CFD profits thrive on volatility. A shift to futures could permanently reshape broker earnings.
As EU regulators tighten OTC rules, brokers are rethinking how sustainable their revenue model really is.
CFD model profits vs. Futures & Options model profits
European CFD brokers are accelerating plans to add futures and options to their platforms. According to a recent Acuiti survey conducted for CME Group, four out of five firms that do not yet offer listed derivatives are either planning to or actively considering doing so.
What looks like product expansion is in fact a structural pivot. Moving from OTC CFDs to exchange-traded futures and options fundamentally changes how brokers generate revenues and what risks they are exposed to.
Public disclosures from major European retail brokers underline how heavily earnings remain concentrated in OTC and leveraged products.
In FY25, the majority of net trading income at IG, CMC Markets and XTB was still derived from CFDs and other internalised derivatives.
Swissquote represents a structural outlier. Unlike most CFD-centric peers, the Swiss-listed broker generates the majority of its trading revenues from securities and exchange-traded activity rather than leveraged OTC flow.
CFD brokers revenue exposure to OTC products (FY25)
Why are CFD brokers under pressure?
European regulators have moved well beyond leverage caps and warning labels.
Belgium introduced an outright ban on leveraged CFDs and rolling spot FX for retail clients via electronic platforms.
Spain’s CNMV prohibited advertising CFDs to retail investors and tightened leverage and margin rules.
The UK’s FCA made ESMA’s temporary restrictions permanent, locking in leverage caps, strict margin close-out rules and aggressive risk warnings.
Regulators are no longer focused solely on marketing practices; they are questioning the structure of the OTC model itself. Issues such as opaque pricing, high leverage, and the inherent conflict of interest embedded in B-Book models are repeatedly highlighted.
When supervisors point out that the majority of retail CFD accounts lose money, the critique is structural rather than cosmetic.
That anxiety is mirrored inside firms.
In the Acuiti survey, regulatory compliance ranked as the top operational challenge for 89% of brokers offering CFDs, and 62% said they were very concerned about further regulatory tightening.
European regulators take tough stance towards CFD
How does a CFD broker actually make money?
The economics of CFDs are closely linked to internalisation and principal risk. In a traditional B-Book setup, the broker is the counterparty to the client. Client losses over time translate into broker profits, subject to hedging costs.
As retail trading behaviour tends to be pro-cyclical and negatively convex, this P&L can be substantial during volatile periods.
Even where brokers hedge selectively, much of the flow is internalised.
Firms capture the bid-ask spread, benefit from asymmetries in execution, and net opposing client positions before deciding whether to hedge externally. Larger brokers typically run hybrid books, dynamically shifting exposure between internal warehousing and external liquidity providers.
This flexibility gives management discretion over how much market risk to carry and when.
The model is highly sensitive to volatility. Spikes in market turbulence increase volumes, widen spreads and accelerate stop-outs, all of which tend to support revenue.
CFDs are therefore structurally high-margin products, precisely because the broker controls pricing and internalisation. That control, however, is exactly what regulators have come to question.
XTB’s third-quarter 2025 results illustrate how sensitive internalised models remain to volatility regimes. Despite a sharp increase in client activity and nominal turnover, lower market volatility reduced profitability per lot, leading to a significant drop in net earnings.
Volatility vs Profitability: XTB Case (Q3 2025)
How is the revenue model different in futures and options?
Listed futures and options fundamentally reframe the broker’s role. Instead of acting as principal, the broker operates primarily as an intermediary connected to an exchange and a clearinghouse.
Revenue is driven mainly by commissions and exchange fee mark-ups rather than by client trading losses.
Margins per contract are typically thinner but more predictable. Brokers do not control spreads in the same way as in OTC products because prices are formed in a central order book,
At the same time, listed derivatives open other revenue channels. Interest on client cash balances, margin financing for active accounts, and paid access to market data or advanced trading tools become increasingly important. The broker’s economics shift from warehousing risk to monetising infrastructure, scale and client engagement.
How is the revenue model different in futures and options
Does that mean revenues will fall?
In the near term, most firms should expect pressure. The reduction of B-Book P&L removes a high-margin, volatility-amplified revenue stream. Replacing it with commission income typically lowers revenue per active client, particularly in the early stages of transition. Competition in listed derivatives is transparent and fee-driven, limiting pricing power.
The medium-term picture, however, is more nuanced. Industry research and broker disclosures suggest that listed derivatives tend to attract a more engaged and better-capitalised segment of retail traders.
A 2025 Acuiti report for CME Group noted that active futures and options traders are more consistent in their activity and more willing to pay for data, analytics and professional tools than mass-market CFD clients.
