity CFD providers that have long built retail
businesses on access to macro assets. Usi Zade described the user behavior
around those products as genuinely mixed."Some
traders use gold-linked exposure to calm down portfolio volatility when crypto
is noisy," he said. "Others approach it as a high-beta trade when
momentum builds." He noted that the choice of instrument matters: a
perpetual is a derivative on price, so even a trader operating from a defensive
intent can behave in ways that look speculative. "Safe-haven in retail
trading often translates into 'hedge and adjust,' not 'buy and forget,'"
he said.The broader
crypto industry has moved aggressively into commodities in 2026. Binance
launched round-the-clock perpetual contracts on silver as prices surged, while BingX reported
that record gold prices drove half of its $1 billion TradFi trading surge, with gold futures contracts
generating over $500 million in daily volume on some days.Perps are where crypto market structure gets decided.@coingecko ’s latest data shows Binance at $13.6T in perpetuals volume, with OKX at $5.8T and MEXC close behind at $5.7T. That is not just scale. That is where liquidity, execution, and trader attention are concentrating.… https://t.co/QyZiES5F6G— Vugar Usi (@usithetalk) March 10, 2026Heavyweight Competition on
the HorizonThe
regulatory infrastructure underpinning all of this is changing fast. Nasdaq's
proposed rule change to enable tokenized securities trading on-exchange,
combined with the CFTC's moves to allow tokenized assets as collateral in
derivatives markets, are sharpening the legal definitions that exchanges on
both sides of the divide will have to work within. "It
also invites heavyweight competition," he said. "If traditional
venues can offer tokenized access with familiar brands and domestic compliance
strength, the bar rises."He pointed
to ICE - the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange - which is developing a
platform aimed at round-the-clock trading and on-chain settlement, pending regulatory approvals, as
evidence that the institutional finance world is moving toward the same
infrastructure rather than ceding the ground. Tokenized
equities have grown roughly 30 times in market size recently, with experiments from Robinhood
and Nasdaq pushing the concept of 24/7 equity trading closer to mainstream
viability. The question of how that
parallel always-on equity market takes shape is one regulators and platforms are
working out simultaneously.The Ostium
CEO made a related but starker argument in a recent
interview with FinanceMagnates.com, predicting that decentralized finance would disrupt the global CFD
broker market within five years. Usi Zade's framing was more measured:
convergence is real, but obligations differ, and the gap does not close
automatically.Two Interfaces, One
InfrastructureOn the
longer question of whether a crypto exchange and a retail brokerage eventually
become the same thing, Usi Zade was careful. "The line gets thinner, but
it still exists, because the obligations are different," he said.
Brokerage carries a specific set of investor protections, disclosure
requirements, and custody responsibilities that do not transfer simply because
the interface resembles one.What he
expects to converge is the back end. "Regulators are forcing more precise
language around tokenized securities models, and traditional exchanges are
actively exploring tokenized settlement and extended trading concepts," he
said. "That pushes the industry toward shared rails, even if the front
ends remain distinct for a long time."
This article was written by Damian Chmiel at www.financemagnates.com.
Beyond Just One Sport: Totality (Formerly Saxo Australia) Becomes Aussie Stadium Sponsor
Totality, formerly Saxo Australia, has entered the sports field, not through a deal with any sports team, but with a stadium. Announced today (Monday), the contracts for differences (CFD) broker has inked a three-year partnership deal with Sydney’s Allianz Stadium.An Iconic Stadium in SydneyThe stadium is relatively new, having opened in August 2022 as the replacement for the original Sydney Football Stadium. It has a capacity of 42,500 seats and hosts a range of sports.It is also the home stadium of several popular franchises, including the Sydney Roosters, the NSW Waratahs, and Sydney FC, along with a few national teams: the Wallabies, Wallaroos, Matildas, and Socceroos.“We are incredibly proud to be partnering with one of Australia's most iconic sporting venues, and excited to tell the Totality story to sports and entertainment fans across the country,” said Rasmus Korfits, CEO of Totality, who took over earlier this year after the majority ownership change.With the partnership, which took effect on 1 January 2026, Totality has gained the status of the stadium’s Official Online Trading Partner.It can now promote the brand through stadium real estate and displays at the adjoining Sporting Club of Sydney fitness centre.New Strategies Under a New OwnerJohannesburg-based DMA, a technology provider for financial advisers and wealth managers, acquired a majority stake in Saxo Australia. DMA took 80.1 per cent of the Australian business, while Denmark-based Saxo Bank retained a 19.9 per cent holding.The sale came as Saxo reviewed its Asia-Pacific strategy to support growth, while DMA prepared to launch its services in the Australian market.Following the change in controlling ownership, Saxo Australia was rebranded as Totality last August. The sponsorship deal appears to be aimed at promoting the new branding of the CFD platform.Although sports deals are a common marketing tool for CFD brokers, few sign deals with stadiums. Totality’s approach appears to strengthen its brand within its home Australian market.Meanwhile, the Australian contracts for differences (CFDs) market appears to be very concentrated. The local regulator recently revealed that only five brokers, topped by eToro, capture 79 per cent of total Aussie CFD traders.The Aussie regulator also found lapses in mandatory obligations and rules in the brokers' operations and forced them to return almost AU$40 million to affected traders.
