The FCA marketing regulations will come into effect on 8th October.
Violation of the rules will be a criminal offense, leading to up to 2 years of imprisonment.
Following the implementation of the Consumer Duty rules in the United Kingdom, crypto providers in the country are now required to comply with a fresh set of regulations around promotions, the deadline for which is approaching.
From 8th October, the
coverage of the UK’s Financial Services and Markets Act will be extended to “qualifying crypto assets”, requiring crypto firms to follow several sets of rules.
Although the overall rules look brief, there are many details crypto companies need to consider, otherwise they will risk committing a criminal offense.
UK's New Crypto Marketing Rules
Alexander Culley, Founder and CEO at C&G Regulatory Solutions
The
FCA supervises and enforces the implementation of the UK’s financial promotion
regime. Lucy Castledine, the Director of Consumer Investments, has warned that: “Come
8th October, we will be taking action against firms illegally
marketing to UK consumers.”
an authorised persons
approving the promotion (known as a “section 21 approver”);
a crypto firm registered
under the Money Laundering Regulations communicating its own promotion; or
the promotion otherwise
complies with the condition of an exemption in the FPO.
Failure to comply with the requirements
of the extended financial promotions regime could lead to restrictions on the company, inclusion in the warning list, and order to take down websites. In extreme cases, the violations could lead to the imprisonment of the responsible person for up to two years or an
unlimited fine, or both.
Lewis Gurry, Director at C&G Regulatory Solutions
🚨 Final Warning from UK FCA 🚨
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is taking a tough stance on crypto promotions! 📣
As of Oct. 8, all firms marketing crypto assets to UK consumers must comply with new regulations. However, only 24 out of 150 firms responded to the FCA's…
The incoming rules will apply to all cryptocurrency companies, local or offshore, offering services in the UK. Although the overall rules cover a broad area, companies need to consider minute details. Some of the potential challenging elements of these rules are:
1. Applicable to all crypto firms promoting "qualifying crypto assets" to UK
consumers: Given that the
internet transcends international borders, there is a serious risk that people based outside the UK will be caught out with the UK’s financial promotion
rules for crypto assets. If a non-UK natural or
legal person communicates a financial promotion to a UK consumer without using
one of the four channels stipulated in the regime, this would result in the
commission of a criminal offence.
The key consideration for any crypto firm, whether based inside or outside the UK, should be if a UK consumer could access
and respond to its crypto asset promotion.
To avoid any violations, these companies should either prevent UK consumers from
accessing those communications post 8th October 2023; or adhere to one of the four guidelines of the UK government.
2. The financial promotion regime is technology “neutral”: Materials
distributed by any medium are capable of being deemed financial promotions subject
to the rules. This includes communication by website, apps such as WhatsApp and
Telegram, voice campaigns, social media campaigns as well as traditional print
media. It is worth making an inventory of how, when and where promotions are
being made.
3. A payment or electronic
money institution cannot communicate or approve financial promotions: Under the incoming rules, companies will
need to make arrangements to communicate crypto asset promotions through one of
the four permitted routes previously mentioned above.
4. Brand advertising risks should be evaluated: It is quite
common for brokerages to partner with sports clubs to raise awareness of their
brand. Normally, “pure” brand advertising falls outside the scope of the FCA’s financial
promotion rules. However, if materials do more than merely provide a logo,
firm’s name and contact information then there is an increased risk that they
will be caught by the financial promotion rules. Accordingly, if relevant, it
is worth reviewing the specific wording included in sponsorship campaigns.
5. Firms, not the creator or issuer of an underlying
crypto asset, should conduct thorough due diligence before promoting: Companies need to check whether claims of the crypto asset issuer promoted by them are credible. Some of the areas of concerns are environmental, social
and governance (ESG) features, prospects of success, legal and beneficial
ownership; and vulnerability to
operational, technological and cyber risks.
6. Do not assume that stablecoins are stable: If firms can’t
evidence a claim then they should not make it, particularly if a so-called “stable” coin
is “algorithmic” or “crypto-backed”. Equally, if they can evidence a claim then
test that it is capable of being understood by the target market.
