2. The second type of regtech firms are those that provide client identification and verification. According to AML regulations, many services such as financial services need to verify their clients. There are companies that gather all the necessary information about the client (ID documents, proof of address, etc) and they can determine whenever identity fraud is happening (forged or stolen documents provided, etc). They also can execute the Client’s Due Diligence when needed (a deeper and more scrupulous check).
Companies need to verify the client's identity to know who they are dealing with and to comply with the law. It does eliminate the risk of dealing with people with fake identities and criminals, and it is used for age
Dmitri Laush, CEO of GetID,
verification when it comes to age-restricted products, remote access to services like rental cars, telemedicine services, etc.
Automated identity verification speeds up the onboarding process and makes the user experience better.
3. There are companies that take the next step after the identity of the client is verified. When it comes to high-risk clients transacting large sums of money, there are companies checking the clients (including legal entities) in sanctions lists /PEPs lists, and executing adverse media. Sanctions lists include individuals, companies, and whole countries which once committed illegal activities violating international laws.
The Politically Exposed Person (PEP) list includes political leaders who committed crimes, performed bribery or been involved in corruption. PEP lists might also include political party officials and senior executives in the companies. In the list might be close friends and family members too.
Adverse media is a search in the media for any negative news about the person or company.
All of these checks help to ensure that the person or company do not use money transfers to launder money, finance terrorism, etc. Also, many companies refuse to take PEPs as clients because of the future risks and illicit activities they might perform.
KYC and identity verification services also use the types of companies that can check sanctions/PEP lists or do adverse media. Businesses that have KYC solutions in-house can buy access to those lists without even using this type of regtech company.
4. Other types of regtech companies help companies with reporting to AML authorities. Every financial service is obliged to make reports and submit their data to different regulatory bodies. For example, Suade helps banks submit required regulatory reports without disruption to their architecture.
5. GDPR in the EU and many other data protection regulations made companies that gather sensitive personal data look for solutions to keep it secure and safe. Data protection regtech companies focus on data privacy and safety. It helps to keep the aggregated client’s data safe and comply with the laws.
6. Some regtech companies focus on the analysis of the fraud rates, criminal activities, money spent on penalties, and other indicators in the industry. Different types of companies just help financial services and other companies, which fall under AML regulation to analyze the personal data they store.
Different types of statistics and analysis are needed for the authorities so they can understand the weaker points of a company’s compliance strategy. This might also be needed for financial companies, like banks, to improve their performance and not violate any directives.
Javelin Strategy & Research and Fenergo are only a few of the companies that provide these types of analyses.
7. And, of course, there are consulting and training companies. The first type simply consults in-house compliance departments on AML regulations, user sign-ups, etc. Another type is making regtech and compliance courses, master classes, and training for certain corporations and employees.
In my opinion, the biggest potential market nowadays is online identity verification and reporting companies. COVID made a lot of services and institutions switch online, hence many of them needed to start performing online paperless identity verification of their customers. Digital ID’s framework is now discussed in many countries and states (European Commission discussing its implementation as well as the state of Florida in the US). Digital ID will only be rising the demand for online identity verification solutions.
In contrast, correct reporting to AML authorities has always been on the table for many companies, so that is, in my mind, another sector of the regtech industry that will soon thrive.
According to Markets and Markets research, the regtech market size is expected to grow from USD 6.3 billion in 2020 to USD 16.0 billion by 2025, so I believe that there are many opportunities for investors and players in this market. Of course, the competition will rise, so only the most advanced, user-friendly, and professional solutions will continue to exist.
Dmitri Laush, CEO GetID, part of Checkin.com Group.
2. The second type of regtech firms are those that provide client identification and verification. According to AML regulations, many services such as financial services need to verify their clients. There are companies that gather all the necessary information about the client (ID documents, proof of address, etc) and they can determine whenever identity fraud is happening (forged or stolen documents provided, etc). They also can execute the Client’s Due Diligence when needed (a deeper and more scrupulous check).
Companies need to verify the client's identity to know who they are dealing with and to comply with the law. It does eliminate the risk of dealing with people with fake identities and criminals, and it is used for age
Dmitri Laush, CEO of GetID,
verification when it comes to age-restricted products, remote access to services like rental cars, telemedicine services, etc.
Automated identity verification speeds up the onboarding process and makes the user experience better.
3. There are companies that take the next step after the identity of the client is verified. When it comes to high-risk clients transacting large sums of money, there are companies checking the clients (including legal entities) in sanctions lists /PEPs lists, and executing adverse media. Sanctions lists include individuals, companies, and whole countries which once committed illegal activities violating international laws.
