The Bank of New York Mellon Subsidiary operating the Pershing brand had one of its business lines handed a tiny fine by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission over errors related to ASX trade confirmations.
The financial markets watchdog in Australia has handed out a small penalty of $15,000 to Pershing Securities Australia Pty Ltd, for failing to give confirmations to certain retail clients for market transactions entered into on their behalf, due to certain accounts not having been set up correctly, as per a press release today by the Australian regulatory body.
According to the announcement published by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC), based on an infringement notice dated December 5th, 2013, the penalty was given by ASIC’s Markets Disciplinary Panel (MDP) and was noted as paid already, with Pershing cooperating throughout the entire process to help resolve the matter that has now been settled.
Historical Matter Now Settled and No Clients Affected
The development first came to light on March 19, 2012 when one of Pershing's intermediaries notified Pershing that because certain trading accounts weren’t set up correctly, twelve relevant Pershing clients had not received confirmation for ASX Market Transactions executed on their instructions.
In order to identify potentially affected accounts, Pershing carried out a review of nearly 36,000 trading accounts that had been set up between 2010 and 2012. This review took just over a month after it began in March 2012, and as a result of the review, Pershing identified that a total of 37 trading accounts were set up incorrectly and specified which confirmations were not issued to the relevant Pershing clients between 10 May, 2010 and 26 June, 2012.
As per the MDP, the account setup errors allegedly contravened MIR 3.4.1(1), and subsection 798H(1) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Corporations Act) which requires compliance with the market integrity rules, thus justifying the issued fine.
37 Accounts Set up Incorrectly, Missing Postal Address, Email Not Sufficient
Accordingly, while the seriousness of the fine is not meant to be under emphasized, in the grand picture of things, it appears to be a minor administrative error and ASIC noted that Pershing did not derive any actual or potential benefit, nor cause any actual or potential detriment, as a result of the breach.
As per the notice, of the Relevant Accounts examined during the internal review, Intermediaries set up 17 of the trading accounts incorrectly and Pershing set up 20 of the trading accounts incorrectly.
Self-Reported to ASIC, After Pointed Out by 3rd Party
From these a total of 701 Market Transactions were executed on behalf of the Relevant Accounts (Relevant Transactions); and the incorrect setup of the trading accounts was attributable to either a missing postal address - because it was mistakenly thought that an email address would suffice for trade confirmations to be sent.
However, those email addresses were not provided and the addresses provided were considered 3rd party addresses and not those as required under MIR 3.4.1, as per the description.
On the 20th of April, 2012, Pershing lodged a self-report with ASIC. The self-report advised, among other things, that:
Pershing undertook a review of its trading accounts upon being notified by the Pershing Intermediary of the incorrect setup of trading accounts;
Confirmations were not received by the Relevant Pershing Clients for the Relevant Transactions;
Pershing was implementing compliance initiatives to ensure the breach did not reoccur.
Fine Indicates the Lower End of the Maximum Fine Spectrum
In the infringement notice, ASIC noted how the combined maximum pecuniary penalty that the Court could have handed out under section 798H(1) of the Act by reason of contravening MIR 3.4.1(1) is $100,000, and maximum pecuniary penalty that could have been payable by Pershing under an infringement notice given pursuant to subsection 798K(2) of the Act, is $60,000, as per the December 5th filing.
An excerpt of the infringement notice, provided below, highlighted among other things how the matter will be settled from the resulting fine:
The effects of compliance with this infringement notice are:
(a) any liability of Pershing to the Commonwealth for the alleged contravention of subsection 798H(1) of the Act is discharged; and (b) no civil or criminal proceedings may be brought or continued by the Commonwealth against Pershing for the conduct specified in the infringement notice as being the conduct that made up the alleged contravention of subsection 798H(1) of the Act; and (c) no administrative action may be taken by ASIC under section 914A, 915B, 915C or 920A of the Act against Pershing for the conduct specified in the infringement notice as being the conduct that made up the alleged contravention of subsection 798H(1) of the Act; and (d) Pershing is not taken to have admitted guilt or liability in relation to the alleged contravention; and (e) Pershing is not taken to have contravened subsection 798H(1) of the Act.
A full copy of the December 5th infringement notice published in the ASIC Gazette can be found on the ASIC website.