While per-trade margins are thinner in exchange-traded products, higher engagement and more stable trading patterns can support improved lifetime value over time.
IG’s US division illustrates this divergence. Exchange-traded derivatives revenue grew 21% year-on-year in USD terms, with revenue per customer up 4%, while OTC revenue per customer declined. The data suggests stronger monetisation momentum in listed products relative to principal-based flow.
IG Group's annual repot (2025)
Listed derivatives also reduce regulatory tail risk. Revenue tied to centrally cleared products is less vulnerable to sudden product bans than income derived from high-leverage OTC contracts. That stability becomes increasingly important when firms commit capital to technology, marketing and balance sheet expansion.
For many firms, the shift toward listed derivatives is not purely opportunistic. In markets where high-leverage OTC products face increasing restrictions, futures and options offer a way to preserve a retail derivatives franchise within a more durable regulatory framework.
What is the biggest obstacle?
Technology integration and regulatory permissions are significant, but the primary constraint is client education. For more than a decade, retail traders in Europe were introduced to derivatives primarily through CFDs, which are perpetual, standardised and relatively simple to understand in notional terms.
Futures and options demand a more complex mental framework involving contract multipliers, margin variation, expiries and, in the case of options, volatility and time decay.
Bridging that gap requires sustained investment in structured education, simulation tools and support infrastructure. In the short term, these costs weigh on margins. In the longer term, they determine whether a broker can cultivate a stable, higher-value client base in listed derivatives.
The most plausible outcome is a hybrid model. Where regulation allows, CFDs will remain for smaller tickets and niche exposures, while futures and options anchor core index, rates and commodity trading.
The revenue mix will gradually shift away from principal risk and toward commissions, financing and services.
Margins per trade are likely to compress across the industry, making scale and cross-selling more important.
Smaller, pure-CFD operators may struggle to fund the infrastructure required for listed derivatives and could consolidate or pivot to introducing-broker models.
Larger, well-capitalised firms with multi-jurisdictional licences and strong technology stacks are positioned to capture share.
Over time, the share of group revenue derived from pure B-Book risk-taking is likely to decline.
The transition does not necessarily shrink revenues outright. Instead, it changes their composition and reduces their volatility. Firms that adapt early may end up with lower per-trade margins but more diversified and resilient earnings.
Those that remain heavily dependent on high-leverage OTC flow face an increasingly binary risk profile in a regulatory environment that shows little sign of softening.
European CFD brokers are accelerating plans to add futures and options to their platforms. According to a recent Acuiti survey conducted for CME Group, four out of five firms that do not yet offer listed derivatives are either planning to or actively considering doing so.
What looks like product expansion is in fact a structural pivot. Moving from OTC CFDs to exchange-traded futures and options fundamentally changes how brokers generate revenues and what risks they are exposed to.
Public disclosures from major European retail brokers underline how heavily earnings remain concentrated in OTC and leveraged products.
In FY25, the majority of net trading income at IG, CMC Markets and XTB was still derived from CFDs and other internalised derivatives.
Swissquote represents a structural outlier. Unlike most CFD-centric peers, the Swiss-listed broker generates the majority of its trading revenues from securities and exchange-traded activity rather than leveraged OTC flow.
CFD brokers revenue exposure to OTC products (FY25)
Why are CFD brokers under pressure?
European regulators have moved well beyond leverage caps and warning labels.
Belgium introduced an outright ban on leveraged CFDs and rolling spot FX for retail clients via electronic platforms.
Spain’s CNMV prohibited advertising CFDs to retail investors and tightened leverage and margin rules.
The UK’s FCA made ESMA’s temporary restrictions permanent, locking in leverage caps, strict margin close-out rules and aggressive risk warnings.
Regulators are no longer focused solely on marketing practices; they are questioning the structure of the OTC model itself. Issues such as opaque pricing, high leverage, and the inherent conflict of interest embedded in B-Book models are repeatedly highlighted.
When supervisors point out that the majority of retail CFD accounts lose money, the critique is structural rather than cosmetic.
That anxiety is mirrored inside firms.
In the Acuiti survey, regulatory compliance ranked as the top operational challenge for 89% of brokers offering CFDs, and 62% said they were very concerned about further regulatory tightening.
European regulators take tough stance towards CFD
How does a CFD broker actually make money?
The economics of CFDs are closely linked to internalisation and principal risk. In a traditional B-Book setup, the broker is the counterparty to the client. Client losses over time translate into broker profits, subject to hedging costs.
As retail trading behaviour tends to be pro-cyclical and negatively convex, this P&L can be substantial during volatile periods.
