BoE Governor Andrew Bailey recently raised questions about the need for a CBDC.
Meanwhile, the likelihood of a digital euro in the Eurozone gathers pace.
FM
The heated debate about introducing a central bank digital currency (CBDC) in the western world continues with fervor in 2023. Whilst many nations see great potential in digital fiat, several remain hostile or at least indifferent.
Despite the UK being touted as being more crypto-friendly since the premiership of Rishi Sunak began, all may not be what it seems.
This week, Bank of England’s Governor, Andrew Bailey, questioned the need for a digital pound in front of the parliament’s Treasury Select Committee. Meanwhile, its European counterparts appear to be pressing ahead with legislation that will pave the way for a digital euro.
So, with other nations forging ahead with CBDCs, can a post-Brexit Great Britain need a digital pound to stay competitive, or are others getting "carried away by the technology and the idea"?
BoE Governor Is Skeptical
“I think it’s an open question whether a wholesale digital central bank currency is needed because we’ve got a wholesale central bank money settlement system with a major upgrade,” Bailey said.
Moreover, Bailey was concerned over the retail use of the digital pound as the British central bank does not have any plans to abolish cash circulation. “We have to be very clear what problem we are trying to solve here before we get carried away by the technology and the idea,” he said, questioning the “need [for] this sort of upgrade at the moment.”
Check out the FMLS22 interview with UK MP Lisa Cameron, discussing "Crypto Hub in the Making."
The UK Is in Preparation for a CBDC
The HM Treasury and the Bank of England formed a joint task force in 2021. The UK Prime Minister Chancellor Rishi Sunak, who was then Chancellor, even unofficially coined the term “Britcoin” for a digital pound.
On top of that, the UK central bank is studying the feasibility of launching a digital fiat with multiple other global counterparts.
Is the Governor Right or Wrong?
Meanwhile, Bailey is not alone in questioning the need for a digital pound. Last year, an all-party committee of the United Kingdom’s House of Lords warned about the concerns of financial instability from the proposed CBDC launch.
“We took evidence from a variety of witnesses, and none of them were able to give us a compelling reason for why the UK needed a central bank digital currency,” Lord Forsyth of Drumlean, the Chair of the Economic Affairs Committee, said earlier. “The concept seems to present a lot of risk for very little reward. We concluded that the idea was a solution in search of a problem.”
Lars Holst, Founder & CEO, GCEX
However, the industry leaders have a different opinion of a potential digital pound than the ones of the BoE Governor or the Economic Affairs Committee at the House of Lords.
“Banks are struggling to keep up with the pace of change and are worried about being left behind. They currently benefit from huge revenue streams and want to protect the status quo, at any price,” Lars Holst, the Founder & CEO at GCEX, said to Finance Magnates. “However, the UK has one of the most inefficient retail banking systems in the world. The Bank of England needs to embrace innovation and find new ways to give consumers and corporates easy access to payments. The Digital Pound would propel the UK forwards.”
Tom Higgins, CEO, Gold-i
“Confidence in sterling and the UK economy isn’t exactly at its highest at the moment, but we won’t change anything tomorrow if we continue to do what we did yesterday. The UK needs change.”
Tom Higgins, the Founder & CEO of Gold-i and Crypto Switch, said: “If the UK wishes to be a crypto powerhouse, then we should embark on key digital asset technological advancements as competing regions are… If we, the UK, delay, then we will never fulfill this dream of being dominant in digital assets.”
Eurozone Is All for a Digital Euro
While the top central bank official of the UK is skeptical about the digital pound, the lawmakers in the eurozone are seemingly in favor of bringing in a digital euro. The European Union is expected to publish a draft law this year to accommodate the digital euro into the existing laws.
“The Eurogroup considers that the introduction of a digital euro, as well as its main features and design choices, requires political decisions that should be discussed and taken at the political level,” the EU ministers said in a joint statement. Moreover, they believe that a digital euro is going to complement, and not replace, the euro circulation.
Higgins added: “The EU is very well advanced with its plans for developing a CBDC, and if the UK delays, the EU will get there first. I expect that the EU will look at early 2024 to launch, which is not far away.”