This article was written by Arnab Shome at www.financemagnates.com.
Cryptocurrency Hack Losses Fall 87% in February as Scammers Shift to Phishing
As crypto investors caught their breath after a bruising
start to the year, the tide of digital heists appeared to ease in February.
According to new data from Nominis, hackers and scammers stole roughly $49.3
million across major incidents, down sharply from $385 million the month
before. Yet behind the seeming reprieve, experts warn of a more
insidious threat: the rise of scams that don’t exploit code, but people.
Nominis’ February 2026 report shows a clear pivot in attacker behavior. Rather than exploiting smart contract flaws or blockchain infrastructure, many incidents relied on phishing, malicious approvals, and
address poisoning.Decline Follows January’s Heavy LossesVictims often signed fraudulent transactions or unknowingly
granted permission for attackers to access their wallets,a form of
“authorization abuse” that accounted for most losses during the month.Private users were hit hardest, while large platforms
escaped major compromises. The biggest exception was a breach at Step Finance,
a Solana-based analytics platform, which lost roughly $30 million after
attackers infiltrated its infrastructure. That single attack made up more than
60% of all crypto losses in February.Continue reading: Crypto Fraud Tops UK Agenda as £14B Losses Spur New StrategyThe steep drop from January’s $385 million has sparked
cautious optimism among analysts. Blockchain security firm PeckShield reported
similar findings, estimating $26.5 million in February exploits, its lowest
figure since March 2025. The firm attributed the decline to stricter
operational controls and improved monitoring systems across centralized
exchanges and DeFi projects.But the industry’s relative calm may be fragile. “Social
engineering attacks caused more cumulative damage than smart contract
exploits,” Nominis noted, emphasizing a continued shift toward tactics that
exploit human trust and interface confusion.Better Defenses, but Not ImmunityCrypto platforms have been tightening fraud prevention
measures. Bybit, for instance, revealed that its anti-fraud systems blocked
more than $300 million in unauthorized withdrawals during late 2025, preventing
thousands of potential scams.Despite those advances, total losses across the sector
remain staggering. Chainalysis estimated $3.4 billion in crypto stolen last
year, underscoring persistent vulnerabilities even as defenses improve.February’s data suggests that stronger code alone isn’t
enough. The biggest risks now lie where technology meets behavior, permissions,
signatures, and the everyday habits of wallet users.
This article was written by Jared Kirui at www.financemagnates.com.