Even where brokers hedge selectively, much of the flow is internalised.
Firms capture the bid-ask spread, benefit from asymmetries in execution, and net opposing client positions before deciding whether to hedge externally. Larger brokers typically run hybrid books, dynamically shifting exposure between internal warehousing and external liquidity providers.
This flexibility gives management discretion over how much market risk to carry and when.
The model is highly sensitive to volatility. Spikes in market turbulence increase volumes, widen spreads and accelerate stop-outs, all of which tend to support revenue.
CFDs are therefore structurally high-margin products, precisely because the broker controls pricing and internalisation. That control, however, is exactly what regulators have come to question.
XTB’s third-quarter 2025 results illustrate how sensitive internalised models remain to volatility regimes. Despite a sharp increase in client activity and nominal turnover, lower market volatility reduced profitability per lot, leading to a significant drop in net earnings.
Volatility vs Profitability: XTB Case (Q3 2025)
How is the revenue model different in futures and options?
Listed futures and options fundamentally reframe the broker’s role. Instead of acting as principal, the broker operates primarily as an intermediary connected to an exchange and a clearinghouse.
Revenue is driven mainly by commissions and exchange fee mark-ups rather than by client trading losses.
Margins per contract are typically thinner but more predictable. Brokers do not control spreads in the same way as in OTC products because prices are formed in a central order book,
At the same time, listed derivatives open other revenue channels. Interest on client cash balances, margin financing for active accounts, and paid access to market data or advanced trading tools become increasingly important. The broker’s economics shift from warehousing risk to monetising infrastructure, scale and client engagement.
How is the revenue model different in futures and options
Does that mean revenues will fall?
In the near term, most firms should expect pressure. The reduction of B-Book P&L removes a high-margin, volatility-amplified revenue stream. Replacing it with commission income typically lowers revenue per active client, particularly in the early stages of transition. Competition in listed derivatives is transparent and fee-driven, limiting pricing power.
The medium-term picture, however, is more nuanced. Industry research and broker disclosures suggest that listed derivatives tend to attract a more engaged and better-capitalised segment of retail traders.
A 2025 Acuiti report for CME Group noted that active futures and options traders are more consistent in their activity and more willing to pay for data, analytics and professional tools than mass-market CFD clients.
While per-trade margins are thinner in exchange-traded products, higher engagement and more stable trading patterns can support improved lifetime value over time.
IG’s US division illustrates this divergence. Exchange-traded derivatives revenue grew 21% year-on-year in USD terms, with revenue per customer up 4%, while OTC revenue per customer declined. The data suggests stronger monetisation momentum in listed products relative to principal-based flow.
IG Group's annual repot (2025)
Listed derivatives also reduce regulatory tail risk. Revenue tied to centrally cleared products is less vulnerable to sudden product bans than income derived from high-leverage OTC contracts. That stability becomes increasingly important when firms commit capital to technology, marketing and balance sheet expansion.
For many firms, the shift toward listed derivatives is not purely opportunistic. In markets where high-leverage OTC products face increasing restrictions, futures and options offer a way to preserve a retail derivatives franchise within a more durable regulatory framework.
What is the biggest obstacle?
Technology integration and regulatory permissions are significant, but the primary constraint is client education. For more than a decade, retail traders in Europe were introduced to derivatives primarily through CFDs, which are perpetual, standardised and relatively simple to understand in notional terms.
Futures and options demand a more complex mental framework involving contract multipliers, margin variation, expiries and, in the case of options, volatility and time decay.
Bridging that gap requires sustained investment in structured education, simulation tools and support infrastructure. In the short term, these costs weigh on margins. In the longer term, they determine whether a broker can cultivate a stable, higher-value client base in listed derivatives.
The most plausible outcome is a hybrid model. Where regulation allows, CFDs will remain for smaller tickets and niche exposures, while futures and options anchor core index, rates and commodity trading.
The revenue mix will gradually shift away from principal risk and toward commissions, financing and services.
Margins per trade are likely to compress across the industry, making scale and cross-selling more important.
Smaller, pure-CFD operators may struggle to fund the infrastructure required for listed derivatives and could consolidate or pivot to introducing-broker models.
Larger, well-capitalised firms with multi-jurisdictional licences and strong technology stacks are positioned to capture share.
Over time, the share of group revenue derived from pure B-Book risk-taking is likely to decline.
The transition does not necessarily shrink revenues outright. Instead, it changes their composition and reduces their volatility. Firms that adapt early may end up with lower per-trade margins but more diversified and resilient earnings.
