The Futu subsidiary lets retail clients plug personal AI agents into a brokerage backbone covering five markets.
Moomoo
launched a tool today (Thursday) that lets retail customers connect their own
artificial intelligence agents directly to its trading platform, the Futu
subsidiary said, formalizing its entry into a corner of retail brokering that
eToro and Robinhood have been reshaping over the past several months.
The tool,
called moomoo API Skills, converts plain-English trading intent into executable
orders across U.S., Canadian, Hong Kong, Singapore and Japanese markets. Moomoo said the product is aimed at removing the coding
requirement that has historically limited algorithmic trading to a smaller
group of technically proficient users.
"We
are seeing a fundamental shift where investors are moving from simply accessing
information," Neil McDonald, CEO of moomoo U.S., said in the statement.
The
announcement lands about a month after eToro began letting users delegate
trades to their own AI agents via sub-accounts with defined budgets and risk limits. The parallels
between the two rollouts are close enough that they look like a single industry
direction rather than a standalone experiment.
eToro, Robinhood and
Webull Set the Tempo
The retail
brokerage sector has been stacking AI features at a rapid pace since late 2025.
eToro's developer App Store, rolled out on
April 14, 2026,
offers agent skills, a Model Context Protocol server and no-code publishing
tools through a builders portal, putting the Nasdaq-listed broker ahead of
Interactive Brokers, Charles Schwab and Fidelity in packaging agent-facing
tooling for end clients.
Robinhood's
Cortex assistant, unveiled in September 2025, introduced voice-activated order
placement and AI-generated stock movement summaries. Webull followed in November with
Vega, an assistant
that reviews user portfolios against stated goals and accepts plain-English
order instructions. Interactive Brokers has rolled out AI research coverage for
the entire S&P 1500, free of charge for clients.
OpenD Architecture Keeps
Credentials Out of Third-Party Hands
Security
framing takes up a large share of the Moomoo announcement. The company said its
proprietary OpenD technology keeps trading credentials and account data inside
the user's local environment rather than routing them through third-party AI
servers, a setup it describes as data sovereignty. Th
Michael Arbus, CEO of moomoo Canada
A FinanceMagnates.com panel at FMLS:25
flagged explainability and regulatory readiness as the hardest open problems for agent-driven
retail trading, questions the Moomoo announcement did not directly address. The
company warned in its own release that "losses can happen more quickly
with quant and algorithmic trading compared to other forms of trading."
Moomoo's
agentic push comes off a strong 2025 for its Hong Kong-based parent. Futu Holdings reported net income of
HK$11.3 billion and revenue of HK$22.8 billion for the full year, with total trading volume
jumping 89.4% and funded accounts reaching 3.37 million. Total users across the
platform, which spans Moomoo and Futubull, hit 29.2 million by year-end.
The
commercial case for agent tooling is also visible in the industry's cost
structures. Both eToro and FXCM have cited agentic AI adoption in their recent
layoff announcements,
pointing to automation as a lever for shrinking headcount while keeping
customer workflows running.
The firm
did not disclose pricing, beta user counts, or the specific third-party AI
frameworks the tool integrates with at launch.
Moomoo
launched a tool today (Thursday) that lets retail customers connect their own
artificial intelligence agents directly to its trading platform, the Futu
subsidiary said, formalizing its entry into a corner of retail brokering that
eToro and Robinhood have been reshaping over the past several months.
The tool,
called moomoo API Skills, converts plain-English trading intent into executable
orders across U.S., Canadian, Hong Kong, Singapore and Japanese markets. Moomoo said the product is aimed at removing the coding
requirement that has historically limited algorithmic trading to a smaller
group of technically proficient users.
"We
are seeing a fundamental shift where investors are moving from simply accessing
information," Neil McDonald, CEO of moomoo U.S., said in the statement.
The
announcement lands about a month after eToro began letting users delegate
trades to their own AI agents via sub-accounts with defined budgets and risk limits. The parallels
between the two rollouts are close enough that they look like a single industry
direction rather than a standalone experiment.
eToro, Robinhood and
Webull Set the Tempo
The retail
brokerage sector has been stacking AI features at a rapid pace since late 2025.
eToro's developer App Store, rolled out on
April 14, 2026,
offers agent skills, a Model Context Protocol server and no-code publishing
tools through a builders portal, putting the Nasdaq-listed broker ahead of
Interactive Brokers, Charles Schwab and Fidelity in packaging agent-facing
tooling for end clients.
Robinhood's
Cortex assistant, unveiled in September 2025, introduced voice-activated order
placement and AI-generated stock movement summaries. Webull followed in November with
Vega, an assistant
that reviews user portfolios against stated goals and accepts plain-English
order instructions. Interactive Brokers has rolled out AI research coverage for
the entire S&P 1500, free of charge for clients.
OpenD Architecture Keeps
Credentials Out of Third-Party Hands
Security
framing takes up a large share of the Moomoo announcement. The company said its
proprietary OpenD technology keeps trading credentials and account data inside
the user's local environment rather than routing them through third-party AI
servers, a setup it describes as data sovereignty. Th
Michael Arbus, CEO of moomoo Canada
A FinanceMagnates.com panel at FMLS:25
flagged explainability and regulatory readiness as the hardest open problems for agent-driven
retail trading, questions the Moomoo announcement did not directly address. The
company warned in its own release that "losses can happen more quickly
with quant and algorithmic trading compared to other forms of trading."
Moomoo's
agentic push comes off a strong 2025 for its Hong Kong-based parent. Futu Holdings reported net income of
HK$11.3 billion and revenue of HK$22.8 billion for the full year, with total trading volume
jumping 89.4% and funded accounts reaching 3.37 million. Total users across the
platform, which spans Moomoo and Futubull, hit 29.2 million by year-end.
The
commercial case for agent tooling is also visible in the industry's cost
structures. Both eToro and FXCM have cited agentic AI adoption in their recent
layoff announcements,
pointing to automation as a lever for shrinking headcount while keeping
customer workflows running.
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
Interactive Brokers Brings ChatGPT and Grok into Trading, Covering Options and Futures
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