The financial markets watchdog in Australia has handed out a small penalty of $15,000 to Pershing Securities Australia Pty Ltd, for failing to give confirmations to certain retail clients for market transactions entered into on their behalf, due to certain accounts not having been set up correctly, as per a press release today by the Australian regulatory body.
According to the announcement published by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC), based on an infringement notice dated December 5th, 2013, the penalty was given by ASIC’s Markets Disciplinary Panel (MDP) and was noted as paid already, with Pershing cooperating throughout the entire process to help resolve the matter that has now been settled.
Historical Matter Now Settled and No Clients Affected
The development first came to light on March 19, 2012 when one of Pershing's intermediaries notified Pershing that because certain trading accounts weren’t set up correctly, twelve relevant Pershing clients had not received confirmation for ASX Market Transactions executed on their instructions.
In order to identify potentially affected accounts, Pershing carried out a review of nearly 36,000 trading accounts that had been set up between 2010 and 2012. This review took just over a month after it began in March 2012, and as a result of the review, Pershing identified that a total of 37 trading accounts were set up incorrectly and specified which confirmations were not issued to the relevant Pershing clients between 10 May, 2010 and 26 June, 2012.
As per the MDP, the account setup errors allegedly contravened MIR 3.4.1(1), and subsection 798H(1) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Corporations Act) which requires compliance with the market integrity rules, thus justifying the issued fine.
37 Accounts Set up Incorrectly, Missing Postal Address, Email Not Sufficient
Accordingly, while the seriousness of the fine is not meant to be under emphasized, in the grand picture of things, it appears to be a minor administrative error and ASIC noted that Pershing did not derive any actual or potential benefit, nor cause any actual or potential detriment, as a result of the breach.
As per the notice, of the Relevant Accounts examined during the internal review, Intermediaries set up 17 of the trading accounts incorrectly and Pershing set up 20 of the trading accounts incorrectly.
Self-Reported to ASIC, After Pointed Out by 3rd Party
From these a total of 701 Market Transactions were executed on behalf of the Relevant Accounts (Relevant Transactions); and the incorrect setup of the trading accounts was attributable to either a missing postal address - because it was mistakenly thought that an email address would suffice for trade confirmations to be sent.
However, those email addresses were not provided and the addresses provided were considered 3rd party addresses and not those as required under MIR 3.4.1, as per the description.
On the 20th of April, 2012, Pershing lodged a self-report with ASIC. The self-report advised, among other things, that:
Pershing undertook a review of its trading accounts upon being notified by the Pershing Intermediary of the incorrect setup of trading accounts;
Confirmations were not received by the Relevant Pershing Clients for the Relevant Transactions;
Pershing was implementing compliance initiatives to ensure the breach did not reoccur.
Fine Indicates the Lower End of the Maximum Fine Spectrum
In the infringement notice, ASIC noted how the combined maximum pecuniary penalty that the Court could have handed out under section 798H(1) of the Act by reason of contravening MIR 3.4.1(1) is $100,000, and maximum pecuniary penalty that could have been payable by Pershing under an infringement notice given pursuant to subsection 798K(2) of the Act, is $60,000, as per the December 5th filing.
An excerpt of the infringement notice, provided below, highlighted among other things how the matter will be settled from the resulting fine:
The effects of compliance with this infringement notice are:
(a) any liability of Pershing to the Commonwealth for the alleged contravention of subsection 798H(1) of the Act is discharged; and (b) no civil or criminal proceedings may be brought or continued by the Commonwealth against Pershing for the conduct specified in the infringement notice as being the conduct that made up the alleged contravention of subsection 798H(1) of the Act; and (c) no administrative action may be taken by ASIC under section 914A, 915B, 915C or 920A of the Act against Pershing for the conduct specified in the infringement notice as being the conduct that made up the alleged contravention of subsection 798H(1) of the Act; and (d) Pershing is not taken to have admitted guilt or liability in relation to the alleged contravention; and (e) Pershing is not taken to have contravened subsection 798H(1) of the Act.
A full copy of the December 5th infringement notice published in the ASIC Gazette can be found on the ASIC website.