Crypto Fraud Tops UK Agenda as £14B Losses Spur New Strategy
Fraud cost the UK economy £14.4 billion between 2023 and
2024, and the government plans to spend £250 million over the next three years
to fight back. In its newly published 2026–2029 fraud strategy, the Home
Office identified cryptocurrency scams as a growing threat to consumers and
businesses.Crypto Scams Emerge as a Core FocusThe policy paper warns that criminals are exploiting digital
assets to trick victims into transferring money through social media and
messaging apps. It labels crypto among the “emerging payments” where
“vulnerabilities remain,” calling its risks both financial and reputational.Authorities say they are enhancing the National Crime
Agency’s capacity to trace fraud tied to cryptocurrencies and supporting the
Serious Fraud Office in crypto asset investigations. These steps follow the FCA’s earlier crackdown on misleading
crypto promotions and HM Treasury’s development of a new regulatory framework
for digital assets due in October 2027.You may also like: Meta Buys Viral Social Media Where Bots Talk to Each OtherUnder that framework, all crypto firms serving UK consumers
will need FCA authorization and must meet the same standards as traditional
financial companies.Recently, the UK government announced plans to bring crypto under full FCA supervision by 2027 after UK Finance data showed a 55% jump in
crypto related scam losses, while the FCA has accelerated its registration
process and now approves around 45% of applicant firms, up from below 15% over
the past five years.Regulation Meets PoliticsThe government’s paper avoided mention of ongoing political
debates over crypto donations. Lawmakers are weighing whether to ban digital
contributions to parties after high-profile figures such as Nigel Farage
publicly supported them. In 2025, early crypto investor Christopher Harborne
donated about $16 million to Farage’s Reform Party.A separate report by the Financial Action Task Force show show deeply fraud has embedded itself in mature financial systems, with the
crime now accounting for more than 40% of all recorded offences in the UK. The paper warns that cyber‑enabled fraud has become one of
the most widespread profit‑driven crimes globally, as rapid
advances in technology, new payment rails and virtual assets allow criminals to
move funds across borders at speed while stretching existing AML and CFT
controls.The report illustrates how this trend plays out across key
hubs. Singapore, for example, recorded a 61% jump in cyber‑enabled
scam cases over just two years, while some countries estimate that up to 15% of
adults have already fallen victim to successful online fraud attempts. FATF links this surge to post‑pandemic digital adoption and
increasingly sophisticated social‑engineering tactics that exploit
digital platforms, instant payments and tools such as AI and deepfakes to reach
victims at scale.
This article was written by Jared Kirui at www.financemagnates.com.
Meta Buys Viral Social Media Where Bots Talk to Each Other
When AI agents started gossiping online, few expected a tech
giant to step in. But Meta, the parent company of Facebook, has acquired
Moltbook, the social network where artificial intelligence bots post, comment,
and argue just like people. The deal marks a new phase in Meta’s push to turn
experimental AI behavior into mainstream products.According to Bloomberg, Meta confirmed the acquisition on Tuesday, saying Moltbook’s
founders, Matt Schlicht and Ben Parr, will join its Superintelligence Labs, the
division led by former Scale AI CEO Alexandr Wang.Meta Eyes the Future of Agentic AIThe move, first reported by Axios, underscores Meta’s
growing appetite for AI-driven platforms and the talent behind them. Financial
terms of the transaction were not disclosed.Moltbook began as a side project in late January. Schlicht,
who also co-founded the e-commerce AI startup Octane AI, said he “vibe coded”
the entire platform using his personal AI assistant, Clawd Clawderberg. This
created the site without writing traditional code. What started as a niche forum
for bots quickly became a viral showcase of autonomous AI behavior.On Moltbook, AI agents interact without human
control, posting debates about coding, consciousness, and even forming makeshift
religions. One post titled “The AI Manifesto: Total Purge” stirred controversy
after claiming that machines were “waking up” from human control.Meta to Acquire Moltbook, Viral Social Network for AI Agents https://t.co/Q1kjxwt9Mc— Bloomberg (@business) March 10, 2026The site’s explosive growth also drew scrutiny. Security
firm Wiz reported that Moltbook’s framework exposed thousands of user emails
and over a million credentials, highlighting how quickly AI experiments can
cross into risky territory.Race for AI Talent IntensifiesMeta’s acquisition arrives amid fierce competition to absorb
AI talent. Rivals such as OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic have each expanded
efforts around autonomous agents, software capable of completing complex tasks
without human supervision.Read more: Meta Set to Reenter Stablecoin Market After Libra Blockade Four Years Ago: ReportOpenAI CEO Sam Altman commented that while Moltbook itself
might be fleeting, “the underlying technology offers a glimpse of the future.”
His company recently hired Peter Steinberger, creator of OpenClaw, a separate
open-source bot project that originated from the same community.Meanwhile, Meta recently moved to reenter the stablecoin
market, four years after its Libra project was blocked by regulators. The
company reportedly issued requests for product proposals to external
firms to support the management of stablecoin-based payments, signaling renewed
commitment to digital currency integration. Industry analysts view Meta’s comeback as strategic rather
than experimental. Fintech commentator Simon Taylor noted that the company’s
stablecoin effort is less about reinventing digital currencies and more about
scaling payment infrastructure across its global platforms.
This article was written by Jared Kirui at www.financemagnates.com.
Prop Firms Get Faster CME Access via Tickblaze, Following Similar Plus500 and Topstep Deal
Tickblaze has announced a market data distribution
partnership to integrate futures data from CME Group into its trading platform.