Those that remain heavily dependent on high-leverage OTC flow face an increasingly binary risk profile in a regulatory environment that shows little sign of softening.
Hannah Hill on Innovation, Branding & Award-Winning Technology | Executive Interview | AXI
Hannah Hill on Innovation, Branding & Award-Winning Technology | Executive Interview | AXI
Hannah Hill on Innovation, Branding & Award-Winning Technology | Executive Interview | AXI
Hannah Hill on Innovation, Branding & Award-Winning Technology | Executive Interview | AXI
Recorded live at FMLS:25, this executive interview features Hannah Hill, Head of Brand and Sponsorship at AXI, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following AXI’s win for Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025.
In this wide-ranging discussion, Hannah shares insights on:
🔹What winning the Finance Magnates award means for AXI’s credibility and innovation
🔹How the launch of AXI Select, the capital allocation program, is redefining industry standards
🔹The development and rollout of the AXI trading app across multiple markets
🔹Driving brand evolution alongside technological advancements
🔹Encouraging and recognizing teams behind the scenes
🔹The role of marketing, content, and social media in building product awareness
Hannah explains why standout products, strategic branding, and a focus on innovation are key to growing visibility and staying ahead in a competitive brokerage landscape.
🏆 Award Highlight: Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #MostInnovativeBroker #TradingTechnology #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview #AXI
Recorded live at FMLS:25, this executive interview features Hannah Hill, Head of Brand and Sponsorship at AXI, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following AXI’s win for Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025.
In this wide-ranging discussion, Hannah shares insights on:
🔹What winning the Finance Magnates award means for AXI’s credibility and innovation
🔹How the launch of AXI Select, the capital allocation program, is redefining industry standards
🔹The development and rollout of the AXI trading app across multiple markets
🔹Driving brand evolution alongside technological advancements
🔹Encouraging and recognizing teams behind the scenes
🔹The role of marketing, content, and social media in building product awareness
Hannah explains why standout products, strategic branding, and a focus on innovation are key to growing visibility and staying ahead in a competitive brokerage landscape.
🏆 Award Highlight: Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #MostInnovativeBroker #TradingTechnology #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview #AXI
Recorded live at FMLS:25, this executive interview features Hannah Hill, Head of Brand and Sponsorship at AXI, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following AXI’s win for Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025.
In this wide-ranging discussion, Hannah shares insights on:
🔹What winning the Finance Magnates award means for AXI’s credibility and innovation
🔹How the launch of AXI Select, the capital allocation program, is redefining industry standards
🔹The development and rollout of the AXI trading app across multiple markets
🔹Driving brand evolution alongside technological advancements
🔹Encouraging and recognizing teams behind the scenes
🔹The role of marketing, content, and social media in building product awareness
Hannah explains why standout products, strategic branding, and a focus on innovation are key to growing visibility and staying ahead in a competitive brokerage landscape.
🏆 Award Highlight: Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #MostInnovativeBroker #TradingTechnology #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview #AXI
Recorded live at FMLS:25, this executive interview features Hannah Hill, Head of Brand and Sponsorship at AXI, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following AXI’s win for Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025.
In this wide-ranging discussion, Hannah shares insights on:
🔹What winning the Finance Magnates award means for AXI’s credibility and innovation
🔹How the launch of AXI Select, the capital allocation program, is redefining industry standards
🔹The development and rollout of the AXI trading app across multiple markets
🔹Driving brand evolution alongside technological advancements
🔹Encouraging and recognizing teams behind the scenes
🔹The role of marketing, content, and social media in building product awareness
Hannah explains why standout products, strategic branding, and a focus on innovation are key to growing visibility and staying ahead in a competitive brokerage landscape.
🏆 Award Highlight: Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #MostInnovativeBroker #TradingTechnology #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview #AXI
Executive Interview | Dor Eligula | Co-Founder & Chief Business Officer, BridgeWise | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Dor Eligula | Co-Founder & Chief Business Officer, BridgeWise | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Dor Eligula | Co-Founder & Chief Business Officer, BridgeWise | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Dor Eligula | Co-Founder & Chief Business Officer, BridgeWise | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Dor Eligula | Co-Founder & Chief Business Officer, BridgeWise | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Dor Eligula | Co-Founder & Chief Business Officer, BridgeWise | FMLS:25
In this session, Jonathan Fine form Ultimate Group speaks with Dor Eligula from Bridgewise, a fast-growing AI-powered research and analytics firm supporting brokers and exchanges worldwide.
We start with Dor’s reaction to the Summit and then move to broker growth and the quick wins brokers often overlook. Dor shares where he sees “blue ocean” growth across Asian markets and how local client behaviour shapes demand.