Prop Firms and Brokers Form a Perfect Synergy: One Offers Access, the Other Capital
Featured Videos
Executive Interview | Charlotte Bullock | Chief Product Officer, Bank of London | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Charlotte Bullock | Chief Product Officer, Bank of London | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Charlotte Bullock | Chief Product Officer, Bank of London | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Charlotte Bullock | Chief Product Officer, Bank of London | FMLS:25
In this interview, we sat down with Charlotte Bullock, Head of Product at The Bank of London, previously at SAP and now shaping product at one of the sector’s most ambitious new banking players.
Charlotte reflects on the Summit so far and talks about the culture inside fintech banks today. We look at the pressures that come with scaling, and how firms can hold onto the nimble approach that made them stand out early on.
We also cover the state of payments ahead of her appearance on the payments roundtable: the blockages financial firms face, the areas that still need fixing, and what a realistic solution looks like in 2026.
In this interview, we sat down with Charlotte Bullock, Head of Product at The Bank of London, previously at SAP and now shaping product at one of the sector’s most ambitious new banking players.
Charlotte reflects on the Summit so far and talks about the culture inside fintech banks today. We look at the pressures that come with scaling, and how firms can hold onto the nimble approach that made them stand out early on.
We also cover the state of payments ahead of her appearance on the payments roundtable: the blockages financial firms face, the areas that still need fixing, and what a realistic solution looks like in 2026.
In this interview, we sat down with Charlotte Bullock, Head of Product at The Bank of London, previously at SAP and now shaping product at one of the sector’s most ambitious new banking players.
Charlotte reflects on the Summit so far and talks about the culture inside fintech banks today. We look at the pressures that come with scaling, and how firms can hold onto the nimble approach that made them stand out early on.
We also cover the state of payments ahead of her appearance on the payments roundtable: the blockages financial firms face, the areas that still need fixing, and what a realistic solution looks like in 2026.
In this interview, we sat down with Charlotte Bullock, Head of Product at The Bank of London, previously at SAP and now shaping product at one of the sector’s most ambitious new banking players.
Charlotte reflects on the Summit so far and talks about the culture inside fintech banks today. We look at the pressures that come with scaling, and how firms can hold onto the nimble approach that made them stand out early on.
We also cover the state of payments ahead of her appearance on the payments roundtable: the blockages financial firms face, the areas that still need fixing, and what a realistic solution looks like in 2026.
In this conversation, we sit down with Drew Niv, CSO at ATFX Connect and one of the most influential figures in modern FX.
We speak about market structure, the institutional view on liquidity, and the sharp rise of prop trading, a sector Drew has been commenting on in recent months. Drew explains why he once dismissed prop trading, why his view changed, and what he now thinks the model means for brokers, clients and risk managers.
We explore subscription-fee dependency, the high reneging rate, and the long-term challenge: how brokers can build a more stable and honest version of the model. Drew also talks about the traffic advantage standalone prop firms have built and why brokers may still win in the long run if they take the right approach.
In this conversation, we sit down with Drew Niv, CSO at ATFX Connect and one of the most influential figures in modern FX.
We speak about market structure, the institutional view on liquidity, and the sharp rise of prop trading, a sector Drew has been commenting on in recent months. Drew explains why he once dismissed prop trading, why his view changed, and what he now thinks the model means for brokers, clients and risk managers.
We explore subscription-fee dependency, the high reneging rate, and the long-term challenge: how brokers can build a more stable and honest version of the model. Drew also talks about the traffic advantage standalone prop firms have built and why brokers may still win in the long run if they take the right approach.
In this conversation, we sit down with Drew Niv, CSO at ATFX Connect and one of the most influential figures in modern FX.
We speak about market structure, the institutional view on liquidity, and the sharp rise of prop trading, a sector Drew has been commenting on in recent months. Drew explains why he once dismissed prop trading, why his view changed, and what he now thinks the model means for brokers, clients and risk managers.
We explore subscription-fee dependency, the high reneging rate, and the long-term challenge: how brokers can build a more stable and honest version of the model. Drew also talks about the traffic advantage standalone prop firms have built and why brokers may still win in the long run if they take the right approach.
In this conversation, we sit down with Drew Niv, CSO at ATFX Connect and one of the most influential figures in modern FX.
We speak about market structure, the institutional view on liquidity, and the sharp rise of prop trading, a sector Drew has been commenting on in recent months. Drew explains why he once dismissed prop trading, why his view changed, and what he now thinks the model means for brokers, clients and risk managers.