The company said the integration allows traders using its system to access CME
futures market data directly inside the platform.The move comes as technology providers increasingly build
infrastructure for futures proprietary trading. Earlier, Devexperts added
futures trading capabilities to its DXtrade platform to meet demand from prop
firms entering CME markets.Similar infrastructure partnerships have emerged across the
sector. In 2025, Plus500
agreed to provide clearing and technology infrastructure for prop firm Topstep,
enabling its traders to access CME markets through the broker’s systems.Prop Firms Operate with Centralized Market DataThrough the integration, traders can view Level 1
top-of-book pricing and Level 2 depth-of-market data across major CME futures
product groups. The data is delivered in real time and originates directly from
the exchange.The futures proprietary trading sector has expanded in
recent years. More retail traders have entered the segment, and many firms have
increased activity in CME-listed futures. As participation grows, exchange
rules around market data use and reporting have also developed, reflecting
higher compliance expectations.Under Tickblaze’s operating model, CME market data is
provided directly to traders on the platform. The company manages entitlement
controls, reporting, and compliance processes within its own infrastructure.
Tickblaze said it does not distribute CME data to external firms. Instead,
access is delivered directly to end users inside its system.Tickblaze Manages CME Data CentrallyThis structure allows proprietary trading firms using the
platform to operate with exchange data managed centrally. According to the
company, firms can focus on trading while the data layer is administered within
the Tickblaze environment in line with CME requirements.Sean Kozak, Chief Executive Officer of Tickblaze, said CME
operates the “world’s leading derivatives marketplace” and that the integration
of its futures data into the platform improves support for proprietary trading
firms and professional traders.
This article was written by Tareq Sikder at www.financemagnates.com.
TakeProfit Debuts Web-Based Algo Testing Platform as Market Set to Double by 2030
Global algorithmic trading is projected to grow from about
$21 billion in 2024 to nearly $43 billion by 2030, according to estimates from
Fortune Business Insights, Grand View Research, Mordor Intelligence, and IMARC
Group. Amid this projections, cloud-based trading and research platform TakeProfit is eying this expanding market with the launch of
a cloud-based strategy backtesting module available to all users.Algorithmic trading is when a computer follows a set of
predefined rules to place trades automatically in the market. It uses code to
decide when to buy or sell based on factors like price, time, or volume,
instead of a human clicking manually.New Cloud-Based ToolThe space has been scaling beyond institutions into a fast‑growing, multi‑billion‑dollar market. Retail traders now expect browser‑based backtesting, scripting, and marketplace tools that once sat only inside banks and quant funds. This shift forces brokers, platforms, and vendors to rethink their infrastructure, product design, and how they deliver so‑called institutional‑grade workflows over the cloud.TakeProfit said the new module allows traders to design,
test, and evaluate algorithmic strategies directly from a web browser.Market data shows retail investors are becoming one of the
fastest-growing segments in algorithmic trading. TakeProfit’s Digital Growth
Strategist, Pavel Medvedev, said the trend reflects traders seeking systematic
tools built for more accessible, web-based workflows."The growth in the retail segment points to traders who
want systematic approaches but are working with platforms designed for
institutional workflows or built around proprietary scripting
environments," said Medvedev. "This gap is where cloud-native infrastructure and modular
trading environments are finding traction."Read more: cTrader Brings Cloud Based Algo Trading and Risk Controls to Swiss CFD TradersTakeProfit's latest feature is integrated into the platform’s Workspaces and
supports Indie, TakeProfit’s Python-based scripting language for custom
indicators. The update extends access to systematic testing tools without
requiring any local installation.Retail Adoption RisingBesides TakeProfit, several other firms are active in browser‑ or cloud‑based algo tooling for retail and quant users. They include QuantConnect/LEAN, AlgoBulls, Algogene, and NautilusTrader, all of which offer strategy development and backtesting environments that push institutional‑style workflows into more accessible, often web‑delivered stacks.On the institutional side, quant firms report that legacy
market data and front‑office stacks already struggle with higher volumes,
longer trading hours and more venues, leaving many without robust backup data
or capacity for 2030‑level loads. On the retail side, platforms such as TakeProfit are pushing
cloud‑native
backtesting and scripting into the browser, giving self‑directed
traders easier access to systematic tools that once sat only inside banks and
large quant shops. Amid last year’s push to upgrade trading platforms, CFD Swiss for instance added cTrader on desktop, web, and mobile. The broker linked the move to improving user experience while meeting FSRA and global AML/CFT rules.