We also discuss the rollout of AI across investment research. Dor gives real examples of how automation and human judgment meet at Bridgewise — including moments when analysts corrected AI output, and times when AI prevented an error.
We close with a practical question: how retail investors can actually use AI without falling into common traps.
In this session, Jonathan Fine form Ultimate Group speaks with Dor Eligula from Bridgewise, a fast-growing AI-powered research and analytics firm supporting brokers and exchanges worldwide.
We start with Dor’s reaction to the Summit and then move to broker growth and the quick wins brokers often overlook. Dor shares where he sees “blue ocean” growth across Asian markets and how local client behaviour shapes demand.
We also discuss the rollout of AI across investment research. Dor gives real examples of how automation and human judgment meet at Bridgewise — including moments when analysts corrected AI output, and times when AI prevented an error.
We close with a practical question: how retail investors can actually use AI without falling into common traps.
In this session, Jonathan Fine form Ultimate Group speaks with Dor Eligula from Bridgewise, a fast-growing AI-powered research and analytics firm supporting brokers and exchanges worldwide.
We start with Dor’s reaction to the Summit and then move to broker growth and the quick wins brokers often overlook. Dor shares where he sees “blue ocean” growth across Asian markets and how local client behaviour shapes demand.
We also discuss the rollout of AI across investment research. Dor gives real examples of how automation and human judgment meet at Bridgewise — including moments when analysts corrected AI output, and times when AI prevented an error.
We close with a practical question: how retail investors can actually use AI without falling into common traps.
In this session, Jonathan Fine form Ultimate Group speaks with Dor Eligula from Bridgewise, a fast-growing AI-powered research and analytics firm supporting brokers and exchanges worldwide.
We start with Dor’s reaction to the Summit and then move to broker growth and the quick wins brokers often overlook. Dor shares where he sees “blue ocean” growth across Asian markets and how local client behaviour shapes demand.
We also discuss the rollout of AI across investment research. Dor gives real examples of how automation and human judgment meet at Bridgewise — including moments when analysts corrected AI output, and times when AI prevented an error.
We close with a practical question: how retail investors can actually use AI without falling into common traps.
In this session, Jonathan Fine form Ultimate Group speaks with Dor Eligula from Bridgewise, a fast-growing AI-powered research and analytics firm supporting brokers and exchanges worldwide.
We start with Dor’s reaction to the Summit and then move to broker growth and the quick wins brokers often overlook. Dor shares where he sees “blue ocean” growth across Asian markets and how local client behaviour shapes demand.
We also discuss the rollout of AI across investment research. Dor gives real examples of how automation and human judgment meet at Bridgewise — including moments when analysts corrected AI output, and times when AI prevented an error.
We close with a practical question: how retail investors can actually use AI without falling into common traps.
In this session, Jonathan Fine form Ultimate Group speaks with Dor Eligula from Bridgewise, a fast-growing AI-powered research and analytics firm supporting brokers and exchanges worldwide.
We start with Dor’s reaction to the Summit and then move to broker growth and the quick wins brokers often overlook. Dor shares where he sees “blue ocean” growth across Asian markets and how local client behaviour shapes demand.
We also discuss the rollout of AI across investment research. Dor gives real examples of how automation and human judgment meet at Bridgewise — including moments when analysts corrected AI output, and times when AI prevented an error.
We close with a practical question: how retail investors can actually use AI without falling into common traps.
Brendan Callan joined us fresh off the Summit’s most anticipated debate: “Is Prop Trading Good for the Industry?” Brendan argued against the motion — and the audience voted him the winner.
In this interview, Brendan explains the reasoning behind his position. He walks through the message he believes many firms avoid: that the current prop trading model is too dependent on fees, too loose on risk, and too confusing for retail audiences.
We discuss why he thinks the model grew fast, why it may run into walls, and what he believes is needed for a cleaner, more responsible version of prop trading.
This is Brendan at his frankest — sharp, grounded, and very clear about what changes are overdue.
Brendan Callan joined us fresh off the Summit’s most anticipated debate: “Is Prop Trading Good for the Industry?” Brendan argued against the motion — and the audience voted him the winner.
In this interview, Brendan explains the reasoning behind his position. He walks through the message he believes many firms avoid: that the current prop trading model is too dependent on fees, too loose on risk, and too confusing for retail audiences.
We discuss why he thinks the model grew fast, why it may run into walls, and what he believes is needed for a cleaner, more responsible version of prop trading.
This is Brendan at his frankest — sharp, grounded, and very clear about what changes are overdue.
Brendan Callan joined us fresh off the Summit’s most anticipated debate: “Is Prop Trading Good for the Industry?” Brendan argued against the motion — and the audience voted him the winner.