7. Ensure that a senior manager who does not work in compliance
spearheads the firm’s implementation project: This will
increase the prospect of the project being delivered on time and counter any
perceptions of compliance being a “one off, tick box” exercise.
8. Consumers will not receive protection from the Financial
Ombudsman Service (FOS) or the Financial Services Compensation Scheme
(FSCS): The entry into
force of the financial promotion regime should not be received, or communicated
to customers, as reducing the inherently high risk and largely unregulated
nature of crypto asset trading.
9.Ensuring that the appropriateness tests are appropriate: If a firm
intends to make a direct offer financial promotion to a consumer, it will need
to perform a robust appropriateness assessment in advance. This is to ensure
that the consumer has the necessary knowledge and experience to understand the
risks involved in the specific investment or service to be promoted.
The FCA
expects this assessment to be meaningful, i.e. that is not capable of being
“gamed”. It means, binary yes/no answers
should not be used in testing; there should be different
questions for each assessment, selected at random; and a client should not be re-assessed for the same investment
within 24 hours (if it is assessed as being inappropriate), encouraged or incentivised
to retake the test or coached through the test (although they can be directed to educational materials).
10. If a firm is
already registered with the FCA, it may be able to apply for
additional flexibility to implement certain technical changes: The
FCA recognises that certain elements of the extended financial promotions
regime are likely to require firms to undertake significant technical
developments. These include the introduction of the 24-hour cooling off period. Therefore, the FCA has recently stated
that an extended implementation period (until 8th January 2024) might
be available to enable firms that are already authorised or registered with the
FCA to make the necessary changes to their systems. Any relief would be: (a)
available only to those that apply for, and are granted it, and which are (ii) limited in
scope, with the core rules still taking effect on 8th October 2023.
If
a firm could potentially benefit from the additional flexibility, it should give
consideration to what to include in the application now. In particular, it is
worth factoring in contingency plans if the firm fails to implement the
technical changes required by 8th January 2024. Clear tasks, milestones,
owners and arrangements for progress reporting should also be detailed.
This article has
provided a whistlestop tour of factors firms will need to consider when the
UK’s financial promotions regime is extended to cover crypto assets. In view of
the FCA’s feedback on firms’ preparations to comply (7th September
2023), there is much to do and little time available in which to do it. The links to other regulatory initiatives such
as the Consumer Duty, financial promotions gateway and new social media
guidance should also not be underestimated.
To summarise, the key to decrypting
this complex web of regulatory expectations is careful planning reinforced by a
clear vision as to what is realistically possible in finite time.
Following the implementation of the Consumer Duty rules in the United Kingdom, crypto providers in the country are now required to comply with a fresh set of regulations around promotions, the deadline for which is approaching.
From 8th October, the
coverage of the UK’s Financial Services and Markets Act will be extended to “qualifying crypto assets”, requiring crypto firms to follow several sets of rules.
Although the overall rules look brief, there are many details crypto companies need to consider, otherwise they will risk committing a criminal offense.
UK's New Crypto Marketing Rules
Alexander Culley, Founder and CEO at C&G Regulatory Solutions
The
FCA supervises and enforces the implementation of the UK’s financial promotion
regime. Lucy Castledine, the Director of Consumer Investments, has warned that: “Come
8th October, we will be taking action against firms illegally
marketing to UK consumers.”
an authorised persons
approving the promotion (known as a “section 21 approver”);
a crypto firm registered
under the Money Laundering Regulations communicating its own promotion; or
the promotion otherwise
complies with the condition of an exemption in the FPO.
Failure to comply with the requirements
of the extended financial promotions regime could lead to restrictions on the company, inclusion in the warning list, and order to take down websites. In extreme cases, the violations could lead to the imprisonment of the responsible person for up to two years or an
unlimited fine, or both.
Lewis Gurry, Director at C&G Regulatory Solutions
🚨 Final Warning from UK FCA 🚨
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is taking a tough stance on crypto promotions! 📣
As of Oct. 8, all firms marketing crypto assets to UK consumers must comply with new regulations. However, only 24 out of 150 firms responded to the FCA's…
The incoming rules will apply to all cryptocurrency companies, local or offshore, offering services in the UK. Although the overall rules cover a broad area, companies need to consider minute details. Some of the potential challenging elements of these rules are:
1. Applicable to all crypto firms promoting "qualifying crypto assets" to UK
consumers: Given that the
internet transcends international borders, there is a serious risk that people based outside the UK will be caught out with the UK’s financial promotion
rules for crypto assets. If a non-UK natural or
legal person communicates a financial promotion to a UK consumer without using
one of the four channels stipulated in the regime, this would result in the
commission of a criminal offence.
The key consideration for any crypto firm, whether based inside or outside the UK, should be if a UK consumer could access
and respond to its crypto asset promotion.
To avoid any violations, these companies should either prevent UK consumers from
accessing those communications post 8th October 2023; or adhere to one of the four guidelines of the UK government.
2. The financial promotion regime is technology “neutral”: Materials
distributed by any medium are capable of being deemed financial promotions subject
to the rules. This includes communication by website, apps such as WhatsApp and
Telegram, voice campaigns, social media campaigns as well as traditional print
media. It is worth making an inventory of how, when and where promotions are
being made.
3. A payment or electronic
money institution cannot communicate or approve financial promotions: Under the incoming rules, companies will
need to make arrangements to communicate crypto asset promotions through one of
the four permitted routes previously mentioned above.
4. Brand advertising risks should be evaluated: It is quite
common for brokerages to partner with sports clubs to raise awareness of their
brand. Normally, “pure” brand advertising falls outside the scope of the FCA’s financial
promotion rules. However, if materials do more than merely provide a logo,
firm’s name and contact information then there is an increased risk that they
will be caught by the financial promotion rules. Accordingly, if relevant, it
is worth reviewing the specific wording included in sponsorship campaigns.
5. Firms, not the creator or issuer of an underlying
crypto asset, should conduct thorough due diligence before promoting: Companies need to check whether claims of the crypto asset issuer promoted by them are credible. Some of the areas of concerns are environmental, social
and governance (ESG) features, prospects of success, legal and beneficial
ownership; and vulnerability to
operational, technological and cyber risks.
6. Do not assume that stablecoins are stable: If firms can’t
evidence a claim then they should not make it, particularly if a so-called “stable” coin
is “algorithmic” or “crypto-backed”. Equally, if they can evidence a claim then
test that it is capable of being understood by the target market.
7. Ensure that a senior manager who does not work in compliance
spearheads the firm’s implementation project: This will
increase the prospect of the project being delivered on time and counter any
perceptions of compliance being a “one off, tick box” exercise.
8. Consumers will not receive protection from the Financial
Ombudsman Service (FOS) or the Financial Services Compensation Scheme
(FSCS): The entry into
force of the financial promotion regime should not be received, or communicated
to customers, as reducing the inherently high risk and largely unregulated
nature of crypto asset trading.
9.Ensuring that the appropriateness tests are appropriate: If a firm
intends to make a direct offer financial promotion to a consumer, it will need
to perform a robust appropriateness assessment in advance. This is to ensure
that the consumer has the necessary knowledge and experience to understand the
risks involved in the specific investment or service to be promoted.
The FCA
expects this assessment to be meaningful, i.e. that is not capable of being
“gamed”. It means, binary yes/no answers
should not be used in testing; there should be different
questions for each assessment, selected at random; and a client should not be re-assessed for the same investment
within 24 hours (if it is assessed as being inappropriate), encouraged or incentivised
to retake the test or coached through the test (although they can be directed to educational materials).
10. If a firm is
already registered with the FCA, it may be able to apply for
additional flexibility to implement certain technical changes: The
FCA recognises that certain elements of the extended financial promotions
regime are likely to require firms to undertake significant technical
developments. These include the introduction of the 24-hour cooling off period. Therefore, the FCA has recently stated
that an extended implementation period (until 8th January 2024) might
be available to enable firms that are already authorised or registered with the
FCA to make the necessary changes to their systems. Any relief would be: (a)
available only to those that apply for, and are granted it, and which are (ii) limited in
scope, with the core rules still taking effect on 8th October 2023.