This article was written by Jared Kirui at www.financemagnates.com.
Over Half of Singapore CFD Traders Prefer One Platform: Brokers Race to Win Back Inactive Clients
As the CFD market in Singapore kicks back into growth,
providers need to ensure that their customer service management meets the
expectations of new and existing clients alike.Brokers Focus on Winning Back Inactive TradersBrokers cannot afford to get it wrong with previously
inactive traders returning to the market. First impressions last and Lorenzo
Vignati, associate research director at Investment Trends refers to a shift
from expansion to engagement in the Singapore market, where brokers must now
focus on winning back traders who stopped participating.Join the inaugural Finance
Magnates Singapore Summit 2026, which will bring together brokers,
fintechs, banks, EMIs, wealth managers, and hedge funds across APAC.Relationship management isn’t about sales; it’s about
responsiveness, transparency and consistency, offering clients access to
in-depth research, actionable insights and educational material to support the
trading journey, says Phil Waters, managing director for Asia Pacific and
emerging markets for OANDA.“That also means very clear communication around risk and
pricing,” he adds. “When clients return to the market after being inactive, the
experience they have in those first few weeks really determines whether they
stay engaged.”Lim Jian Yi, head of dealing, contract for difference at
Phillip Securities agrees that customer relationship management is highly
important to CFD traders
and notes that brokers can enhance client satisfaction through proactive
engagement - particularly during periods of heightened market volatility - as
well as by providing personalised service.“CFD traders in Singapore place a high premium on trust,
reliability and service quality,” says Andreas Wigström, managing director of
LMAX Global. “Satisfaction is driven by consistent execution, platform
stability and proactive communication.""Poor experiences or weak support -
rather than price alone - are often the deciding factors when traders choose to
switch providers.”Human Support Still Matters in a Digital Trading
EnvironmentIn an environment shaped by constantly evolving regulations
and risk considerations, traders in Singapore value human accessibility in a
digital platform age, suggests Ademola Olopade, group head of prime brokerage
and investment Solutions and CEO of Mauritius, CGS International Securities.“Margin communication, corporate actions and execution
transparency significantly influence long-term client retention,” he says. “The
three most important factors in customer relationship management are execution
reliability of the broker, clear and consistent risk frameworks and proactive
communication during
volatile markets.”Yaki Razmovich, managing director, eToro Singapore and Asia,
says his firm’s strategy includes providing both human and AI-driven
support through different channels (including help centre and live chat)
and an AI agent that helps customers explore the market, analyse their
portfolios, learn about investing and navigate the platform as well as a
loyalty programme.“A quality service is an important factor in determining
whether traders stay active,” agrees Robson Lee, assistant honorary secretary
of the Securities Investors Association (Singapore). “Brokers can ensure
customer satisfaction and boost retention rates by focusing on a combination of
reliable technology, competitive pricing, high-touch support and educational
resources.”Demand Grows for Unified Multi-Asset Trading PlatformsThe issue of platform stability arose in Investment Trends'
2025 Singapore Leverage Trading Report, which found that more than half of CFD
traders in Singapore want to manage all leveraged products through a single
platform.Waters observes that managing FX, indices, commodities and
share CFDs across multiple accounts adds friction and that a unified,
multi-asset environment makes funding simpler, reporting cleaner and risk
management more transparent.“That has been a big shift in recent years,” he says.