In this interview, Brendan explains the reasoning behind his position. He walks through the message he believes many firms avoid: that the current prop trading model is too dependent on fees, too loose on risk, and too confusing for retail audiences.
We discuss why he thinks the model grew fast, why it may run into walls, and what he believes is needed for a cleaner, more responsible version of prop trading.
This is Brendan at his frankest — sharp, grounded, and very clear about what changes are overdue.
Brendan Callan joined us fresh off the Summit’s most anticipated debate: “Is Prop Trading Good for the Industry?” Brendan argued against the motion — and the audience voted him the winner.
In this interview, Brendan explains the reasoning behind his position. He walks through the message he believes many firms avoid: that the current prop trading model is too dependent on fees, too loose on risk, and too confusing for retail audiences.
We discuss why he thinks the model grew fast, why it may run into walls, and what he believes is needed for a cleaner, more responsible version of prop trading.
This is Brendan at his frankest — sharp, grounded, and very clear about what changes are overdue.
Brendan Callan joined us fresh off the Summit’s most anticipated debate: “Is Prop Trading Good for the Industry?” Brendan argued against the motion — and the audience voted him the winner.
In this interview, Brendan explains the reasoning behind his position. He walks through the message he believes many firms avoid: that the current prop trading model is too dependent on fees, too loose on risk, and too confusing for retail audiences.
We discuss why he thinks the model grew fast, why it may run into walls, and what he believes is needed for a cleaner, more responsible version of prop trading.
This is Brendan at his frankest — sharp, grounded, and very clear about what changes are overdue.
Brendan Callan joined us fresh off the Summit’s most anticipated debate: “Is Prop Trading Good for the Industry?” Brendan argued against the motion — and the audience voted him the winner.
In this interview, Brendan explains the reasoning behind his position. He walks through the message he believes many firms avoid: that the current prop trading model is too dependent on fees, too loose on risk, and too confusing for retail audiences.
We discuss why he thinks the model grew fast, why it may run into walls, and what he believes is needed for a cleaner, more responsible version of prop trading.
This is Brendan at his frankest — sharp, grounded, and very clear about what changes are overdue.
Elina Pedersen on Growth, Stability & Ultra-Low Latency | Executive Interview | Your Bourse
Elina Pedersen on Growth, Stability & Ultra-Low Latency | Executive Interview | Your Bourse
Elina Pedersen on Growth, Stability & Ultra-Low Latency | Executive Interview | Your Bourse
Elina Pedersen on Growth, Stability & Ultra-Low Latency | Executive Interview | Your Bourse
Elina Pedersen on Growth, Stability & Ultra-Low Latency | Executive Interview | Your Bourse
Elina Pedersen on Growth, Stability & Ultra-Low Latency | Executive Interview | Your Bourse
Recorded live at FMLS:25 London, this executive interview features Elina Pedersen, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following her company’s win for Best Connectivity 2025.
🔹In this wide-ranging discussion, Elina shares insights on:
🔹What winning a Finance Magnates award means for credibility and reputation
🔹How broker demand for stability and reliability is driving rapid growth
🔹The launch of a new trade server enabling flexible front-end integrations
🔹Why ultra-low latency must be proven with data, not buzzwords
🔹Common mistakes brokers make when scaling globally
🔹Educating the industry through a newly launched Dealers Academy
🔹Where AI fits into trading infrastructure and where it doesn’t
Elina explains why resilient back-end infrastructure, deep client partnerships, and disciplined focus are critical for brokers looking to scale sustainably in today’s competitive market.
🏆 Award Highlight: Best Connectivity 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #BestConnectivity #TradingTechnology #UltraLowLatency #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview
Recorded live at FMLS:25 London, this executive interview features Elina Pedersen, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following her company’s win for Best Connectivity 2025.
🔹In this wide-ranging discussion, Elina shares insights on:
🔹What winning a Finance Magnates award means for credibility and reputation
🔹How broker demand for stability and reliability is driving rapid growth
🔹The launch of a new trade server enabling flexible front-end integrations
🔹Why ultra-low latency must be proven with data, not buzzwords
🔹Common mistakes brokers make when scaling globally
🔹Educating the industry through a newly launched Dealers Academy
🔹Where AI fits into trading infrastructure and where it doesn’t
Elina explains why resilient back-end infrastructure, deep client partnerships, and disciplined focus are critical for brokers looking to scale sustainably in today’s competitive market.
