Gibraltar-based market maker brings $5 billion in daily volume to the Swiss trading technology firm's institutional client base.
The deal extends Wyden's run of liquidity network integrations and comes as brokers ramp up digital asset offerings under post-MiCA frameworks.
Wyden, the
Zurich-based institutional digital asset trading platform, said today (Tuesday)
it has added Wincent to its liquidity network, connecting the
Gibraltar-headquartered market maker with banks and brokers using Wyden's smart
order routing infrastructure.
Wincent
ranks among the top 10 global high-frequency cryptocurrency market makers,
according to the company, executing roughly 500,000 trades and more than $5
billion in daily notional volume.
Banks and Brokers in Focus
Through the
integration, Wyden's institutional clients will be able to route orders across
more than 200 digital assets and 17 global venues, with Wincent's pricing
feeding into Wyden's real-time Smart Order Routing engine.
Boris
Sebosik, Chief Business Development Officer at Wincent, added exclusively for
FinanceMagnates.com, that the tie-up was designed specifically to serve banks
and brokers, noting that the company tailored its offering for retail-facing
institutions with a wide symbol portfolio and tight pricing.
He
characterized Wincent's role not as a passive aggregator but as a liquidity
enhancer, pointing to the firm's prop trading origins as a differentiator in
order book depth and breadth.
"By
combining our high-frequency market-making capabilities with Wyden's trading
infrastructure and smart order routing, we are making it easier for
institutions to access deep liquidity, tighter pricing, and more efficient
execution across the digital asset market," Sebosik said.
CFD Brokers Also in the
Frame
Boris Sebosik, Chief Business Development Officer at Wincent
On the CFD
side, Sebosik confirmed that institutions, including CFD retail brokers, can
already trade bilaterally with Wincent through multiple access points,
including Talos, Wincent's own FIX gateway, and as part of prime brokers'
aggregated offerings.
The
integration fits into a broader effort by both firms to meet growing demand
from regulated financial institutions expanding into digital assets. As FinanceMagnates.com reported in
January 2025, rival
crypto market maker Wintermute recorded OTC volume growth in 2024, pointing to
accelerating institutional appetite for structured digital asset access.
TradFi's Share of the
Market Is Rising
Wincent
processes a mix of crypto-native and traditional finance counterparties on its
OTC desk, with roughly 60% of flow currently coming from crypto-native
institutions, Sebosik told Finance Magnates. That balance is shifting, he said,
as more banks bring new retail client bases online with digital asset
offerings.
"The
distinction is no longer very clear in many cases, as several large
institutions have been offering crypto trading for a long time and I wouldn't
count them as pure tradfi brokers," Sebosik commented for
FinanceMagnates.com.
That view
reflects a broader market reality visible across the liquidity
provider landscape,
where the line between crypto-native and traditional finance counterparties
continues to blur.
Wyden Keeps Building Its
LP Roster
This is not
Wyden's first integration in recent months. The firm added Crypto Finance AG,
the Deutsche Börse-owned digital asset trading firm, to its network in March
2025, and followed that with Nomura-backed Laser Digital in October 2025.
Nomura's
digital asset arm has since faced its own
challenges, with
the Japanese bank partly attributing a 10% profit decline to crypto-related
losses in early 2026, adding a note of caution to the otherwise expansive
institutional narrative.
Wyden, the
Zurich-based institutional digital asset trading platform, said today (Tuesday)
it has added Wincent to its liquidity network, connecting the
Gibraltar-headquartered market maker with banks and brokers using Wyden's smart
order routing infrastructure.
Wincent
ranks among the top 10 global high-frequency cryptocurrency market makers,
according to the company, executing roughly 500,000 trades and more than $5
billion in daily notional volume.
Banks and Brokers in Focus
Through the
integration, Wyden's institutional clients will be able to route orders across
more than 200 digital assets and 17 global venues, with Wincent's pricing
feeding into Wyden's real-time Smart Order Routing engine.
Boris
Sebosik, Chief Business Development Officer at Wincent, added exclusively for
FinanceMagnates.com, that the tie-up was designed specifically to serve banks
and brokers, noting that the company tailored its offering for retail-facing
institutions with a wide symbol portfolio and tight pricing.
He
characterized Wincent's role not as a passive aggregator but as a liquidity
enhancer, pointing to the firm's prop trading origins as a differentiator in
order book depth and breadth.
"By
combining our high-frequency market-making capabilities with Wyden's trading
infrastructure and smart order routing, we are making it easier for
institutions to access deep liquidity, tighter pricing, and more efficient
execution across the digital asset market," Sebosik said.
CFD Brokers Also in the
Frame
Boris Sebosik, Chief Business Development Officer at Wincent
On the CFD
side, Sebosik confirmed that institutions, including CFD retail brokers, can
already trade bilaterally with Wincent through multiple access points,
including Talos, Wincent's own FIX gateway, and as part of prime brokers'
aggregated offerings.
The
integration fits into a broader effort by both firms to meet growing demand
from regulated financial institutions expanding into digital assets. As FinanceMagnates.com reported in
January 2025, rival
crypto market maker Wintermute recorded OTC volume growth in 2024, pointing to
accelerating institutional appetite for structured digital asset access.
TradFi's Share of the
Market Is Rising
Wincent
processes a mix of crypto-native and traditional finance counterparties on its
OTC desk, with roughly 60% of flow currently coming from crypto-native
institutions, Sebosik told Finance Magnates. That balance is shifting, he said,
as more banks bring new retail client bases online with digital asset
offerings.
"The
distinction is no longer very clear in many cases, as several large
institutions have been offering crypto trading for a long time and I wouldn't
count them as pure tradfi brokers," Sebosik commented for
FinanceMagnates.com.
That view
reflects a broader market reality visible across the liquidity
provider landscape,
where the line between crypto-native and traditional finance counterparties
continues to blur.
Wyden Keeps Building Its
LP Roster
This is not
Wyden's first integration in recent months. The firm added Crypto Finance AG,
the Deutsche Börse-owned digital asset trading firm, to its network in March
2025, and followed that with Nomura-backed Laser Digital in October 2025.
Nomura's
digital asset arm has since faced its own
challenges, with
the Japanese bank partly attributing a 10% profit decline to crypto-related
losses in early 2026, adding a note of caution to the otherwise expansive
institutional narrative.
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
XM’s Sister Brand Trading.com Secures MiCA License in Cyprus
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