Pepperstone UK Profit Jumps 81% to £18 Million in FY25

Sunday, 12/04/2026 | 18:23 GMT by Damian Chmiel
  • Trading revenue at the FCA-regulated subsidiary climbed 16% to £15 million in the year ended June 2025.
  • Profit before tax nearly doubled to £24.1 million, fueled by a sharp rise in services income paid by sister entities within the wider Pepperstone group.
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Pepperstone Limited, the UK subsidiary of Australian foreign exchange group Pepperstone, posted a sharp jump in earnings for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025 (FY25), with profit before tax climbing to £24.1 million from £13.3 million a year earlier, according to the broker's latest accounts filed with Companies House.

Net profit at the FCA-regulated entity rose to £18 million, up 81% from £9.9 million in fiscal 2024. Trading revenue from commissions, swaps and spreads on contracts for difference and spread bets reached £15 million, a 15.5% increase from £13 million the previous year.

The bigger swing, however, came from outside the trading book. Other income, which the company attributes mostly to services provided to other entities within the group, jumped to £22.9 million from £13.2 million. Of that, £21.4 million represented a profit repatriation allocation from another group entity, the filing shows. Interest income contributed a further £1.5 million.

Metric

2025 (£m)

2024 (£m)

Change

Trading Revenue

15.04

13.02

▲ 15.5%

Gross Profit

12.71

11.15

▲ 14.0%

Other Income

22.90

13.24

▲ 73.0%

Total Expenses

(11.53)

(11.11)

▲ 3.8%

Operating Profit (before tax)

24.07

13.27

▲ 81.4%

Net Profit (after tax)

18.00

9.94

▲ 81.1%

Trading Revenue Recovers After 2024 Dip

The 2025 numbers mark a rebound for the London arm, which had reported a slight revenue dip in the prior year. As Finance Magnates reported in early 2025, Pepperstone Limited closed fiscal 2024 with £13 million in trading revenue and a £9.9 million profit, alongside its first dividend distribution in years.

The latest filing shows the company added 272 new trading instruments across asset classes during the year, taking the total catalogue to more than 1,700 CFD and spread-bet products. The broker said it remains focused on professional traders and retail clients "who are generally experienced and informed about derivatives and financial markets."

Average headcount at the UK entity stood at 27, broadly flat year on year, while the wider Pepperstone group employed more than 600 staff. Employee expenses rose to £4.8 million from £3.8 million.

Spread Betting Players Crowd a Shrinking UK Field

Pepperstone's UK business operates in a market that has consolidated around a handful of large names, even as new entrants chip away at the edges. IG Group, CMC Markets and Plus500 dominate the listed UK retail derivatives space, while privately held competitors including Pepperstone, ActivTrades and XTB compete for the same retail and professional client base.

Group CEO Tamas Szabo has previously told Finance Magnates that the UK contributes between 10% and 13% of overall group revenue, calling the market "significant" despite broader industry concerns about declining UK retail participation.

In a 2024 interview at the Finance Magnates London Summit, Szabo said the firm sees crypto exchanges encroaching on the CFD turf and flagged crypto as Pepperstone's fourth-largest asset class by trading activity.

Pepperstone has differentiated its UK offering in part through its TradingView integration, having added spread betting on TradingView for UK clients in 2023. That contrasts with rival approaches: CMC Markets has leaned on its proprietary Next Generation platform, while IG Group continues to push its own ecosystem alongside tastytrade in the United States.

Pepperstone's UK license does not allow it to take on market risk, with all of that exposure routed back to affiliate Pepperstone Group Limited.

Group Cash Repatriation Drives the Headline Number

Strip out the intra-group services income and Pepperstone Limited's underlying trading business looks more measured than the headline profit suggests. The £21.4 million profit repatriation from another group entity is the single biggest line item on the income statement and effectively flatters the UK numbers relative to organic trading performance.

The company also released a £300,000 legal provision booked the previous year after the Financial Ombudsman Service ruled in its favor on the underlying complaint, the filing notes. A £6.1 million UK corporation tax expense brought the effective tax rate close to 25%.

Dividends paid during the year totaled £8.5 million, up from £6.3 million in fiscal 2024, with all of it flowing to immediate parent FX MidCo Pty Ltd in Australia. Client segregated cash held in designated accounts ended the period at £26.2 million, broadly flat against £27 million a year earlier.

Capital Buffers Sit Well Above Regulatory Floor

The UK entity reported a Pillar 1 capital adequacy ratio of 427% and a liquid asset ratio of 877% as of June 30, 2025, with regulatory Tier 1 capital of £12.4 million. Both figures sit well above the minimums required under the UK Investment Firms Prudential Regime that applies to MIFID investment firms.

Auditor Ernst & Young signed off the accounts on October 21, 2025, issuing an unqualified opinion. Directors include group CEO Tamas Szabo, Savvakis Ioannou and Robert Bowen, who joined the London office in 2019 from IG Group, as Finance Magnates reported at the time. The wider Pepperstone group is ultimately controlled by FX HoldCo Pty Ltd, registered in Melbourne.