If
a firm could potentially benefit from the additional flexibility, it should give
consideration to what to include in the application now. In particular, it is
worth factoring in contingency plans if the firm fails to implement the
technical changes required by 8th January 2024. Clear tasks, milestones,
owners and arrangements for progress reporting should also be detailed.
This article has
provided a whistlestop tour of factors firms will need to consider when the
UK’s financial promotions regime is extended to cover crypto assets. In view of
the FCA’s feedback on firms’ preparations to comply (7th September
2023), there is much to do and little time available in which to do it. The links to other regulatory initiatives such
as the Consumer Duty, financial promotions gateway and new social media
guidance should also not be underestimated.
To summarise, the key to decrypting
this complex web of regulatory expectations is careful planning reinforced by a
clear vision as to what is realistically possible in finite time.
Discover how FYNXT TradeOps Control Center helps forex brokers automate MT4 and MT5 operations, reduce manual workload, strengthen compliance, and save over 1,000 operational hours.
In this exclusive Finance Magnates webinar, FYNXT Chief Product Strategist Elian Daoud, reveals how brokers can modernize MetaTrader operations with a powerful suite of automation tools designed for risk management, trade operations, payments, account administration, dynamic leverage, swap management, and more.
Read article at: https://www.financemagnates.com/thought-leadership/how-fynxts-tradeops-control-center-bridges-a-20-year-technology-gap/
🚀 Key topics covered:
MT4 & MT5 operations automation
Dynamic Leverage with scheduling and multi-level rule hierarchy
Swap-Free Engine with advanced pricing controls
Bulk account, group, symbol, and balance updates
Trade creation, modification, and closure workflows
Holiday scheduling and session management
Manager account governance and access control
MT5 account archiving automation
Audit trails, compliance, and operational risk reduction
Multi-server MetaTrader management
AI roadmap for broker operations
💡 What you'll learn:
How brokers can eliminate repetitive manual tasks
Ways to reduce operational risk and human error
Best practices for managing MT4 and MT5 at scale
How dynamic leverage can improve risk management
Why scheduling and automation are becoming essential for modern brokerages
How FYNXT is preparing broker operations for the AI era
Whether you're a CEO, COO, Head of Operations, Risk Manager, Dealer, or Back Office professional, this webinar provides practical insights into streamlining brokerage operations while maintaining control, compliance, and transparency.
Chapters
00:00 Introduction
01:18 The MT4 Operations Challenge
04:54 TradeOps Control Center Overview
07:39 Full Suite Breakdown
10:06 Dynamic Leverage Deep Dive
17:19 Q&A: Dynamic Leverage
20:08 Swap-Free Engine Deep Dive
24:45 Account Updater
26:07 Manager Creator
28:03 Accounts Archiver
31:46 Additional Automation Tools
35:14 Phase 2: AI Roadmap
37:07 Live Q&A
48:34 Closing Remarks
#FYNXT #TradeOps #MetaTrader4 #MetaTrader5 #MT4 #MT5 #ForexBroker #BrokerTechnology #ForexTechnology #Fintech #BrokerOperations #DynamicLeverage #SwapFree #RiskManagement #Compliance #FinanceMagnates #ForexTrading #TradingTechnology #BackOfficeAutomation #BrokerAutomation
Discover how FYNXT TradeOps Control Center helps forex brokers automate MT4 and MT5 operations, reduce manual workload, strengthen compliance, and save over 1,000 operational hours.
In this exclusive Finance Magnates webinar, FYNXT Chief Product Strategist Elian Daoud, reveals how brokers can modernize MetaTrader operations with a powerful suite of automation tools designed for risk management, trade operations, payments, account administration, dynamic leverage, swap management, and more.