We explore subscription-fee dependency, the high reneging rate, and the long-term challenge: how brokers can build a more stable and honest version of the model. Drew also talks about the traffic advantage standalone prop firms have built and why brokers may still win in the long run if they take the right approach.
In this conversation, we sit down with Drew Niv, CSO at ATFX Connect and one of the most influential figures in modern FX.
We speak about market structure, the institutional view on liquidity, and the sharp rise of prop trading, a sector Drew has been commenting on in recent months. Drew explains why he once dismissed prop trading, why his view changed, and what he now thinks the model means for brokers, clients and risk managers.
We explore subscription-fee dependency, the high reneging rate, and the long-term challenge: how brokers can build a more stable and honest version of the model. Drew also talks about the traffic advantage standalone prop firms have built and why brokers may still win in the long run if they take the right approach.
In this conversation, we sit down with Drew Niv, CSO at ATFX Connect and one of the most influential figures in modern FX.
We speak about market structure, the institutional view on liquidity, and the sharp rise of prop trading, a sector Drew has been commenting on in recent months. Drew explains why he once dismissed prop trading, why his view changed, and what he now thinks the model means for brokers, clients and risk managers.
We explore subscription-fee dependency, the high reneging rate, and the long-term challenge: how brokers can build a more stable and honest version of the model. Drew also talks about the traffic advantage standalone prop firms have built and why brokers may still win in the long run if they take the right approach.
Executive Interview | Remonda Z. Kirketerp Møller| CEO & Founder Muinmos | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Remonda Z. Kirketerp Møller| CEO & Founder Muinmos | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Remonda Z. Kirketerp Møller| CEO & Founder Muinmos | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Remonda Z. Kirketerp Møller| CEO & Founder Muinmos | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Remonda Z. Kirketerp Møller| CEO & Founder Muinmos | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Remonda Z. Kirketerp Møller| CEO & Founder Muinmos | FMLS:25
In this interview, Remonda Z. Kirketerp Møller, founder of Muinmos, breaks down the state of AI in regtech and what responsible adoption really looks like for brokers. We talk about rising fragmentation, the pressures around compliance accuracy, and why most firms are still in the early stages of AI maturity.
Ramanda also shares insights on regulator sandboxes, shifting expectations around accountability, and the current reality of MiCA licensing and passporting in Europe.
A concise look at where compliance, onboarding, and AI-driven processes are heading next.
In this interview, Remonda Z. Kirketerp Møller, founder of Muinmos, breaks down the state of AI in regtech and what responsible adoption really looks like for brokers. We talk about rising fragmentation, the pressures around compliance accuracy, and why most firms are still in the early stages of AI maturity.
Ramanda also shares insights on regulator sandboxes, shifting expectations around accountability, and the current reality of MiCA licensing and passporting in Europe.
A concise look at where compliance, onboarding, and AI-driven processes are heading next.
In this interview, Remonda Z. Kirketerp Møller, founder of Muinmos, breaks down the state of AI in regtech and what responsible adoption really looks like for brokers. We talk about rising fragmentation, the pressures around compliance accuracy, and why most firms are still in the early stages of AI maturity.
Ramanda also shares insights on regulator sandboxes, shifting expectations around accountability, and the current reality of MiCA licensing and passporting in Europe.
A concise look at where compliance, onboarding, and AI-driven processes are heading next.
In this interview, Remonda Z. Kirketerp Møller, founder of Muinmos, breaks down the state of AI in regtech and what responsible adoption really looks like for brokers. We talk about rising fragmentation, the pressures around compliance accuracy, and why most firms are still in the early stages of AI maturity.
Ramanda also shares insights on regulator sandboxes, shifting expectations around accountability, and the current reality of MiCA licensing and passporting in Europe.
A concise look at where compliance, onboarding, and AI-driven processes are heading next.
In this interview, Remonda Z. Kirketerp Møller, founder of Muinmos, breaks down the state of AI in regtech and what responsible adoption really looks like for brokers. We talk about rising fragmentation, the pressures around compliance accuracy, and why most firms are still in the early stages of AI maturity.
Ramanda also shares insights on regulator sandboxes, shifting expectations around accountability, and the current reality of MiCA licensing and passporting in Europe.
A concise look at where compliance, onboarding, and AI-driven processes are heading next.