Holst also pointed out that the “payment and clearing is increasingly moving out of the UK to the Eurozone [and] the UK will be left even further behind if there is a digital euro and not a digital pound.”
However, when it comes to digital fiat development, Asian countries are far ahead. China looks to be at the forefront with its mass digital yuan pilots. Other developed jurisdictions like the UAE, Singapore, and Hong Kong are also advancing towards developing digital fiats.
“I think we’ll see this kind of innovation coming from the UAE or an Asian country such as Singapore or Hong Kong before we see it in a western economy. I think we’ll see the first digital fiat within the next two years, possibly even by the end of 2023,” said Holst.
Simone Mazzuca, CEO & Founder, Wallex
However, the industry looks confused with the launch timeline of digital fiat without proper guidance from the regulators.
“I see that that the process of launching a central bank digital currency is long and has many aspects to consider,” said Simone Mazzuca, the CEO and Founder of Wallex. “So far, most governments are exploring the idea of a digital currency and working on it. I do not see it happening though any time soon. I believe that what is more likely, that governments and central authorities work with private digital currency issuers.”
The Bank of England Governor is not alone in being skeptical of digital fiat. However, a significant part of the world, including the eurozone, is seeing potential in launching a CBDC; nothing is finalized, though. So the British central bank now has to decide whether to keep its faith in the existing currency circulation or take a leap toward technological-advancement and start preparations for a digital pound, at least the pilots
The heated debate about introducing a central bank digital currency (CBDC) in the western world continues with fervor in 2023. Whilst many nations see great potential in digital fiat, several remain hostile or at least indifferent.
Despite the UK being touted as being more crypto-friendly since the premiership of Rishi Sunak began, all may not be what it seems.
This week, Bank of England’s Governor, Andrew Bailey, questioned the need for a digital pound in front of the parliament’s Treasury Select Committee. Meanwhile, its European counterparts appear to be pressing ahead with legislation that will pave the way for a digital euro.
So, with other nations forging ahead with CBDCs, can a post-Brexit Great Britain need a digital pound to stay competitive, or are others getting "carried away by the technology and the idea"?
BoE Governor Is Skeptical
“I think it’s an open question whether a wholesale digital central bank currency is needed because we’ve got a wholesale central bank money settlement system with a major upgrade,” Bailey said.
Moreover, Bailey was concerned over the retail use of the digital pound as the British central bank does not have any plans to abolish cash circulation. “We have to be very clear what problem we are trying to solve here before we get carried away by the technology and the idea,” he said, questioning the “need [for] this sort of upgrade at the moment.”
Check out the FMLS22 interview with UK MP Lisa Cameron, discussing "Crypto Hub in the Making."
The UK Is in Preparation for a CBDC
The HM Treasury and the Bank of England formed a joint task force in 2021. The UK Prime Minister Chancellor Rishi Sunak, who was then Chancellor, even unofficially coined the term “Britcoin” for a digital pound.
On top of that, the UK central bank is studying the feasibility of launching a digital fiat with multiple other global counterparts.
Is the Governor Right or Wrong?
Meanwhile, Bailey is not alone in questioning the need for a digital pound. Last year, an all-party committee of the United Kingdom’s House of Lords warned about the concerns of financial instability from the proposed CBDC launch.
“We took evidence from a variety of witnesses, and none of them were able to give us a compelling reason for why the UK needed a central bank digital currency,” Lord Forsyth of Drumlean, the Chair of the Economic Affairs Committee, said earlier. “The concept seems to present a lot of risk for very little reward. We concluded that the idea was a solution in search of a problem.”
Lars Holst, Founder & CEO, GCEX
However, the industry leaders have a different opinion of a potential digital pound than the ones of the BoE Governor or the Economic Affairs Committee at the House of Lords.
“Banks are struggling to keep up with the pace of change and are worried about being left behind. They currently benefit from huge revenue streams and want to protect the status quo, at any price,” Lars Holst, the Founder & CEO at GCEX, said to Finance Magnates. “However, the UK has one of the most inefficient retail banking systems in the world. The Bank of England needs to embrace innovation and find new ways to give consumers and corporates easy access to payments. The Digital Pound would propel the UK forwards.”