Pepperstone Limited, the UK subsidiary of Australian foreign exchange group Pepperstone, posted a sharp jump in earnings for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025 (FY25), with profit before tax climbing to £24.1 million from £13.3 million a year earlier, according to the broker's latest accounts filed with Companies House.

Net profit at the FCA-regulated entity rose to £18 million, up 81% from £9.9 million in fiscal 2024. Trading revenue from commissions, swaps and spreads on contracts for difference and spread bets reached £15 million, a 15.5% increase from £13 million the previous year.

The bigger swing, however, came from outside the trading book. Other income, which the company attributes mostly to services provided to other entities within the group, jumped to £22.9 million from £13.2 million. Of that, £21.4 million represented a profit repatriation allocation from another group entity, the filing shows. Interest income contributed a further £1.5 million.

Metric

2025 (£m)

2024 (£m)

Change

Trading Revenue

15.04

13.02

▲ 15.5%

Gross Profit

12.71

11.15

▲ 14.0%

Other Income

22.90

13.24

▲ 73.0%

Total Expenses

(11.53)

(11.11)

▲ 3.8%

Operating Profit (before tax)

24.07

13.27

▲ 81.4%

Net Profit (after tax)

18.00

9.94

▲ 81.1%

Trading Revenue Recovers After 2024 Dip

The 2025 numbers mark a rebound for the London arm, which had reported a slight revenue dip in the prior year. As Finance Magnates reported in early 2025, Pepperstone Limited closed fiscal 2024 with £13 million in trading revenue and a £9.9 million profit, alongside its first dividend distribution in years.

The latest filing shows the company added 272 new trading instruments across asset classes during the year, taking the total catalogue to more than 1,700 CFD and spread-bet products. The broker said it remains focused on professional traders and retail clients "who are generally experienced and informed about derivatives and financial markets."

Average headcount at the UK entity stood at 27, broadly flat year on year, while the wider Pepperstone group employed more than 600 staff. Employee expenses rose to £4.8 million from £3.8 million.

Spread Betting Players Crowd a Shrinking UK Field

Pepperstone's UK business operates in a market that has consolidated around a handful of large names, even as new entrants chip away at the edges. IG Group, CMC Markets and Plus500 dominate the listed UK retail derivatives space, while privately held competitors including Pepperstone, ActivTrades and XTB compete for the same retail and professional client base.

Group CEO Tamas Szabo has previously told Finance Magnates that the UK contributes between 10% and 13% of overall group revenue, calling the market "significant" despite broader industry concerns about declining UK retail participation.

In a 2024 interview at the Finance Magnates London Summit, Szabo said the firm sees crypto exchanges encroaching on the CFD turf and flagged crypto as Pepperstone's fourth-largest asset class by trading activity.

Pepperstone has differentiated its UK offering in part through its TradingView integration, having added spread betting on TradingView for UK clients in 2023. That contrasts with rival approaches: CMC Markets has leaned on its proprietary Next Generation platform, while IG Group continues to push its own ecosystem alongside tastytrade in the United States.

Pepperstone's UK license does not allow it to take on market risk, with all of that exposure routed back to affiliate Pepperstone Group Limited.

Group Cash Repatriation Drives the Headline Number

Strip out the intra-group services income and Pepperstone Limited's underlying trading business looks more measured than the headline profit suggests. The £21.4 million profit repatriation from another group entity is the single biggest line item on the income statement and effectively flatters the UK numbers relative to organic trading performance.

The company also released a £300,000 legal provision booked the previous year after the Financial Ombudsman Service ruled in its favor on the underlying complaint, the filing notes. A £6.1 million UK corporation tax expense brought the effective tax rate close to 25%.

Dividends paid during the year totaled £8.5 million, up from £6.3 million in fiscal 2024, with all of it flowing to immediate parent FX MidCo Pty Ltd in Australia. Client segregated cash held in designated accounts ended the period at £26.2 million, broadly flat against £27 million a year earlier.

Capital Buffers Sit Well Above Regulatory Floor

The UK entity reported a Pillar 1 capital adequacy ratio of 427% and a liquid asset ratio of 877% as of June 30, 2025, with regulatory Tier 1 capital of £12.4 million. Both figures sit well above the minimums required under the UK Investment Firms Prudential Regime that applies to MIFID investment firms.

Auditor Ernst & Young signed off the accounts on October 21, 2025, issuing an unqualified opinion. Directors include group CEO Tamas Szabo, Savvakis Ioannou and Robert Bowen, who joined the London office in 2019 from IG Group, as Finance Magnates reported at the time. The wider Pepperstone group is ultimately controlled by FX HoldCo Pty Ltd, registered in Melbourne.

About the Author: Damian Chmiel
Damian Chmiel
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About the Author: Damian Chmiel
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
  • 3427 Articles
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