In this interview, Remonda Z. Kirketerp Møller, founder of Muinmos, breaks down the state of AI in regtech and what responsible adoption really looks like for brokers. We talk about rising fragmentation, the pressures around compliance accuracy, and why most firms are still in the early stages of AI maturity.
Ramanda also shares insights on regulator sandboxes, shifting expectations around accountability, and the current reality of MiCA licensing and passporting in Europe.
A concise look at where compliance, onboarding, and AI-driven processes are heading next.
In this conversation, we speak with Aydin Bonabi, CEO and co-founder of Surveill, a firm focused on fraud detection and AI-driven compliance tools for financial institutions.
We start with Aydin’s view of the Summit and the challenges brokers face as fraud tactics grow more complex. He explains how firms can stay ahead through real-time signals, data patterns, and early-stage detection.
We also talk about AI training and why compliance teams often struggle to keep models accurate, fair, and aligned with regulatory expectations. Aydin breaks down what “good” AI training looks like inside a financial environment, including the importance of clean data, domain expertise, and human oversight.
He closes with a clear message: fraud is scaling, and so must the tools that stop it.
In this conversation, we speak with Aydin Bonabi, CEO and co-founder of Surveill, a firm focused on fraud detection and AI-driven compliance tools for financial institutions.
We start with Aydin’s view of the Summit and the challenges brokers face as fraud tactics grow more complex. He explains how firms can stay ahead through real-time signals, data patterns, and early-stage detection.
We also talk about AI training and why compliance teams often struggle to keep models accurate, fair, and aligned with regulatory expectations. Aydin breaks down what “good” AI training looks like inside a financial environment, including the importance of clean data, domain expertise, and human oversight.
He closes with a clear message: fraud is scaling, and so must the tools that stop it.
In this conversation, we speak with Aydin Bonabi, CEO and co-founder of Surveill, a firm focused on fraud detection and AI-driven compliance tools for financial institutions.
We start with Aydin’s view of the Summit and the challenges brokers face as fraud tactics grow more complex. He explains how firms can stay ahead through real-time signals, data patterns, and early-stage detection.
We also talk about AI training and why compliance teams often struggle to keep models accurate, fair, and aligned with regulatory expectations. Aydin breaks down what “good” AI training looks like inside a financial environment, including the importance of clean data, domain expertise, and human oversight.
He closes with a clear message: fraud is scaling, and so must the tools that stop it.
In this conversation, we speak with Aydin Bonabi, CEO and co-founder of Surveill, a firm focused on fraud detection and AI-driven compliance tools for financial institutions.
We start with Aydin’s view of the Summit and the challenges brokers face as fraud tactics grow more complex. He explains how firms can stay ahead through real-time signals, data patterns, and early-stage detection.
We also talk about AI training and why compliance teams often struggle to keep models accurate, fair, and aligned with regulatory expectations. Aydin breaks down what “good” AI training looks like inside a financial environment, including the importance of clean data, domain expertise, and human oversight.
He closes with a clear message: fraud is scaling, and so must the tools that stop it.
In this conversation, we speak with Aydin Bonabi, CEO and co-founder of Surveill, a firm focused on fraud detection and AI-driven compliance tools for financial institutions.
We start with Aydin’s view of the Summit and the challenges brokers face as fraud tactics grow more complex. He explains how firms can stay ahead through real-time signals, data patterns, and early-stage detection.
We also talk about AI training and why compliance teams often struggle to keep models accurate, fair, and aligned with regulatory expectations. Aydin breaks down what “good” AI training looks like inside a financial environment, including the importance of clean data, domain expertise, and human oversight.
He closes with a clear message: fraud is scaling, and so must the tools that stop it.
In this conversation, we speak with Aydin Bonabi, CEO and co-founder of Surveill, a firm focused on fraud detection and AI-driven compliance tools for financial institutions.
We start with Aydin’s view of the Summit and the challenges brokers face as fraud tactics grow more complex. He explains how firms can stay ahead through real-time signals, data patterns, and early-stage detection.
We also talk about AI training and why compliance teams often struggle to keep models accurate, fair, and aligned with regulatory expectations. Aydin breaks down what “good” AI training looks like inside a financial environment, including the importance of clean data, domain expertise, and human oversight.
He closes with a clear message: fraud is scaling, and so must the tools that stop it.