Tom Higgins, CEO, Gold-i
“Confidence in sterling and the UK economy isn’t exactly at its highest at the moment, but we won’t change anything tomorrow if we continue to do what we did yesterday. The UK needs change.”
Tom Higgins, the Founder & CEO of Gold-i and Crypto Switch, said: “If the UK wishes to be a crypto powerhouse, then we should embark on key digital asset technological advancements as competing regions are… If we, the UK, delay, then we will never fulfill this dream of being dominant in digital assets.”
Eurozone Is All for a Digital Euro
While the top central bank official of the UK is skeptical about the digital pound, the lawmakers in the eurozone are seemingly in favor of bringing in a digital euro. The European Union is expected to publish a draft law this year to accommodate the digital euro into the existing laws.
“The Eurogroup considers that the introduction of a digital euro, as well as its main features and design choices, requires political decisions that should be discussed and taken at the political level,” the EU ministers said in a joint statement. Moreover, they believe that a digital euro is going to complement, and not replace, the euro circulation.
Higgins added: “The EU is very well advanced with its plans for developing a CBDC, and if the UK delays, the EU will get there first. I expect that the EU will look at early 2024 to launch, which is not far away.”
Holst also pointed out that the “payment and clearing is increasingly moving out of the UK to the Eurozone [and] the UK will be left even further behind if there is a digital euro and not a digital pound.”
However, when it comes to digital fiat development, Asian countries are far ahead. China looks to be at the forefront with its mass digital yuan pilots. Other developed jurisdictions like the UAE, Singapore, and Hong Kong are also advancing towards developing digital fiats.
“I think we’ll see this kind of innovation coming from the UAE or an Asian country such as Singapore or Hong Kong before we see it in a western economy. I think we’ll see the first digital fiat within the next two years, possibly even by the end of 2023,” said Holst.
Simone Mazzuca, CEO & Founder, Wallex
However, the industry looks confused with the launch timeline of digital fiat without proper guidance from the regulators.
“I see that that the process of launching a central bank digital currency is long and has many aspects to consider,” said Simone Mazzuca, the CEO and Founder of Wallex. “So far, most governments are exploring the idea of a digital currency and working on it. I do not see it happening though any time soon. I believe that what is more likely, that governments and central authorities work with private digital currency issuers.”
The Bank of England Governor is not alone in being skeptical of digital fiat. However, a significant part of the world, including the eurozone, is seeing potential in launching a CBDC; nothing is finalized, though. So the British central bank now has to decide whether to keep its faith in the existing currency circulation or take a leap toward technological-advancement and start preparations for a digital pound, at least the pilots
Arnab Shome is an electronics engineer-turned-financial editor. He holds a Bachelor of Technology from the National Institute of Technology, Agartala. He entered the retail trading industry about a decade ago, covering the cryptocurrency market for Finance Magnates, and later expanded his coverage to include forex and CFDs as well.
His work at Finance Magnates includes C-level interviews, data-driven analysis, opinion pieces, and scoops of industry exclusives. He also contributes to Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry report.
Area of coverage:
1. CFD broker-related news
2. Industry-related Regulatory updates and developments
3. New retail trading trends
4. Prop trading industry updates
5. Executive interviews
Education:
Bachelor of Technology - National Institute of Technology, Agartala (India)
Retail Traders Get Tokenized US IPO Allocations at Offer Price as Payward Expands xStocks
Featured Videos
From Rewards to Retention: The 5 Loyalty Program Mistakes Brokers Need To Avoid (Case Study)
From Rewards to Retention: The 5 Loyalty Program Mistakes Brokers Need To Avoid (Case Study)
From Rewards to Retention: The 5 Loyalty Program Mistakes Brokers Need To Avoid (Case Study)
From Rewards to Retention: The 5 Loyalty Program Mistakes Brokers Need To Avoid (Case Study)
Acquisition is getting more expensive. Most brokers already know that. The harder question is what happens after the client funds the account.