Read article at: https://www.financemagnates.com/thought-leadership/how-fynxts-tradeops-control-center-bridges-a-20-year-technology-gap/
🚀 Key topics covered:
MT4 & MT5 operations automation
Dynamic Leverage with scheduling and multi-level rule hierarchy
Swap-Free Engine with advanced pricing controls
Bulk account, group, symbol, and balance updates
Trade creation, modification, and closure workflows
Holiday scheduling and session management
Manager account governance and access control
MT5 account archiving automation
Audit trails, compliance, and operational risk reduction
Multi-server MetaTrader management
AI roadmap for broker operations
💡 What you'll learn:
How brokers can eliminate repetitive manual tasks
Ways to reduce operational risk and human error
Best practices for managing MT4 and MT5 at scale
How dynamic leverage can improve risk management
Why scheduling and automation are becoming essential for modern brokerages
How FYNXT is preparing broker operations for the AI era
Whether you're a CEO, COO, Head of Operations, Risk Manager, Dealer, or Back Office professional, this webinar provides practical insights into streamlining brokerage operations while maintaining control, compliance, and transparency.
Chapters
00:00 Introduction
01:18 The MT4 Operations Challenge
04:54 TradeOps Control Center Overview
07:39 Full Suite Breakdown
10:06 Dynamic Leverage Deep Dive
17:19 Q&A: Dynamic Leverage
20:08 Swap-Free Engine Deep Dive
24:45 Account Updater
26:07 Manager Creator
28:03 Accounts Archiver
31:46 Additional Automation Tools
35:14 Phase 2: AI Roadmap
37:07 Live Q&A
48:34 Closing Remarks
#FYNXT #TradeOps #MetaTrader4 #MetaTrader5 #MT4 #MT5 #ForexBroker #BrokerTechnology #ForexTechnology #Fintech #BrokerOperations #DynamicLeverage #SwapFree #RiskManagement #Compliance #FinanceMagnates #ForexTrading #TradingTechnology #BackOfficeAutomation #BrokerAutomation
Discover how FYNXT TradeOps Control Center helps forex brokers automate MT4 and MT5 operations, reduce manual workload, strengthen compliance, and save over 1,000 operational hours.
In this exclusive Finance Magnates webinar, FYNXT Chief Product Strategist Elian Daoud, reveals how brokers can modernize MetaTrader operations with a powerful suite of automation tools designed for risk management, trade operations, payments, account administration, dynamic leverage, swap management, and more.
Read article at: https://www.financemagnates.com/thought-leadership/how-fynxts-tradeops-control-center-bridges-a-20-year-technology-gap/
🚀 Key topics covered:
MT4 & MT5 operations automation
Dynamic Leverage with scheduling and multi-level rule hierarchy
Swap-Free Engine with advanced pricing controls
Bulk account, group, symbol, and balance updates
Trade creation, modification, and closure workflows
Holiday scheduling and session management
Manager account governance and access control
MT5 account archiving automation
Audit trails, compliance, and operational risk reduction
Multi-server MetaTrader management
AI roadmap for broker operations
💡 What you'll learn:
How brokers can eliminate repetitive manual tasks
Ways to reduce operational risk and human error
Best practices for managing MT4 and MT5 at scale
How dynamic leverage can improve risk management
Why scheduling and automation are becoming essential for modern brokerages
How FYNXT is preparing broker operations for the AI era
Whether you're a CEO, COO, Head of Operations, Risk Manager, Dealer, or Back Office professional, this webinar provides practical insights into streamlining brokerage operations while maintaining control, compliance, and transparency.
Chapters
00:00 Introduction
01:18 The MT4 Operations Challenge
04:54 TradeOps Control Center Overview
07:39 Full Suite Breakdown
10:06 Dynamic Leverage Deep Dive
17:19 Q&A: Dynamic Leverage
20:08 Swap-Free Engine Deep Dive
24:45 Account Updater
26:07 Manager Creator
28:03 Accounts Archiver
31:46 Additional Automation Tools
35:14 Phase 2: AI Roadmap
37:07 Live Q&A
48:34 Closing Remarks
#FYNXT #TradeOps #MetaTrader4 #MetaTrader5 #MT4 #MT5 #ForexBroker #BrokerTechnology #ForexTechnology #Fintech #BrokerOperations #DynamicLeverage #SwapFree #RiskManagement #Compliance #FinanceMagnates #ForexTrading #TradingTechnology #BackOfficeAutomation #BrokerAutomation
Discover how FYNXT TradeOps Control Center helps forex brokers automate MT4 and MT5 operations, reduce manual workload, strengthen compliance, and save over 1,000 operational hours.
In this exclusive Finance Magnates webinar, FYNXT Chief Product Strategist Elian Daoud, reveals how brokers can modernize MetaTrader operations with a powerful suite of automation tools designed for risk management, trade operations, payments, account administration, dynamic leverage, swap management, and more.
Read article at: https://www.financemagnates.com/thought-leadership/how-fynxts-tradeops-control-center-bridges-a-20-year-technology-gap/
🚀 Key topics covered:
MT4 & MT5 operations automation
Dynamic Leverage with scheduling and multi-level rule hierarchy
Swap-Free Engine with advanced pricing controls
Bulk account, group, symbol, and balance updates
Trade creation, modification, and closure workflows
Holiday scheduling and session management
Manager account governance and access control
MT5 account archiving automation
Audit trails, compliance, and operational risk reduction
Multi-server MetaTrader management
AI roadmap for broker operations
💡 What you'll learn:
How brokers can eliminate repetitive manual tasks
Ways to reduce operational risk and human error
Best practices for managing MT4 and MT5 at scale
How dynamic leverage can improve risk management
Why scheduling and automation are becoming essential for modern brokerages
How FYNXT is preparing broker operations for the AI era
Whether you're a CEO, COO, Head of Operations, Risk Manager, Dealer, or Back Office professional, this webinar provides practical insights into streamlining brokerage operations while maintaining control, compliance, and transparency.
Chapters
00:00 Introduction
01:18 The MT4 Operations Challenge
04:54 TradeOps Control Center Overview
07:39 Full Suite Breakdown
10:06 Dynamic Leverage Deep Dive
17:19 Q&A: Dynamic Leverage
20:08 Swap-Free Engine Deep Dive
24:45 Account Updater
26:07 Manager Creator
28:03 Accounts Archiver
31:46 Additional Automation Tools
35:14 Phase 2: AI Roadmap
37:07 Live Q&A
48:34 Closing Remarks
#FYNXT #TradeOps #MetaTrader4 #MetaTrader5 #MT4 #MT5 #ForexBroker #BrokerTechnology #ForexTechnology #Fintech #BrokerOperations #DynamicLeverage #SwapFree #RiskManagement #Compliance #FinanceMagnates #ForexTrading #TradingTechnology #BackOfficeAutomation #BrokerAutomation
Today’s Tuesday, the 30th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Asic warns that crypto perpetual futures are beginning to resemble CFDs, FM Intelligence tracks shifting broker web visibility, and the UK's FCA softens its stablecoin proposals.
Today’s Tuesday, the 30th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Asic warns that crypto perpetual futures are beginning to resemble CFDs, FM Intelligence tracks shifting broker web visibility, and the UK's FCA softens its stablecoin proposals.
Today’s Tuesday, the 30th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Asic warns that crypto perpetual futures are beginning to resemble CFDs, FM Intelligence tracks shifting broker web visibility, and the UK's FCA softens its stablecoin proposals.
Today’s Tuesday, the 30th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Asic warns that crypto perpetual futures are beginning to resemble CFDs, FM Intelligence tracks shifting broker web visibility, and the UK's FCA softens its stablecoin proposals.
Today’s Tuesday, the 30th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Asic warns that crypto perpetual futures are beginning to resemble CFDs, FM Intelligence tracks shifting broker web visibility, and the UK's FCA softens its stablecoin proposals.
Today’s Tuesday, the 30th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Asic warns that crypto perpetual futures are beginning to resemble CFDs, FM Intelligence tracks shifting broker web visibility, and the UK's FCA softens its stablecoin proposals.
FM Daily Brief – 29 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 29 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 29 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 29 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 29 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 29 June 2026
Today’s Monday, the 29th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: why foreign brokers are abandoning South Africa’s ODP licence regime, Plus500’s expansion into sports prediction markets, and regulatory concerns over staff trading controls in Dubai.
Today’s Monday, the 29th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: why foreign brokers are abandoning South Africa’s ODP licence regime, Plus500’s expansion into sports prediction markets, and regulatory concerns over staff trading controls in Dubai.
Today’s Monday, the 29th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: why foreign brokers are abandoning South Africa’s ODP licence regime, Plus500’s expansion into sports prediction markets, and regulatory concerns over staff trading controls in Dubai.
Today’s Monday, the 29th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: why foreign brokers are abandoning South Africa’s ODP licence regime, Plus500’s expansion into sports prediction markets, and regulatory concerns over staff trading controls in Dubai.
Today’s Monday, the 29th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: why foreign brokers are abandoning South Africa’s ODP licence regime, Plus500’s expansion into sports prediction markets, and regulatory concerns over staff trading controls in Dubai.
Today’s Monday, the 29th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: why foreign brokers are abandoning South Africa’s ODP licence regime, Plus500’s expansion into sports prediction markets, and regulatory concerns over staff trading controls in Dubai.
Shift Markets Review: The Shift Platform & White Label Prediction Markets
Shift Markets Review: The Shift Platform & White Label Prediction Markets
Shift Markets Review: The Shift Platform & White Label Prediction Markets
Shift Markets Review: The Shift Platform & White Label Prediction Markets
Shift Markets Review: The Shift Platform & White Label Prediction Markets
Shift Markets Review: The Shift Platform & White Label Prediction Markets
In this video, we review The Shift Platform by Shift Markets, a white label crypto exchange solution designed for brokerages, crypto exchanges, fintechs, banks, and other digital asset businesses.
We explore the platform's exchange infrastructure, including spot and derivatives trading, liquidity aggregation, market-making tools, digital asset ledger, API-first architecture, back-office management, and third-party integrations. We also take a look at Shift Markets' White Label Prediction Markets solution, which enables businesses to launch fully branded prediction markets for real-world events.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of The Shift Platform, its core features, use cases, and the infrastructure powering modern digital asset trading businesses.
#ShiftMarkets #ShiftPlatform #WhiteLabelCryptoExchange #PredictionMarkets #WhiteLabelPredictionMarkets #CryptoExchange #CryptoInfrastructure #DigitalAssets #Fintech #FinanceMagnates #CryptoTrading #TradingTechnology
In this video, we review The Shift Platform by Shift Markets, a white label crypto exchange solution designed for brokerages, crypto exchanges, fintechs, banks, and other digital asset businesses.
We explore the platform's exchange infrastructure, including spot and derivatives trading, liquidity aggregation, market-making tools, digital asset ledger, API-first architecture, back-office management, and third-party integrations. We also take a look at Shift Markets' White Label Prediction Markets solution, which enables businesses to launch fully branded prediction markets for real-world events.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of The Shift Platform, its core features, use cases, and the infrastructure powering modern digital asset trading businesses.
#ShiftMarkets #ShiftPlatform #WhiteLabelCryptoExchange #PredictionMarkets #WhiteLabelPredictionMarkets #CryptoExchange #CryptoInfrastructure #DigitalAssets #Fintech #FinanceMagnates #CryptoTrading #TradingTechnology
In this video, we review The Shift Platform by Shift Markets, a white label crypto exchange solution designed for brokerages, crypto exchanges, fintechs, banks, and other digital asset businesses.
We explore the platform's exchange infrastructure, including spot and derivatives trading, liquidity aggregation, market-making tools, digital asset ledger, API-first architecture, back-office management, and third-party integrations. We also take a look at Shift Markets' White Label Prediction Markets solution, which enables businesses to launch fully branded prediction markets for real-world events.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of The Shift Platform, its core features, use cases, and the infrastructure powering modern digital asset trading businesses.
