OANDA's deposits sink nearly 20% year-on-year as January data confirms a broad pullback across US retail currency markets.
Gain Capital retains its grip on roughly 40% of the market as the total industry pot shrinks to its lowest reading since the third quarter of 2023.
Customer
deposits held by US retail forex brokers fell sharply in January, with the
industry's combined total dropping to $472.96 million, the lowest figure
recorded in more than two years and well below a high-water mark of $557.5
million set back in June 2024.
No broker
has lost more ground than OANDA. January's figure of $133.7 million represents
an 8% drop from December and a 19% collapse year-on-year, when OANDA was still
managing $165.6 million in US retail forex deposits.
OANDA's
share of total US retail forex deposits now stands at roughly 28%, down from a
position that once put it firmly in second place with greater distance behind
Gain Capital.
Gain Capital Holds Firm,
Though Its Lead Narrows
Gain
Capital, which operates the Forex.com platform in the United States, remains
the dominant player with $203.1 million in January, still commanding 42.9% of
the total market. But the number itself has pulled back from the $211.8 million
it held at year-end, and it is running 4% below the $211.5
million reported in January 2025, when the broker was benefiting from strong monthly inflows.
The broker
has not posted a meaningful breakout since touching $226.6 million in March
2025. That plateau, combined with a post-summer cooling across the market,
suggests demand in US retail forex is under genuine pressure.
Gain
Capital's market share above 44% in the second half of 2024 has gradually
eroded, and the December
2025 data now
looks more like a temporary stabilization.
us fx deposits
Charles Schwab and tastyfx
Lose Ground
Charles
Schwab's forex unit shed just over 5% in January, falling to $58.6 million from
$61.8 million in December. That marks a roughly $2.6 million shortfall against
the same month last year, though Schwab's year-on-year decline of 4.3% is
relatively contained compared to broader industry weakness.
tastyfx, the
US retail forex brand of London-listed IG Group, which rebranded from
IG US in 2024, dropped
3.7% on the month to $44.6 million. Of the four brokers showing annual
declines, tastyfx is the most modest, down just 1.7% year-on-year.
The broker
launched Prime accounts in September 2025 targeting professional traders with
a 6% promotional
annual yield on cash deposits, a product designed to attract larger clients and retain high-value
balances.
Interactive Brokers and
Trading.com Swim Against the Tide
Against an
otherwise uniform picture of decline, Interactive Brokers and Trading.com stand
out as the only two brokers showing positive deposits compared to January 2025.
Interactive Brokers held $30.1 million in retail forex assets at end-January,
down 7.3% from December but up 16.4% year-on-year - a contrast that reflects
how badly the broker had underperformed a year ago when deposits had already
fallen to a low base.
Trading.com,
the smallest platform by absolute deposit size at $2.86 million, posted the
shallowest monthly decline of any broker, shedding just 1.4% from December.
More notable is the year-on-year comparison: Trading.com's deposits are
up 25.4% from a year ago, continuing a growth trajectory that,
while small in absolute dollar terms, is consistent and directionally distinct
from the rest of the market.
Customer
deposits held by US retail forex brokers fell sharply in January, with the
industry's combined total dropping to $472.96 million, the lowest figure
recorded in more than two years and well below a high-water mark of $557.5
million set back in June 2024.
No broker
has lost more ground than OANDA. January's figure of $133.7 million represents
an 8% drop from December and a 19% collapse year-on-year, when OANDA was still
managing $165.6 million in US retail forex deposits.
OANDA's
share of total US retail forex deposits now stands at roughly 28%, down from a
position that once put it firmly in second place with greater distance behind
Gain Capital.
Gain Capital Holds Firm,
Though Its Lead Narrows
Gain
Capital, which operates the Forex.com platform in the United States, remains
the dominant player with $203.1 million in January, still commanding 42.9% of
the total market. But the number itself has pulled back from the $211.8 million
it held at year-end, and it is running 4% below the $211.5
million reported in January 2025, when the broker was benefiting from strong monthly inflows.
The broker
has not posted a meaningful breakout since touching $226.6 million in March
2025. That plateau, combined with a post-summer cooling across the market,
suggests demand in US retail forex is under genuine pressure.
Gain
Capital's market share above 44% in the second half of 2024 has gradually
eroded, and the December
2025 data now
looks more like a temporary stabilization.
us fx deposits
Charles Schwab and tastyfx
Lose Ground
Charles
Schwab's forex unit shed just over 5% in January, falling to $58.6 million from
$61.8 million in December. That marks a roughly $2.6 million shortfall against
the same month last year, though Schwab's year-on-year decline of 4.3% is
relatively contained compared to broader industry weakness.
tastyfx, the
US retail forex brand of London-listed IG Group, which rebranded from
IG US in 2024, dropped
3.7% on the month to $44.6 million. Of the four brokers showing annual
declines, tastyfx is the most modest, down just 1.7% year-on-year.
The broker
launched Prime accounts in September 2025 targeting professional traders with
a 6% promotional
annual yield on cash deposits, a product designed to attract larger clients and retain high-value
balances.
Interactive Brokers and
Trading.com Swim Against the Tide
Against an
otherwise uniform picture of decline, Interactive Brokers and Trading.com stand
out as the only two brokers showing positive deposits compared to January 2025.
Interactive Brokers held $30.1 million in retail forex assets at end-January,
down 7.3% from December but up 16.4% year-on-year - a contrast that reflects
how badly the broker had underperformed a year ago when deposits had already
fallen to a low base.
Trading.com,
the smallest platform by absolute deposit size at $2.86 million, posted the
shallowest monthly decline of any broker, shedding just 1.4% from December.
More notable is the year-on-year comparison: Trading.com's deposits are
up 25.4% from a year ago, continuing a growth trajectory that,
while small in absolute dollar terms, is consistent and directionally distinct
from the rest of the market.
Damian Chmiel is a Senior Analyst & Editor at Finance Magnates with more than 15 years of experience in the CFD and online trading industry. Active as both a trader and journalist since 2010, he focuses on broker coverage, fintech innovation, and regulatory developments across Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.
His work includes interviews with C-level leaders at major brokerages and fintech platforms, as well as co-authoring Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry benchmarking reports. Damian’s reporting is data-driven, market-aware, and grounded in direct industry engagement. His analysis and commentary have also been cited by external media outlets, including Investing.com, Binance, The Asset, Stockhead, and Dispatch.
Education:
MA in Finance and Accounting, Cracow University of Economics
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