This session looks at how broker loyalty programmes are moving from “nice-to-have rewards” into a serious retention layer inside the client portal.
In this session, Desmond Leong, CEO of Returning.AI, will break down the practical mechanics behind high-performing broker loyalty programmes: what to reward, what not to reward, how onshore and offshore entities need different incentive structures, what belongs in the rewards store, and how brokers can recycle reward budgets back into trading value instead of letting them disappear as pure cost.
The talk will cover common mistakes brokers make when launching loyalty programmes, including copying retail-style rewards, ignoring jurisdictional constraints, over-relying on bonuses, failing to connect rewards to lifecycle stages, and measuring vanity engagement instead of retention, LTV, CAC payback, deposits, and active trading behaviour.
Attendees will leave with a clear do-and-don’t framework they can use to pressure-test their own loyalty strategy.
Why loyalty is no longer a “nice-to-have” marketing feature for brokers
The building blocks of any loyalty program and what they mean: points, tiers, missions, stores, leaderboards, boosters, and cashback-style mechanics
Understanding of how key regulators read loyalty incentives and where the compliance lines are
What should go in the rewards store, and what quietly destroys ROI
How trading credits, rebates, VIP perks, education, and service benefits can recycle value back into the brokerage
The 5 mistakes brokers should avoid when building or buying a loyalty programme
Real figures from a live deployment: what moved in daily activity, tier progression, and trader spend
Acquisition is getting more expensive. Most brokers already know that. The harder question is what happens after the client funds the account.
This session looks at how broker loyalty programmes are moving from “nice-to-have rewards” into a serious retention layer inside the client portal.
In this session, Desmond Leong, CEO of Returning.AI, will break down the practical mechanics behind high-performing broker loyalty programmes: what to reward, what not to reward, how onshore and offshore entities need different incentive structures, what belongs in the rewards store, and how brokers can recycle reward budgets back into trading value instead of letting them disappear as pure cost.
The talk will cover common mistakes brokers make when launching loyalty programmes, including copying retail-style rewards, ignoring jurisdictional constraints, over-relying on bonuses, failing to connect rewards to lifecycle stages, and measuring vanity engagement instead of retention, LTV, CAC payback, deposits, and active trading behaviour.
Attendees will leave with a clear do-and-don’t framework they can use to pressure-test their own loyalty strategy.
Why loyalty is no longer a “nice-to-have” marketing feature for brokers
The building blocks of any loyalty program and what they mean: points, tiers, missions, stores, leaderboards, boosters, and cashback-style mechanics
Understanding of how key regulators read loyalty incentives and where the compliance lines are
What should go in the rewards store, and what quietly destroys ROI
How trading credits, rebates, VIP perks, education, and service benefits can recycle value back into the brokerage
The 5 mistakes brokers should avoid when building or buying a loyalty programme
Real figures from a live deployment: what moved in daily activity, tier progression, and trader spend
Acquisition is getting more expensive. Most brokers already know that. The harder question is what happens after the client funds the account.
This session looks at how broker loyalty programmes are moving from “nice-to-have rewards” into a serious retention layer inside the client portal.
In this session, Desmond Leong, CEO of Returning.AI, will break down the practical mechanics behind high-performing broker loyalty programmes: what to reward, what not to reward, how onshore and offshore entities need different incentive structures, what belongs in the rewards store, and how brokers can recycle reward budgets back into trading value instead of letting them disappear as pure cost.
The talk will cover common mistakes brokers make when launching loyalty programmes, including copying retail-style rewards, ignoring jurisdictional constraints, over-relying on bonuses, failing to connect rewards to lifecycle stages, and measuring vanity engagement instead of retention, LTV, CAC payback, deposits, and active trading behaviour.
Attendees will leave with a clear do-and-don’t framework they can use to pressure-test their own loyalty strategy.