The Politically Exposed Person (PEP) list includes political leaders who committed crimes, performed bribery or been involved in corruption. PEP lists might also include political party officials and senior executives in the companies. In the list might be close friends and family members too.
Adverse media is a search in the media for any negative news about the person or company.
All of these checks help to ensure that the person or company do not use money transfers to launder money, finance terrorism, etc. Also, many companies refuse to take PEPs as clients because of the future risks and illicit activities they might perform.
KYC and identity verification services also use the types of companies that can check sanctions/PEP lists or do adverse media. Businesses that have KYC solutions in-house can buy access to those lists without even using this type of regtech company.
4. Other types of regtech companies help companies with reporting to AML authorities. Every financial service is obliged to make reports and submit their data to different regulatory bodies. For example, Suade helps banks submit required regulatory reports without disruption to their architecture.
5. GDPR in the EU and many other data protection regulations made companies that gather sensitive personal data look for solutions to keep it secure and safe. Data protection regtech companies focus on data privacy and safety. It helps to keep the aggregated client’s data safe and comply with the laws.
6. Some regtech companies focus on the analysis of the fraud rates, criminal activities, money spent on penalties, and other indicators in the industry. Different types of companies just help financial services and other companies, which fall under AML regulation to analyze the personal data they store.
Different types of statistics and analysis are needed for the authorities so they can understand the weaker points of a company’s compliance strategy. This might also be needed for financial companies, like banks, to improve their performance and not violate any directives.
Javelin Strategy & Research and Fenergo are only a few of the companies that provide these types of analyses.
7. And, of course, there are consulting and training companies. The first type simply consults in-house compliance departments on AML regulations, user sign-ups, etc. Another type is making regtech and compliance courses, master classes, and training for certain corporations and employees.
In my opinion, the biggest potential market nowadays is online identity verification and reporting companies. COVID made a lot of services and institutions switch online, hence many of them needed to start performing online paperless identity verification of their customers. Digital ID’s framework is now discussed in many countries and states (European Commission discussing its implementation as well as the state of Florida in the US). Digital ID will only be rising the demand for online identity verification solutions.
In contrast, correct reporting to AML authorities has always been on the table for many companies, so that is, in my mind, another sector of the regtech industry that will soon thrive.
According to Markets and Markets research, the regtech market size is expected to grow from USD 6.3 billion in 2020 to USD 16.0 billion by 2025, so I believe that there are many opportunities for investors and players in this market. Of course, the competition will rise, so only the most advanced, user-friendly, and professional solutions will continue to exist.
Dmitri Laush, CEO GetID, part of Checkin.com Group.
Finseta Swings to Full-Year Loss as Expansion Costs Outrun Revenue Growth
Featured Videos
FM Daily Brief – 11 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 11 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 11 June 2026
FM Daily Brief – 11 June 2026
Today’s Thursday, the 11th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Spain moves to classify certain futures products as CFDs for retail investors, IUX reports more than $1.5 trillion in monthly trading volume, and a closer look at why crypto still struggles to reach the mainstream.
Today’s Thursday, the 11th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Spain moves to classify certain futures products as CFDs for retail investors, IUX reports more than $1.5 trillion in monthly trading volume, and a closer look at why crypto still struggles to reach the mainstream.
Today’s Thursday, the 11th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Spain moves to classify certain futures products as CFDs for retail investors, IUX reports more than $1.5 trillion in monthly trading volume, and a closer look at why crypto still struggles to reach the mainstream.
Today’s Thursday, the 11th of June 2026, and these are our main stories: Spain moves to classify certain futures products as CFDs for retail investors, IUX reports more than $1.5 trillion in monthly trading volume, and a closer look at why crypto still struggles to reach the mainstream.
In this video, we review @AxiOfficialChannel , a multi-asset broker offering access to forex and CFD markets through MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, the Axi Trading App, and copy trading solutions.
We examine the broker’s regulatory framework, platform offering, market coverage, and customer support structure. We also explore key features such as available trading instruments, swap-free account options, funding considerations, and multilingual support.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of Axi’s products, trading tools, and overall broker offering.
#Axi #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #FinanceMagnates #Trading #BrokerReview #OnlineTrading
In this video, we review @AxiOfficialChannel , a multi-asset broker offering access to forex and CFD markets through MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, the Axi Trading App, and copy trading solutions.
We examine the broker’s regulatory framework, platform offering, market coverage, and customer support structure. We also explore key features such as available trading instruments, swap-free account options, funding considerations, and multilingual support.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of Axi’s products, trading tools, and overall broker offering.