🏆 Award Highlight: Best Connectivity 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #BestConnectivity #TradingTechnology #UltraLowLatency #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview
Recorded live at FMLS:25 London, this executive interview features Elina Pedersen, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following her company’s win for Best Connectivity 2025.
🔹In this wide-ranging discussion, Elina shares insights on:
🔹What winning a Finance Magnates award means for credibility and reputation
🔹How broker demand for stability and reliability is driving rapid growth
🔹The launch of a new trade server enabling flexible front-end integrations
🔹Why ultra-low latency must be proven with data, not buzzwords
🔹Common mistakes brokers make when scaling globally
🔹Educating the industry through a newly launched Dealers Academy
🔹Where AI fits into trading infrastructure and where it doesn’t
Elina explains why resilient back-end infrastructure, deep client partnerships, and disciplined focus are critical for brokers looking to scale sustainably in today’s competitive market.
🏆 Award Highlight: Best Connectivity 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #BestConnectivity #TradingTechnology #UltraLowLatency #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview
Recorded live at FMLS:25 London, this executive interview features Elina Pedersen, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following her company’s win for Best Connectivity 2025.
🔹In this wide-ranging discussion, Elina shares insights on:
🔹What winning a Finance Magnates award means for credibility and reputation
🔹How broker demand for stability and reliability is driving rapid growth
🔹The launch of a new trade server enabling flexible front-end integrations
🔹Why ultra-low latency must be proven with data, not buzzwords
🔹Common mistakes brokers make when scaling globally
🔹Educating the industry through a newly launched Dealers Academy
🔹Where AI fits into trading infrastructure and where it doesn’t
Elina explains why resilient back-end infrastructure, deep client partnerships, and disciplined focus are critical for brokers looking to scale sustainably in today’s competitive market.
🏆 Award Highlight: Best Connectivity 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #BestConnectivity #TradingTechnology #UltraLowLatency #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview
Recorded live at FMLS:25 London, this executive interview features Elina Pedersen, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following her company’s win for Best Connectivity 2025.
🔹In this wide-ranging discussion, Elina shares insights on:
🔹What winning a Finance Magnates award means for credibility and reputation
🔹How broker demand for stability and reliability is driving rapid growth
🔹The launch of a new trade server enabling flexible front-end integrations
🔹Why ultra-low latency must be proven with data, not buzzwords
🔹Common mistakes brokers make when scaling globally
🔹Educating the industry through a newly launched Dealers Academy
🔹Where AI fits into trading infrastructure and where it doesn’t
Elina explains why resilient back-end infrastructure, deep client partnerships, and disciplined focus are critical for brokers looking to scale sustainably in today’s competitive market.
🏆 Award Highlight: Best Connectivity 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #BestConnectivity #TradingTechnology #UltraLowLatency #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview
Recorded live at FMLS:25 London, this executive interview features Elina Pedersen, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following her company’s win for Best Connectivity 2025.
🔹In this wide-ranging discussion, Elina shares insights on:
🔹What winning a Finance Magnates award means for credibility and reputation
🔹How broker demand for stability and reliability is driving rapid growth
🔹The launch of a new trade server enabling flexible front-end integrations
🔹Why ultra-low latency must be proven with data, not buzzwords
🔹Common mistakes brokers make when scaling globally
🔹Educating the industry through a newly launched Dealers Academy
🔹Where AI fits into trading infrastructure and where it doesn’t
Elina explains why resilient back-end infrastructure, deep client partnerships, and disciplined focus are critical for brokers looking to scale sustainably in today’s competitive market.
🏆 Award Highlight: Best Connectivity 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #BestConnectivity #TradingTechnology #UltraLowLatency #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @BlueberryMarketsForex , a forex and CFD broker operating since 2016, offering access to multiple trading platforms, over 1,000 instruments, and flexible account types for different trading styles.
We break down Blueberry’s regulatory structure, including its Australian Financial Services License (AFSL), as well as its authorisation and registrations in other jurisdictions. The review also covers supported platforms such as MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, TradingView, Blueberry.X, and web-based trading.
You’ll learn about available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, share CFDs, and crypto CFDs, along with leverage options, minimum and maximum trade sizes, and how Blueberry structures its Standard and Raw accounts.
We also explain spreads, commissions, swap rates, swap-free account availability, funding and withdrawal methods, processing times, and what traders can expect from customer support and additional services.
Watch the full review to see whether Blueberry’s trading setup aligns with your experience level, strategy, and risk tolerance.
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Blueberry #BlueberryMarkets #BrokerReview #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #FinanceMagnates #TradingPlatforms #MarketInsights
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @BlueberryMarketsForex , a forex and CFD broker operating since 2016, offering access to multiple trading platforms, over 1,000 instruments, and flexible account types for different trading styles.
We break down Blueberry’s regulatory structure, including its Australian Financial Services License (AFSL), as well as its authorisation and registrations in other jurisdictions. The review also covers supported platforms such as MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, TradingView, Blueberry.X, and web-based trading.
You’ll learn about available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, share CFDs, and crypto CFDs, along with leverage options, minimum and maximum trade sizes, and how Blueberry structures its Standard and Raw accounts.
We also explain spreads, commissions, swap rates, swap-free account availability, funding and withdrawal methods, processing times, and what traders can expect from customer support and additional services.
Watch the full review to see whether Blueberry’s trading setup aligns with your experience level, strategy, and risk tolerance.
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Blueberry #BlueberryMarkets #BrokerReview #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #FinanceMagnates #TradingPlatforms #MarketInsights
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @BlueberryMarketsForex , a forex and CFD broker operating since 2016, offering access to multiple trading platforms, over 1,000 instruments, and flexible account types for different trading styles.
We break down Blueberry’s regulatory structure, including its Australian Financial Services License (AFSL), as well as its authorisation and registrations in other jurisdictions. The review also covers supported platforms such as MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, TradingView, Blueberry.X, and web-based trading.
You’ll learn about available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, share CFDs, and crypto CFDs, along with leverage options, minimum and maximum trade sizes, and how Blueberry structures its Standard and Raw accounts.
We also explain spreads, commissions, swap rates, swap-free account availability, funding and withdrawal methods, processing times, and what traders can expect from customer support and additional services.
Watch the full review to see whether Blueberry’s trading setup aligns with your experience level, strategy, and risk tolerance.
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Blueberry #BlueberryMarkets #BrokerReview #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #FinanceMagnates #TradingPlatforms #MarketInsights
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @BlueberryMarketsForex , a forex and CFD broker operating since 2016, offering access to multiple trading platforms, over 1,000 instruments, and flexible account types for different trading styles.
We break down Blueberry’s regulatory structure, including its Australian Financial Services License (AFSL), as well as its authorisation and registrations in other jurisdictions. The review also covers supported platforms such as MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, TradingView, Blueberry.X, and web-based trading.
You’ll learn about available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, share CFDs, and crypto CFDs, along with leverage options, minimum and maximum trade sizes, and how Blueberry structures its Standard and Raw accounts.
We also explain spreads, commissions, swap rates, swap-free account availability, funding and withdrawal methods, processing times, and what traders can expect from customer support and additional services.
Watch the full review to see whether Blueberry’s trading setup aligns with your experience level, strategy, and risk tolerance.
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Blueberry #BlueberryMarkets #BrokerReview #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #FinanceMagnates #TradingPlatforms #MarketInsights
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @BlueberryMarketsForex , a forex and CFD broker operating since 2016, offering access to multiple trading platforms, over 1,000 instruments, and flexible account types for different trading styles.
We break down Blueberry’s regulatory structure, including its Australian Financial Services License (AFSL), as well as its authorisation and registrations in other jurisdictions. The review also covers supported platforms such as MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, TradingView, Blueberry.X, and web-based trading.
You’ll learn about available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, share CFDs, and crypto CFDs, along with leverage options, minimum and maximum trade sizes, and how Blueberry structures its Standard and Raw accounts.
We also explain spreads, commissions, swap rates, swap-free account availability, funding and withdrawal methods, processing times, and what traders can expect from customer support and additional services.
Watch the full review to see whether Blueberry’s trading setup aligns with your experience level, strategy, and risk tolerance.
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Blueberry #BlueberryMarkets #BrokerReview #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #FinanceMagnates #TradingPlatforms #MarketInsights
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @BlueberryMarketsForex , a forex and CFD broker operating since 2016, offering access to multiple trading platforms, over 1,000 instruments, and flexible account types for different trading styles.
We break down Blueberry’s regulatory structure, including its Australian Financial Services License (AFSL), as well as its authorisation and registrations in other jurisdictions. The review also covers supported platforms such as MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, TradingView, Blueberry.X, and web-based trading.
You’ll learn about available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, share CFDs, and crypto CFDs, along with leverage options, minimum and maximum trade sizes, and how Blueberry structures its Standard and Raw accounts.
We also explain spreads, commissions, swap rates, swap-free account availability, funding and withdrawal methods, processing times, and what traders can expect from customer support and additional services.
Watch the full review to see whether Blueberry’s trading setup aligns with your experience level, strategy, and risk tolerance.
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Blueberry #BlueberryMarkets #BrokerReview #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #FinanceMagnates #TradingPlatforms #MarketInsights