Why loyalty is no longer a “nice-to-have” marketing feature for brokers
The building blocks of any loyalty program and what they mean: points, tiers, missions, stores, leaderboards, boosters, and cashback-style mechanics
Understanding of how key regulators read loyalty incentives and where the compliance lines are
What should go in the rewards store, and what quietly destroys ROI
How trading credits, rebates, VIP perks, education, and service benefits can recycle value back into the brokerage
The 5 mistakes brokers should avoid when building or buying a loyalty programme
Real figures from a live deployment: what moved in daily activity, tier progression, and trader spend
Acquisition is getting more expensive. Most brokers already know that. The harder question is what happens after the client funds the account.
This session looks at how broker loyalty programmes are moving from “nice-to-have rewards” into a serious retention layer inside the client portal.
In this session, Desmond Leong, CEO of Returning.AI, will break down the practical mechanics behind high-performing broker loyalty programmes: what to reward, what not to reward, how onshore and offshore entities need different incentive structures, what belongs in the rewards store, and how brokers can recycle reward budgets back into trading value instead of letting them disappear as pure cost.
The talk will cover common mistakes brokers make when launching loyalty programmes, including copying retail-style rewards, ignoring jurisdictional constraints, over-relying on bonuses, failing to connect rewards to lifecycle stages, and measuring vanity engagement instead of retention, LTV, CAC payback, deposits, and active trading behaviour.
Attendees will leave with a clear do-and-don’t framework they can use to pressure-test their own loyalty strategy.
Why loyalty is no longer a “nice-to-have” marketing feature for brokers
The building blocks of any loyalty program and what they mean: points, tiers, missions, stores, leaderboards, boosters, and cashback-style mechanics
Understanding of how key regulators read loyalty incentives and where the compliance lines are
What should go in the rewards store, and what quietly destroys ROI
How trading credits, rebates, VIP perks, education, and service benefits can recycle value back into the brokerage
The 5 mistakes brokers should avoid when building or buying a loyalty programme
Real figures from a live deployment: what moved in daily activity, tier progression, and trader spend
Stablecoins from Experimentation to Implementation
Stablecoins from Experimentation to Implementation
Stablecoins from Experimentation to Implementation
Stablecoins from Experimentation to Implementation
Stablecoins from Experimentation to Implementation
Stablecoins from Experimentation to Implementation
With over $300 billion in stablecoins now in circulation and APAC regulators moving from frameworks to enforcement, the conversation has shifted.
Held in partnership with 8Circle, this session brings together the builders of new payment rails and the institutions putting them to work.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which stablecoin use cases have cleared proof of concept and are now operating at scale in APAC
Understanding of what the MAS Payment Services Act and Hong Kong's fiat stablecoin licensing regime mean for brokers and payment providers in practice
Insight into the infrastructure gaps firms most commonly underestimate before going live
Perspective on where the next wave of adoption is heading and what existing systems need to accommodate
With over $300 billion in stablecoins now in circulation and APAC regulators moving from frameworks to enforcement, the conversation has shifted.
Held in partnership with 8Circle, this session brings together the builders of new payment rails and the institutions putting them to work.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which stablecoin use cases have cleared proof of concept and are now operating at scale in APAC
Understanding of what the MAS Payment Services Act and Hong Kong's fiat stablecoin licensing regime mean for brokers and payment providers in practice
Insight into the infrastructure gaps firms most commonly underestimate before going live
Perspective on where the next wave of adoption is heading and what existing systems need to accommodate
With over $300 billion in stablecoins now in circulation and APAC regulators moving from frameworks to enforcement, the conversation has shifted.
Held in partnership with 8Circle, this session brings together the builders of new payment rails and the institutions putting them to work.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which stablecoin use cases have cleared proof of concept and are now operating at scale in APAC
Understanding of what the MAS Payment Services Act and Hong Kong's fiat stablecoin licensing regime mean for brokers and payment providers in practice
Insight into the infrastructure gaps firms most commonly underestimate before going live
Perspective on where the next wave of adoption is heading and what existing systems need to accommodate
With over $300 billion in stablecoins now in circulation and APAC regulators moving from frameworks to enforcement, the conversation has shifted.