#Axi #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #FinanceMagnates #Trading #BrokerReview #OnlineTrading
In this video, we review @AxiOfficialChannel , a multi-asset broker offering access to forex and CFD markets through MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, the Axi Trading App, and copy trading solutions.
We examine the broker’s regulatory framework, platform offering, market coverage, and customer support structure. We also explore key features such as available trading instruments, swap-free account options, funding considerations, and multilingual support.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of Axi’s products, trading tools, and overall broker offering.
#Axi #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #FinanceMagnates #Trading #BrokerReview #OnlineTrading
In this video, we review @AxiOfficialChannel , a multi-asset broker offering access to forex and CFD markets through MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, the Axi Trading App, and copy trading solutions.
We examine the broker’s regulatory framework, platform offering, market coverage, and customer support structure. We also explore key features such as available trading instruments, swap-free account options, funding considerations, and multilingual support.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of Axi’s products, trading tools, and overall broker offering.
#Axi #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #FinanceMagnates #Trading #BrokerReview #OnlineTrading
In this video, we review @AxiOfficialChannel , a multi-asset broker offering access to forex and CFD markets through MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, the Axi Trading App, and copy trading solutions.
We examine the broker’s regulatory framework, platform offering, market coverage, and customer support structure. We also explore key features such as available trading instruments, swap-free account options, funding considerations, and multilingual support.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of Axi’s products, trading tools, and overall broker offering.
#Axi #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #FinanceMagnates #Trading #BrokerReview #OnlineTrading
In this video, we review @AxiOfficialChannel , a multi-asset broker offering access to forex and CFD markets through MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, the Axi Trading App, and copy trading solutions.
We examine the broker’s regulatory framework, platform offering, market coverage, and customer support structure. We also explore key features such as available trading instruments, swap-free account options, funding considerations, and multilingual support.
Watch the full video for a clear, fact-based overview of Axi’s products, trading tools, and overall broker offering.
#Axi #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #FinanceMagnates #Trading #BrokerReview #OnlineTrading
Multi-Asset or Die: The New Brokerage Playbook
Multi-Asset or Die: The New Brokerage Playbook
Multi-Asset or Die: The New Brokerage Playbook
Multi-Asset or Die: The New Brokerage Playbook
Multi-Asset or Die: The New Brokerage Playbook
Multi-Asset or Die: The New Brokerage Playbook
This panel will explore how firms are moving beyond CFDs into crypto, perpetuals, equities, and multi‑asset offerings, and the challenges they face across regulation, technology, liquidity, and risk management. It examines what is driving the shift, what it takes to execute it successfully, and how brokers can position themselves for the next phase of growth.
This panel will explore how firms are moving beyond CFDs into crypto, perpetuals, equities, and multi‑asset offerings, and the challenges they face across regulation, technology, liquidity, and risk management. It examines what is driving the shift, what it takes to execute it successfully, and how brokers can position themselves for the next phase of growth.
This panel will explore how firms are moving beyond CFDs into crypto, perpetuals, equities, and multi‑asset offerings, and the challenges they face across regulation, technology, liquidity, and risk management. It examines what is driving the shift, what it takes to execute it successfully, and how brokers can position themselves for the next phase of growth.
This panel will explore how firms are moving beyond CFDs into crypto, perpetuals, equities, and multi‑asset offerings, and the challenges they face across regulation, technology, liquidity, and risk management. It examines what is driving the shift, what it takes to execute it successfully, and how brokers can position themselves for the next phase of growth.
This panel will explore how firms are moving beyond CFDs into crypto, perpetuals, equities, and multi‑asset offerings, and the challenges they face across regulation, technology, liquidity, and risk management. It examines what is driving the shift, what it takes to execute it successfully, and how brokers can position themselves for the next phase of growth.
This panel will explore how firms are moving beyond CFDs into crypto, perpetuals, equities, and multi‑asset offerings, and the challenges they face across regulation, technology, liquidity, and risk management. It examines what is driving the shift, what it takes to execute it successfully, and how brokers can position themselves for the next phase of growth.
Beyond Reach? Retail Investor Acquisition Across APAC
Beyond Reach? Retail Investor Acquisition Across APAC
Beyond Reach? Retail Investor Acquisition Across APAC
Beyond Reach? Retail Investor Acquisition Across APAC
Beyond Reach? Retail Investor Acquisition Across APAC
Beyond Reach? Retail Investor Acquisition Across APAC
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms