Financial and Business News

Tradition Posts Record CHF 1.2 Billion Revenue as UAE Business Rises 55%

Wednesday, 25/03/2026 | 09:55 GMT by Damian Chmiel
  • The Swiss interdealer broker's profit before tax climbed 25% to CHF 183 million.
  • With its share price up 55% and a dividend raised to CHF 7.50, Tradition is outpacing larger rivals on margin expansion and shareholder returns.
Compagnie Financiere Tradition

Compagnie Financière Tradition SA posted full-year 2025 revenue of CHF 1.2 billion, as the Lausanne-based interdealer broker turned central bank divergence and elevated market volatility into its most profitable year since listing on the SIX Swiss Exchange in 1973.

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Consolidated revenue including joint ventures reached CHF 1,203.6 million, up 11.4% at constant exchange rates from CHF 1,132.8 million in 2024, according to the company's annual report. Profit before tax climbed 25.3% to CHF 183.1 million, and net profit attributable to shareholders reached CHF 134.2 million, a 22.2% gain at constant rates.

The Middle East Rewrites the Geographic Map

The UAE stood out as the year's most striking geographic story. Revenue from Dubai and the newly opened Abu Dhabi office rose to CHF 129.1 million from CHF 83.5 million in 2024, a jump of roughly 55%, outpacing every other territory the group disclosed. By comparison, the United States generated CHF 343.4 million, broadly flat year-on-year, while the UK contributed CHF 240.8 million, up modestly from CHF 231.2 million.

The Middle East surge came against a backdrop of sweeping regulatory reform across the UAE, where authorities overhauled client asset rules, expanded digital finance frameworks, and signaled clear ambitions to become a leading global financial center.

Tradition's third-quarter results had already forecasted strong momentum, with revenue running about 9% ahead through September. The final numbers confirm the pace held into year-end.

Key 2025 Performance Metrics

Metric

2025

2024

Change (constant FX)

Revenue incl. JVs

CHF 1,203.6m

CHF 1,132.8m

+11.4%

EBITDA incl. JVs

CHF 209.9m

CHF 176.5m

+24.6%

Net profit (shareholders)

CHF 134.2m

CHF 115.6m

+22.2%

Return on equity

27.6%

26.0%

+160bps

Productivity per broker

CHF 929,000

CHF 876,000

+6.0%

Fewer Brokers, More Revenue Per Head

Tradition's broker headcount fell to 2,470 at year-end from 2,605 in 2024, yet productivity per broker rose to CHF 929,000, the highest in at least four years and up steadily from CHF 774,000 in 2022. The group processed more revenue with roughly 135 fewer brokers, pointing to efficiency gains across its 300 specialist desks rather than simply a market windfall.

Staff costs still rose to CHF 771.2 million from CHF 748.6 million, reflecting higher variable compensation, though the increase was proportionally smaller than revenue growth.

Chairman Patrick Combes noted the results reflected "disciplined capital allocation maintained by the Group over time and rigorous cost management."

Margin Expansion Puts Tradition Ahead of Sector Peers

EBITDA margin expanded to 17.4% from 15.6% in 2024, and operating profit rose 35% to CHF 161.5 million, one of the fastest growth rates in the interdealer broker sector for the year. Return on equity reached 27.6%, up from 26.0%.

That compares favorably with what peers reported. TP ICAP, the world's largest interdealer broker, posted full-year adjusted EBIT at a 14.8% margin on revenue of GBP 2.35 billion, up 6% at constant currency. BGC Group reported revenue of $2.94 billion, up 30%, though a substantial portion reflected acquisition rather than organic trading growth.

By asset class, currencies and interest rates remained the largest segment at 41% of consolidated revenue, as diverging Fed, ECB, and Bank of England policies generated what the company described as "significant arbitrage opportunities."

Tradition's Q1 2025 had already shown 12% revenue growth driven by similar dynamics, setting the template for the full year.

Share Price, Dividend, and 2026 Outlook

Tradition's shares on the SIX Swiss Exchange rose 55.6% to CHF 287.0, giving the company a market capitalization of CHF 2.19 billion at year-end, against a Swiss Market Index gain of just 14.4%. Average daily trading volume doubled to roughly 3,800 shares. The board will propose a cash dividend of CHF 7.50 per share at the May 21 annual general meeting, up from CHF 6.75 for 2024.

The group said its activity since the start of 2026 is running ahead of the same period last year at constant exchange rates, with priorities focused on organic broker recruitment, electronic execution investment, and further expansion of TraditionData, its OTC market data division.

TP ICAP has made a parallel push into electronic trading and data, recruiting heavily for its Fusion platform, underscoring that data monetisation has become a sector-wide priority. With shareholders' equity at CHF 489.7 million and net cash of CHF 329 million, Tradition enters 2026 with limited structural vulnerabilities, though its results remain tightly linked to market volatility and client flow.

Compagnie Financière Tradition SA posted full-year 2025 revenue of CHF 1.2 billion, as the Lausanne-based interdealer broker turned central bank divergence and elevated market volatility into its most profitable year since listing on the SIX Swiss Exchange in 1973.

Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)

Consolidated revenue including joint ventures reached CHF 1,203.6 million, up 11.4% at constant exchange rates from CHF 1,132.8 million in 2024, according to the company's annual report. Profit before tax climbed 25.3% to CHF 183.1 million, and net profit attributable to shareholders reached CHF 134.2 million, a 22.2% gain at constant rates.

The Middle East Rewrites the Geographic Map

The UAE stood out as the year's most striking geographic story. Revenue from Dubai and the newly opened Abu Dhabi office rose to CHF 129.1 million from CHF 83.5 million in 2024, a jump of roughly 55%, outpacing every other territory the group disclosed. By comparison, the United States generated CHF 343.4 million, broadly flat year-on-year, while the UK contributed CHF 240.8 million, up modestly from CHF 231.2 million.

The Middle East surge came against a backdrop of sweeping regulatory reform across the UAE, where authorities overhauled client asset rules, expanded digital finance frameworks, and signaled clear ambitions to become a leading global financial center.

Tradition's third-quarter results had already forecasted strong momentum, with revenue running about 9% ahead through September. The final numbers confirm the pace held into year-end.

Key 2025 Performance Metrics

Metric

2025

2024

Change (constant FX)

Revenue incl. JVs

CHF 1,203.6m

CHF 1,132.8m

+11.4%

EBITDA incl. JVs

CHF 209.9m

CHF 176.5m

+24.6%

Net profit (shareholders)

CHF 134.2m

CHF 115.6m

+22.2%

Return on equity

27.6%

26.0%

+160bps

Productivity per broker

CHF 929,000

CHF 876,000

+6.0%

Fewer Brokers, More Revenue Per Head

Tradition's broker headcount fell to 2,470 at year-end from 2,605 in 2024, yet productivity per broker rose to CHF 929,000, the highest in at least four years and up steadily from CHF 774,000 in 2022. The group processed more revenue with roughly 135 fewer brokers, pointing to efficiency gains across its 300 specialist desks rather than simply a market windfall.

Staff costs still rose to CHF 771.2 million from CHF 748.6 million, reflecting higher variable compensation, though the increase was proportionally smaller than revenue growth.

Chairman Patrick Combes noted the results reflected "disciplined capital allocation maintained by the Group over time and rigorous cost management."

Margin Expansion Puts Tradition Ahead of Sector Peers

EBITDA margin expanded to 17.4% from 15.6% in 2024, and operating profit rose 35% to CHF 161.5 million, one of the fastest growth rates in the interdealer broker sector for the year. Return on equity reached 27.6%, up from 26.0%.

That compares favorably with what peers reported. TP ICAP, the world's largest interdealer broker, posted full-year adjusted EBIT at a 14.8% margin on revenue of GBP 2.35 billion, up 6% at constant currency. BGC Group reported revenue of $2.94 billion, up 30%, though a substantial portion reflected acquisition rather than organic trading growth.

By asset class, currencies and interest rates remained the largest segment at 41% of consolidated revenue, as diverging Fed, ECB, and Bank of England policies generated what the company described as "significant arbitrage opportunities."

Tradition's Q1 2025 had already shown 12% revenue growth driven by similar dynamics, setting the template for the full year.

Share Price, Dividend, and 2026 Outlook

Tradition's shares on the SIX Swiss Exchange rose 55.6% to CHF 287.0, giving the company a market capitalization of CHF 2.19 billion at year-end, against a Swiss Market Index gain of just 14.4%. Average daily trading volume doubled to roughly 3,800 shares. The board will propose a cash dividend of CHF 7.50 per share at the May 21 annual general meeting, up from CHF 6.75 for 2024.

The group said its activity since the start of 2026 is running ahead of the same period last year at constant exchange rates, with priorities focused on organic broker recruitment, electronic execution investment, and further expansion of TraditionData, its OTC market data division.

TP ICAP has made a parallel push into electronic trading and data, recruiting heavily for its Fusion platform, underscoring that data monetisation has become a sector-wide priority. With shareholders' equity at CHF 489.7 million and net cash of CHF 329 million, Tradition enters 2026 with limited structural vulnerabilities, though its results remain tightly linked to market volatility and client flow.

About the Author: Damian Chmiel
Damian Chmiel
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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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