Held in partnership with 8Circle, this session brings together the builders of new payment rails and the institutions putting them to work.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which stablecoin use cases have cleared proof of concept and are now operating at scale in APAC
Understanding of what the MAS Payment Services Act and Hong Kong's fiat stablecoin licensing regime mean for brokers and payment providers in practice
Insight into the infrastructure gaps firms most commonly underestimate before going live
Perspective on where the next wave of adoption is heading and what existing systems need to accommodate
With over $300 billion in stablecoins now in circulation and APAC regulators moving from frameworks to enforcement, the conversation has shifted.
Held in partnership with 8Circle, this session brings together the builders of new payment rails and the institutions putting them to work.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which stablecoin use cases have cleared proof of concept and are now operating at scale in APAC
Understanding of what the MAS Payment Services Act and Hong Kong's fiat stablecoin licensing regime mean for brokers and payment providers in practice
Insight into the infrastructure gaps firms most commonly underestimate before going live
Perspective on where the next wave of adoption is heading and what existing systems need to accommodate
With over $300 billion in stablecoins now in circulation and APAC regulators moving from frameworks to enforcement, the conversation has shifted.
Held in partnership with 8Circle, this session brings together the builders of new payment rails and the institutions putting them to work.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which stablecoin use cases have cleared proof of concept and are now operating at scale in APAC
Understanding of what the MAS Payment Services Act and Hong Kong's fiat stablecoin licensing regime mean for brokers and payment providers in practice
Insight into the infrastructure gaps firms most commonly underestimate before going live
Perspective on where the next wave of adoption is heading and what existing systems need to accommodate
Overfunded or Underregulated? The APAC Prop Trading Story
Overfunded or Underregulated? The APAC Prop Trading Story
Overfunded or Underregulated? The APAC Prop Trading Story
Overfunded or Underregulated? The APAC Prop Trading Story
Overfunded or Underregulated? The APAC Prop Trading Story
Overfunded or Underregulated? The APAC Prop Trading Story
APAC now accounts for nearly half of global prop firm sign-up growth, with emerging markets pulling away from established hubs. The pass rates, however, tell a different story.
This session brings together prop firms, regional brokers, and specialists to examine where the APAC growth story holds and where it doesn't.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which APAC markets are generating real funded trader volume versus registration noise, and why that gap matters more than the headline figures
Understanding of how mobile-first acquisition funnels and grey-market legacies complicate KYC, payout infrastructure, and regulatory standing across jurisdictions
Insight into how India, Vietnam, and Singapore are each handling the shift from offshore leverage workarounds to licensed operations
Perspective on whether the low-barrier, high-volume prop model can survive regional professionalization without hollowing out its core audience
APAC now accounts for nearly half of global prop firm sign-up growth, with emerging markets pulling away from established hubs. The pass rates, however, tell a different story.
This session brings together prop firms, regional brokers, and specialists to examine where the APAC growth story holds and where it doesn't.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which APAC markets are generating real funded trader volume versus registration noise, and why that gap matters more than the headline figures
Understanding of how mobile-first acquisition funnels and grey-market legacies complicate KYC, payout infrastructure, and regulatory standing across jurisdictions
Insight into how India, Vietnam, and Singapore are each handling the shift from offshore leverage workarounds to licensed operations
Perspective on whether the low-barrier, high-volume prop model can survive regional professionalization without hollowing out its core audience
APAC now accounts for nearly half of global prop firm sign-up growth, with emerging markets pulling away from established hubs. The pass rates, however, tell a different story.
This session brings together prop firms, regional brokers, and specialists to examine where the APAC growth story holds and where it doesn't.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which APAC markets are generating real funded trader volume versus registration noise, and why that gap matters more than the headline figures
Understanding of how mobile-first acquisition funnels and grey-market legacies complicate KYC, payout infrastructure, and regulatory standing across jurisdictions
Insight into how India, Vietnam, and Singapore are each handling the shift from offshore leverage workarounds to licensed operations
Perspective on whether the low-barrier, high-volume prop model can survive regional professionalization without hollowing out its core audience
APAC now accounts for nearly half of global prop firm sign-up growth, with emerging markets pulling away from established hubs. The pass rates, however, tell a different story.