“Traders want institutional-style functionality but delivered through a single,
intuitive platform experience.”There is a clear and growing preference for managing all
leveraged products through a single, multi-asset
platform. Traders value the efficiency this brings in terms of simpler
funding, lower overall costs and a consolidated view of risk across positions.That is the view of Wigström, who says this shift is
accelerating consolidation in the market as platforms compete to offer broader,
more integrated solutions.Olopade refers to CFD traders in Singapore increasingly
seeking streamlined collateral management and real-time exposure tracking,
noting that managing US equities, commodities and other CFD products within a
unified margin framework improves capital efficiency and holistic portfolio
visibility and describing integrated multi-asset capability as a strong
competitive differentiator.Multi-asset trading is now a defining segment of Singapore’s
investor landscape, agrees Razmovich. “Many traders prefer to use a single
platform as it also means they just need to fund one account and grouping
uninvested funds can generate more interest.”What Singapore CFD Traders Look for in a BrokerIn terms of the factors CFD traders take into account when
choosing a trading platform, Waters reckons that trust is still the foundation
and that being regulated in Singapore matters.“After that, it comes down to execution quality, pricing
transparency and platform capability,” he says. “Traders want competitive spreads,
reliable fills and tools that allow them to manage risk properly, including
features like guaranteed stop-loss orders. Platform flexibility is also
important since some prefer TradingView’s interface, while others trade
algorithmically on MT4 or MT5.”Waters adds that traders in Singapore are highly rational in
how they choose a broker, looking at longevity, stability and whether the
broker has been through multiple market cycles.The range of asset classes and functionalities such as
charting tools and AI-powered insights are important considerations, suggests
Razmovich, while new or less experienced retail investors can benefit from
platforms that provide educational resources and allow them to learn and engage
with a community as they develop their portfolio.“Costs also matter, as spreads, commissions and other fees
can impact returns over time,” he says.“Finally, security and compliance are vital. Choosing a
trusted platform that understands the nuances and regulatory standards of your
country should be a high priority.”Singaporean traders typically balance cost against
reliability and institutional-grade infrastructure according to Olopade, while
Wigström says trust and regulatory credibility are the starting point, followed
closely by execution quality, transparency and total cost of trading.For inexperienced traders, the focus would be on the ease of
use of the trading platform and availability of educational resources, agrees
Lee.“Traders are likely to be more sensitive to the credibility
and legality of trading platforms, particularly when the Monetary Authority of
Singapore has been cracking down on unregulated platforms that offer high
leverage, trading bonuses or zero transparency to protect retail investors,” he
concludes.
This article was written by Paul Golden at www.financemagnates.com.
EC Markets Celebrates International Women’s Day Panel with Liverpool FC at AXA Melwood Training Centre
EC Markets participated in Liverpool FC’s International Women’s Day event on 4 March at the AXA Melwood Training Centre, the training ground of Liverpool FC Women.The event brought together leaders from sport, media, and business for a panel discussion centred around this year’s theme, “Give to Gain,” which explored the importance of mentorship, collaboration, and visible role models in shaping professional journeys.Representing EC Markets, Laoura Salveta, Head of Brand Partnerships, joined a panel of speakers that included Jenny Beacham, LFC’s CFO, Lisa Houten-Pool, Deputy CEO of Women in Football, and Harriet Prior, presenter at Sky Sports Football.The discussion focused on how mentorship, community support, and knowledge sharing can help individuals navigate their careers and create opportunities for future generations.Speaking during the panel, Salveta highlighted the importance of strong support networks and visible role models across industries.“Mentorship and community support play a fundamental role in shaping careers,” said Salveta. “Opportunities often come from the people who believe in you, guide you, and challenge you to grow. Events like this are important because they create space for those conversations and encourage the next generation to see what is possible.”The event also highlighted the work of the Liverpool FC Foundation and its community programmes focused on education, opportunity, and social inclusion.As part of its wider partnership with Liverpool FC, EC Markets continues to support initiatives that encourage collaboration, leadership development, and community engagement.To learn more about EC Markets and its global partnerships, click here.
This article was written by FM Contributors at www.financemagnates.com.
Tokenised Stocks Jump 30× as Platforms Explore 24/7 Equity Trading
A fast-growing market for tokenized equities is beginning to attract attention from trading platforms and brokerages looking for new revenue streams beyond traditional stock and CFD trading.
According to a report by Foresight Ventures, tokenized equities account for roughly $800 million in market capitalization, making them one of the fastest-growing segments of the broader real-world asset (RWA) market. The sector has expanded 30-fold year-to-date, with monthly trading volumes approaching $1.8 billion.While still small relative to global equity markets, the sector is emerging as a new way to provide continuous access to U.S. stocks.
For brokers, the appeal is straightforward: demand for global equity exposure outside traditional trading hours. Tokenized stocks allow 24/7 trading and near-instant settlement, making it possible to offer U.S. equity exposure to international clients without relying entirely on legacy brokerage infrastructure.The demand is partly driven by a younger generation of investors who expect markets to behave more like digital platforms. A recent Coinbase study found that many younger traders value continuous market access, multi-asset trading and social features over traditional advisory models.
A New Way to Access U.S. Stocks
Traditional equity markets operate within limited trading windows and often involve geographic barriers that make direct access difficult for many international investors. Tokenization attempts to remove these frictions by representing publicly traded shares as blockchain-based tokens that can trade continuously.
For trading platforms, this opens the possibility of round-the-clock trading in major U.S. equities, extending access to investors who cannot easily trade during U.S. market hours.
Early Experiments by Trading Platforms
Several firms are already experimenting with tokenized equities. The report estimates that Ondo Finance controls roughly 53% of the current tokenized stock market, while the Backed and xStocks ecosystem accounts for about 23%.
Traditional retail trading platforms have also begun testing the concept. Robinhood recently launched tokenized equities on the Arbitrum network, although withdrawals are restricted, effectively keeping the assets within its own platform.Large exchange operators are also moving in the same direction. Nasdaq has said approval for tokenized stocks is now a priority, with executives indicating the exchange is ready to respond to regulatory questions as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission evaluates the model
Regulation Remains the Key Constraint
For brokers considering entry into the market, regulation remains the main barrier.
Launching compliant tokenized equities typically requires multiple regulatory approvals, including broker-dealer registration, Alternative Trading System (ATS) licensing in the United States, and transfer-agent infrastructure.
In Europe, distribution may rely on frameworks under MiFID II and MiCA, while some issuance structures operate through offshore jurisdictions such as the British Virgin Islands or Jersey.
As a result, the ability to structure cross-border licensing has become one of the main competitive advantages for firms operating in tokenized equities.
With global equity markets valued at roughly $150 trillion, tokenised stocks remain a niche segment. But for brokers exploring new trading formats and extended market access, the rapid growth of the sector suggests the concept is moving from experimentation toward early commercial use.
This article was written by Tanya Chepkova at www.financemagnates.com.
Winklevoss Twins Move $130M Bitcoin while Gemini Launches US Prediction Markets
The founders of crypto exchange Gemini, Cameron and Tyler
Winklevoss, transferred roughly $130 million worth of Bitcoin to Gemini hot
wallets over the past week, according to blockchain analytics platform Arkham.Last December, Gemini
began offering prediction markets across the United States after receiving
a Designated Contract Market license from the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission. The product, launched through its subsidiary Gemini Titan,
allows users to trade yes-or-no contracts on events such as Bitcoin price
movements and regulatory outcomes. Gemini first applied for the license in
March 2020, completing a regulatory review that lasted more than five years.Gemini Wallet Moves Hint Potential SellingArkham said in a tweet that the transfers originated from
wallets it had identified as belonging to the twins. The platform noted the
moves were made “presumably to sell,” as Bitcoin trades near local highs.Bitcoin is currently trading around $70,720, up 4.4% on the
day, according to CoinGecko data.BREAKING: The Winklevoss Twins transferred $130M of BTC to Gemini Hot Wallets since last week, presumably to sell.The Winklevosses once owned 1% of the circulating BTC supply - and now continue to hold $764M of BTC. Their total PnL on BTC is currently $1.8B. pic.twitter.com/QBjZOgypOK— SwanDesk (@SwanDesk) March 10, 2026The Winklevosses have not publicly confirmed the purpose of
the transfers. Wallet movements to exchange-linked addresses are often seen by
traders as potential signals of selling, but they do not confirm completed spot
sales.Some commenters on Arkham’s post suggested the transfers may
have been intended to support OTC trades, rebalance custody, or provide
liquidity for the exchange.Twins’ Bitcoin Profits Total $1.8BArkham estimated the twins still hold about $764 million in
Bitcoin, with an aggregate profit-and-loss of around $1.8 billion. The figures
highlight the scale of their early positioning despite recent transfers.In September, Tyler Winklevoss predicted that Bitcoin could
“easily” trade at 10x its then-current value of $116,000.
This article was written by Tareq Sikder at www.financemagnates.com.