#ShiftMarkets #ShiftPlatform #WhiteLabelCryptoExchange #PredictionMarkets #WhiteLabelPredictionMarkets #CryptoExchange #CryptoInfrastructure #DigitalAssets #Fintech #FinanceMagnates #CryptoTrading #TradingTechnology
In this video, we review The Shift Platform by Shift Markets, a white label crypto exchange solution designed for brokerages, crypto exchanges, fintechs, banks, and other digital asset businesses.
We explore the platform's exchange infrastructure, including spot and derivatives trading, liquidity aggregation, market-making tools, digital asset ledger, API-first architecture, back-office management, and third-party integrations. We also take a look at Shift Markets' White Label Prediction Markets solution, which enables businesses to launch fully branded prediction markets for real-world events.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of The Shift Platform, its core features, use cases, and the infrastructure powering modern digital asset trading businesses.
#ShiftMarkets #ShiftPlatform #WhiteLabelCryptoExchange #PredictionMarkets #WhiteLabelPredictionMarkets #CryptoExchange #CryptoInfrastructure #DigitalAssets #Fintech #FinanceMagnates #CryptoTrading #TradingTechnology
In this video, we review The Shift Platform by Shift Markets, a white label crypto exchange solution designed for brokerages, crypto exchanges, fintechs, banks, and other digital asset businesses.
We explore the platform's exchange infrastructure, including spot and derivatives trading, liquidity aggregation, market-making tools, digital asset ledger, API-first architecture, back-office management, and third-party integrations. We also take a look at Shift Markets' White Label Prediction Markets solution, which enables businesses to launch fully branded prediction markets for real-world events.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of The Shift Platform, its core features, use cases, and the infrastructure powering modern digital asset trading businesses.
#ShiftMarkets #ShiftPlatform #WhiteLabelCryptoExchange #PredictionMarkets #WhiteLabelPredictionMarkets #CryptoExchange #CryptoInfrastructure #DigitalAssets #Fintech #FinanceMagnates #CryptoTrading #TradingTechnology
In this video, we review The Shift Platform by Shift Markets, a white label crypto exchange solution designed for brokerages, crypto exchanges, fintechs, banks, and other digital asset businesses.
We explore the platform's exchange infrastructure, including spot and derivatives trading, liquidity aggregation, market-making tools, digital asset ledger, API-first architecture, back-office management, and third-party integrations. We also take a look at Shift Markets' White Label Prediction Markets solution, which enables businesses to launch fully branded prediction markets for real-world events.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of The Shift Platform, its core features, use cases, and the infrastructure powering modern digital asset trading businesses.
#ShiftMarkets #ShiftPlatform #WhiteLabelCryptoExchange #PredictionMarkets #WhiteLabelPredictionMarkets #CryptoExchange #CryptoInfrastructure #DigitalAssets #Fintech #FinanceMagnates #CryptoTrading #TradingTechnology
FM Daily Brief – 26 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 26 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 26 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 26 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 26 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 26 June 2026
Today’s Friday, the 26th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: retail prop trading slips down Europe’s regulatory agenda, Mica reaches a major milestone for crypto markets, and Naga reports stronger audited results.
Today’s Friday, the 26th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: retail prop trading slips down Europe’s regulatory agenda, Mica reaches a major milestone for crypto markets, and Naga reports stronger audited results.
Today’s Friday, the 26th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: retail prop trading slips down Europe’s regulatory agenda, Mica reaches a major milestone for crypto markets, and Naga reports stronger audited results.
Today’s Friday, the 26th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: retail prop trading slips down Europe’s regulatory agenda, Mica reaches a major milestone for crypto markets, and Naga reports stronger audited results.
Today’s Friday, the 26th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: retail prop trading slips down Europe’s regulatory agenda, Mica reaches a major milestone for crypto markets, and Naga reports stronger audited results.
Today’s Friday, the 26th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: retail prop trading slips down Europe’s regulatory agenda, Mica reaches a major milestone for crypto markets, and Naga reports stronger audited results.