This session brings together prop firms, regional brokers, and specialists to examine where the APAC growth story holds and where it doesn't.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which APAC markets are generating real funded trader volume versus registration noise, and why that gap matters more than the headline figures
Understanding of how mobile-first acquisition funnels and grey-market legacies complicate KYC, payout infrastructure, and regulatory standing across jurisdictions
Insight into how India, Vietnam, and Singapore are each handling the shift from offshore leverage workarounds to licensed operations
Perspective on whether the low-barrier, high-volume prop model can survive regional professionalization without hollowing out its core audience
APAC now accounts for nearly half of global prop firm sign-up growth, with emerging markets pulling away from established hubs. The pass rates, however, tell a different story.
This session brings together prop firms, regional brokers, and specialists to examine where the APAC growth story holds and where it doesn't.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which APAC markets are generating real funded trader volume versus registration noise, and why that gap matters more than the headline figures
Understanding of how mobile-first acquisition funnels and grey-market legacies complicate KYC, payout infrastructure, and regulatory standing across jurisdictions
Insight into how India, Vietnam, and Singapore are each handling the shift from offshore leverage workarounds to licensed operations
Perspective on whether the low-barrier, high-volume prop model can survive regional professionalization without hollowing out its core audience
APAC now accounts for nearly half of global prop firm sign-up growth, with emerging markets pulling away from established hubs. The pass rates, however, tell a different story.
This session brings together prop firms, regional brokers, and specialists to examine where the APAC growth story holds and where it doesn't.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which APAC markets are generating real funded trader volume versus registration noise, and why that gap matters more than the headline figures
Understanding of how mobile-first acquisition funnels and grey-market legacies complicate KYC, payout infrastructure, and regulatory standing across jurisdictions
Insight into how India, Vietnam, and Singapore are each handling the shift from offshore leverage workarounds to licensed operations
Perspective on whether the low-barrier, high-volume prop model can survive regional professionalization without hollowing out its core audience
Trading Tales: Stories from The Floor
Trading Tales: Stories from The Floor
Trading Tales: Stories from The Floor
Trading Tales: Stories from The Floor
Trading Tales: Stories from The Floor
Trading Tales: Stories from The Floor
Join seasoned financial markets professionals as they reflect on life spent in front of tickets, phones, and later screens, and the stories they’ve accumulated on sales and trading floors.
You can count on an unorthodox blend of candid perspectives and off-the-record tales that novices won’t get, and compliance won’t approve.
Attend at your own risk.
What to expect:
A deeper grasp of the evolution that Singapore's FX market has gone through
Practical wisdom on regional market peculiarities and FX careers
Unforgettable anecdotes that bring the Lion City's trading culture to life
Join seasoned financial markets professionals as they reflect on life spent in front of tickets, phones, and later screens, and the stories they’ve accumulated on sales and trading floors.
You can count on an unorthodox blend of candid perspectives and off-the-record tales that novices won’t get, and compliance won’t approve.
Attend at your own risk.
What to expect:
A deeper grasp of the evolution that Singapore's FX market has gone through
Practical wisdom on regional market peculiarities and FX careers
Unforgettable anecdotes that bring the Lion City's trading culture to life
Join seasoned financial markets professionals as they reflect on life spent in front of tickets, phones, and later screens, and the stories they’ve accumulated on sales and trading floors.
You can count on an unorthodox blend of candid perspectives and off-the-record tales that novices won’t get, and compliance won’t approve.
Attend at your own risk.
What to expect:
A deeper grasp of the evolution that Singapore's FX market has gone through
Practical wisdom on regional market peculiarities and FX careers
Unforgettable anecdotes that bring the Lion City's trading culture to life
Join seasoned financial markets professionals as they reflect on life spent in front of tickets, phones, and later screens, and the stories they’ve accumulated on sales and trading floors.
You can count on an unorthodox blend of candid perspectives and off-the-record tales that novices won’t get, and compliance won’t approve.
Attend at your own risk.
What to expect:
A deeper grasp of the evolution that Singapore's FX market has gone through
Practical wisdom on regional market peculiarities and FX careers
Unforgettable anecdotes that bring the Lion City's trading culture to life
Join seasoned financial markets professionals as they reflect on life spent in front of tickets, phones, and later screens, and the stories they’ve accumulated on sales and trading floors.
You can count on an unorthodox blend of candid perspectives and off-the-record tales that novices won’t get, and compliance won’t approve.
Attend at your own risk.
What to expect:
A deeper grasp of the evolution that Singapore's FX market has gone through
Practical wisdom on regional market peculiarities and FX careers
Unforgettable anecdotes that bring the Lion City's trading culture to life
Join seasoned financial markets professionals as they reflect on life spent in front of tickets, phones, and later screens, and the stories they’ve accumulated on sales and trading floors.
You can count on an unorthodox blend of candid perspectives and off-the-record tales that novices won’t get, and compliance won’t approve.
Attend at your own risk.
What to expect:
A deeper grasp of the evolution that Singapore's FX market has gone through
Practical wisdom on regional market peculiarities and FX careers
Unforgettable anecdotes that bring the Lion City's trading culture to life
The Future of Finance Will be Tokenised
The Future of Finance Will be Tokenised
The Future of Finance Will be Tokenised
The Future of Finance Will be Tokenised
The Future of Finance Will be Tokenised
The Future of Finance Will be Tokenised
Tokenized assets are all the rage across retail and institutional trading, but adoption might hit unique roadblocks for each.
This session gathers builders and architects practitioners to break down questions of infrastructure, ownership, and settlement that will define the next wave of asset tokenization.
Attendees will walk away with:
Institutional perspective on tokenized assets and what they unlock from bonds to debt
Understanding which paths are available for retail brokers and their compliance and product implications
Insight into where APAC regulators stand on tokenized securities
Tokenized assets are all the rage across retail and institutional trading, but adoption might hit unique roadblocks for each.
This session gathers builders and architects practitioners to break down questions of infrastructure, ownership, and settlement that will define the next wave of asset tokenization.
Attendees will walk away with:
Institutional perspective on tokenized assets and what they unlock from bonds to debt
Understanding which paths are available for retail brokers and their compliance and product implications
Insight into where APAC regulators stand on tokenized securities
Tokenized assets are all the rage across retail and institutional trading, but adoption might hit unique roadblocks for each.
This session gathers builders and architects practitioners to break down questions of infrastructure, ownership, and settlement that will define the next wave of asset tokenization.
Attendees will walk away with:
Institutional perspective on tokenized assets and what they unlock from bonds to debt
Understanding which paths are available for retail brokers and their compliance and product implications
Insight into where APAC regulators stand on tokenized securities
Tokenized assets are all the rage across retail and institutional trading, but adoption might hit unique roadblocks for each.
This session gathers builders and architects practitioners to break down questions of infrastructure, ownership, and settlement that will define the next wave of asset tokenization.
Attendees will walk away with:
Institutional perspective on tokenized assets and what they unlock from bonds to debt
Understanding which paths are available for retail brokers and their compliance and product implications
Insight into where APAC regulators stand on tokenized securities
Tokenized assets are all the rage across retail and institutional trading, but adoption might hit unique roadblocks for each.
This session gathers builders and architects practitioners to break down questions of infrastructure, ownership, and settlement that will define the next wave of asset tokenization.
Attendees will walk away with:
Institutional perspective on tokenized assets and what they unlock from bonds to debt
Understanding which paths are available for retail brokers and their compliance and product implications
Insight into where APAC regulators stand on tokenized securities
Tokenized assets are all the rage across retail and institutional trading, but adoption might hit unique roadblocks for each.
This session gathers builders and architects practitioners to break down questions of infrastructure, ownership, and settlement that will define the next wave of asset tokenization.
Attendees will walk away with:
Institutional perspective on tokenized assets and what they unlock from bonds to debt
Understanding which paths are available for retail brokers and their compliance and product implications
Insight into where APAC regulators stand on tokenized securities