Exness expands its presence in Africa: Inside our interview with Paul Margarites in Cape Town
Exness expands its presence in Africa: Inside our interview with Paul Margarites in Cape Town
Exness expands its presence in Africa: Inside our interview with Paul Margarites in Cape Town
Exness expands its presence in Africa: Inside our interview with Paul Margarites in Cape Town
Exness expands its presence in Africa: Inside our interview with Paul Margarites in Cape Town
Exness expands its presence in Africa: Inside our interview with Paul Margarites in Cape Town
Finance Magnates met with Paul Margarites, Exness regional commercial director for Sub-Saharan Africa, during a visit to the firm’s office opening in Cape Town. In this talk, led by Andrea Badiola Mateos, Co-CEO at Finance Magnates, Paul shares views on the South African trading space, local user behavior, mobile trends, regulation, team growth, and how Exness plans to grow in more markets across the region. @Exness
Read the article at: https://www.financemagnates.com/thought-leadership/exness-expands-its-presence-in-africa-inside-our-interview-with-paul-margarites/
#exness #financemagnates #exnesstrading #CFDtrading #tradeonline #africanews #capetown
Finance Magnates met with Paul Margarites, Exness regional commercial director for Sub-Saharan Africa, during a visit to the firm’s office opening in Cape Town. In this talk, led by Andrea Badiola Mateos, Co-CEO at Finance Magnates, Paul shares views on the South African trading space, local user behavior, mobile trends, regulation, team growth, and how Exness plans to grow in more markets across the region. @Exness
Read the article at: https://www.financemagnates.com/thought-leadership/exness-expands-its-presence-in-africa-inside-our-interview-with-paul-margarites/
#exness #financemagnates #exnesstrading #CFDtrading #tradeonline #africanews #capetown
Finance Magnates met with Paul Margarites, Exness regional commercial director for Sub-Saharan Africa, during a visit to the firm’s office opening in Cape Town. In this talk, led by Andrea Badiola Mateos, Co-CEO at Finance Magnates, Paul shares views on the South African trading space, local user behavior, mobile trends, regulation, team growth, and how Exness plans to grow in more markets across the region. @Exness
Read the article at: https://www.financemagnates.com/thought-leadership/exness-expands-its-presence-in-africa-inside-our-interview-with-paul-margarites/
#exness #financemagnates #exnesstrading #CFDtrading #tradeonline #africanews #capetown
Finance Magnates met with Paul Margarites, Exness regional commercial director for Sub-Saharan Africa, during a visit to the firm’s office opening in Cape Town. In this talk, led by Andrea Badiola Mateos, Co-CEO at Finance Magnates, Paul shares views on the South African trading space, local user behavior, mobile trends, regulation, team growth, and how Exness plans to grow in more markets across the region. @Exness
Read the article at: https://www.financemagnates.com/thought-leadership/exness-expands-its-presence-in-africa-inside-our-interview-with-paul-margarites/
#exness #financemagnates #exnesstrading #CFDtrading #tradeonline #africanews #capetown
Finance Magnates met with Paul Margarites, Exness regional commercial director for Sub-Saharan Africa, during a visit to the firm’s office opening in Cape Town. In this talk, led by Andrea Badiola Mateos, Co-CEO at Finance Magnates, Paul shares views on the South African trading space, local user behavior, mobile trends, regulation, team growth, and how Exness plans to grow in more markets across the region. @Exness
Read the article at: https://www.financemagnates.com/thought-leadership/exness-expands-its-presence-in-africa-inside-our-interview-with-paul-margarites/
#exness #financemagnates #exnesstrading #CFDtrading #tradeonline #africanews #capetown
Finance Magnates met with Paul Margarites, Exness regional commercial director for Sub-Saharan Africa, during a visit to the firm’s office opening in Cape Town. In this talk, led by Andrea Badiola Mateos, Co-CEO at Finance Magnates, Paul shares views on the South African trading space, local user behavior, mobile trends, regulation, team growth, and how Exness plans to grow in more markets across the region. @Exness
Read the article at: https://www.financemagnates.com/thought-leadership/exness-expands-its-presence-in-africa-inside-our-interview-with-paul-margarites/
#exness #financemagnates #exnesstrading #CFDtrading #tradeonline #africanews #capetown