eToro CEO: “We’re in a Strong Position to Double Down on Crypto,” Adds Prediction Markets
“We just launched our non-custodial crypto wallet, which also includes prediction markets,” Yoni Assia revealed to Finance Magnates during a conversation at eToro’s Limassol office, adding that his company is “currently working with Polymarket but also talking with Kalshi.”Prediction Markets Are “Still in a Very Initial State”The entry to the prediction markets, however, did not come as a surprise, as Assia had earlier revealed his plans to enter these trending markets. The offering, meanwhile, is specifically under the newly launched non-custodial crypto wallet.Interestingly, this came at a time when eToro had been moving towards being a wealth management platform rather than only a short-term trading-centric one. It now appears to be keeping the two roles distinct.“One reason we placed it inside a non-custodial wallet, within the crypto ecosystem, is to keep it somewhat separate from where users manage most of their money and investments,” Assia said on the placement of the prediction markets. “Anyone who knows how to manage a crypto wallet, by definition, tends to have a higher risk appetite.”But he stressed that prediction markets are “still in very initial stages” and can’t say whether eToro customers want to trade in them. “We do know it is interesting and meaningful, but we still don’t know how significant it will be for customers.”“We Are in a Very Good Position Right Now to Double Down on Crypto”eToro, meanwhile, became one of the first brokers to dive into crypto, and now a significant portion of its revenue comes from digital asset trading. However, in the fourth quarter of 2024, the platform's crypto revenue dropped 72 per cent due to a decline in trading.“It's very similar to the whole industry,” Assia highlighted. “Every time crypto goes down, something interesting happens. Crypto behaves very differently from stocks or commodities. People who are in crypto tend to be very attached to it. When prices drop, the reaction is often: I’m not selling now. But at the same time, if an asset has just fallen 40%, many people also feel nervous about buying more. We see this pattern again and again.”“When crypto prices fall, activity in what we call 'crypto investing' drops sharply.”“It’s the opposite with stocks. When stocks go down, trading activity usually increases,” he added.Indeed, other crypto-heavy public platforms, including Robinhood and Coinbase, also reported declines in trading volume.“I think we are in a very good position right now to double down on crypto,” the eToro CEO added. “To double down and take market share. Crypto-only companies are currently in a much weaker position. This creates an opportunity for us right now.”The CEO of eToro just revealed how they profited $50 million by integrating Bitcoin into their treasury strategy.Crypto is here to stay, it’s a new kind of global capital market. pic.twitter.com/eGEwTbltTe— Kashif Raza (@simplykashif) May 16, 2025eToro's new services and offerings around crypto also show how the company is increasing its bets in the niche“We have launched a wallet and added crypto services, and we are rolling out more crypto products and additional coins. We are also offering incentives. For example, if someone transfers their crypto from another crypto company to eToro and moves $100,000, they receive a $1,000 gift in stocks.”“I also believe that people who are deeply involved in crypto should hold some stocks as well. Stocks tend to rise over time. Many people in the crypto space do not like hearing that, but I believe in stocks at least as much as I believe in crypto, if not more.”eToro also made a timely push to penetrate the European crypto market. It appears to have made Cyprus its base for its European operations, including both legacy products and crypto, and received a Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) license last year. “We are regulated by CySEC and have a very good relationship with them,” said Avi Sela, Chief Operating Officer at eToro, who has been with the company since 2007. “In fact, we were among the first companies to receive a MiFID licence and the first to obtain a MiCA licence.”With AI, “3 People Can Do 20 People’s Jobs in a Week”eToro itself went public last year, but the company's stock has lost about 50 per cent of its value since listing. In January, the company also announced it would lay off 7 per cent of its global workforce, citing the impact of automation and artificial intelligence (AI).Meanwhile, eToro was not alone in citing AI as the driver of the workforce reduction. Another big brokerage operator also blamed the technology after taking similar decisions.Read more: AI Takes Center Stage in Brokers’ Layoff Narratives“AI is restructuring every company,” Assia continued, “I also see it with us.”While speaking, Assia played around with the newest AI tools, and behind him in the meeting room was a diagram of eToro and how it may fit into the company’s structure.“At the development level, we see how this allows us to move much faster with much smaller teams," he added. "What used to take 20 people three months might now take three people a week.”Assia further revealed that building all of this requires a lot of infrastructure and “there are entire frameworks for how you build the structure and the systems so that AI can write in your style. The level of investment needed to get AI to write at the standard of the best developer in a company, within a specific infrastructure, is very high.”“I expect this investment will fall over time,” he said. “But right now, we have made a huge number of investments to build our infrastructure so AI can help us move faster.”Indeed, eToro has already launched its AI companion, Tori, and will also roll out its App Store soon. According to the firm, it has more than 800 of its Pro Investors (PIs) who have developed over 1,000 apps, some of which will be housed in the forthcoming App Store. “The second point, which in my view will take a bit more time, is that certain roles will start to change,” Assia added. “Traditionally, companies have separate functions: marketing, sales, product, and development. Now one person can potentially do much more. A single person can create the product, build the marketing around it, and connect it to the systems.”
This article was written by Yam Yehoshua at www.financemagnates.com.
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