The regulator will conduct on-site visits at CIFs, examining how brokers handle conflicts between their own profits and clients' interests.
Staff pay structures, digital platform design, and inducement practices are all under scrutiny.
Limassol, Cyprus. Source: Shutterstock
Cyprus's financial watchdog is preparing to walk through the
front doors of CFD brokers and other investment firms in a series of
inspections tied to a broader EU-wide supervisory effort targeting conflicts of
interest.
Inspectors Will Look at Pay, Platforms, and Profit Motives
The question regulators want answered is direct: are brokers
putting their own financial interests ahead of their clients? CySEC and ESMA
will probe three specific areas, all of them hitting at the heart of how retail
investment products get sold.
The first is how staff compensation, bonuses, and
inducements shape which products brokers recommend to retail clients. The
second concerns digital platforms, specifically whether they're built to steer
users toward certain products in ways that don't actually serve those users.
The third is how firms manage the tension between their own revenue goals and
the genuine needs of ordinary investors.
Dr George Theocharides, Source: LinkedIn
CySEC Chairman Dr. George Theocharides has been candid about
the challenges regulators face in keeping pace with bad actors. In a FinanceMagnates.com interview ahead of 2026,
Theocharides said, "Honestly, no matter what we do, scammers will find new
ways to deceive investors." The upcoming inspections reflect a push to at
least tighten controls at the regulated end of the market.
These concerns have circulated in EU regulatory discussions
for years. But the on-site visit element gives this round considerably more
force. Rather than waiting for document submissions, CySEC inspectors can
arrive at a broker's office directly, a step that puts real operational
pressure on firms to demonstrate live compliance, not just on paper.
Cyprus Holds an Outsized Stake in EU Retail Trading
The sweep carries particular weight in Cyprus because of the
island's dominant position in European retail trading. CySEC-regulated firms serve roughly 3.6 million of the 10.5
million retail clients trading across EU borders (about one in three)
while complaints against Cyprus-based brokers jumped 46% in 2024 alone. That
combination of scale and rising grievances makes the sector a natural focus for
coordinated EU-level oversight.
The circular makes one thing unmistakably clear: CySEC
expects firms to take this seriously. Adherence to the circular "will form
part of CySEC's supervisory review for the purposes of the CSA 2026,"
according to the document signed by Theocharides.
Some firms appear to be responding to the growing compliance
environment by simply walking away from their licenses. Two Cyprus investment firms have surrendered their CIF
authorizations in less than a month, though the exact reasons behind
each exit aren't publicly confirmed.
CySEC, for its part, is expanding. The regulator recently sought additional Nicosia office space for 30 staff,
having grown its headcount by 32 employees while targeting 42 more hires. More
staff, more office space, and now unannounced on-site visits, the supervisory
machine is clearly shifting into a higher gear.
Cyprus's financial watchdog is preparing to walk through the
front doors of CFD brokers and other investment firms in a series of
inspections tied to a broader EU-wide supervisory effort targeting conflicts of
interest.
Inspectors Will Look at Pay, Platforms, and Profit Motives
The question regulators want answered is direct: are brokers
putting their own financial interests ahead of their clients? CySEC and ESMA
will probe three specific areas, all of them hitting at the heart of how retail
investment products get sold.
The first is how staff compensation, bonuses, and
inducements shape which products brokers recommend to retail clients. The
second concerns digital platforms, specifically whether they're built to steer
users toward certain products in ways that don't actually serve those users.
The third is how firms manage the tension between their own revenue goals and
the genuine needs of ordinary investors.
Dr George Theocharides, Source: LinkedIn
CySEC Chairman Dr. George Theocharides has been candid about
the challenges regulators face in keeping pace with bad actors. In a FinanceMagnates.com interview ahead of 2026,
Theocharides said, "Honestly, no matter what we do, scammers will find new
ways to deceive investors." The upcoming inspections reflect a push to at
least tighten controls at the regulated end of the market.
These concerns have circulated in EU regulatory discussions
for years. But the on-site visit element gives this round considerably more
force. Rather than waiting for document submissions, CySEC inspectors can
arrive at a broker's office directly, a step that puts real operational
pressure on firms to demonstrate live compliance, not just on paper.
Cyprus Holds an Outsized Stake in EU Retail Trading
The sweep carries particular weight in Cyprus because of the
island's dominant position in European retail trading. CySEC-regulated firms serve roughly 3.6 million of the 10.5
million retail clients trading across EU borders (about one in three)
while complaints against Cyprus-based brokers jumped 46% in 2024 alone. That
combination of scale and rising grievances makes the sector a natural focus for
coordinated EU-level oversight.
The circular makes one thing unmistakably clear: CySEC
expects firms to take this seriously. Adherence to the circular "will form
part of CySEC's supervisory review for the purposes of the CSA 2026,"
according to the document signed by Theocharides.
Some firms appear to be responding to the growing compliance
environment by simply walking away from their licenses. Two Cyprus investment firms have surrendered their CIF
authorizations in less than a month, though the exact reasons behind
each exit aren't publicly confirmed.
CySEC, for its part, is expanding. The regulator recently sought additional Nicosia office space for 30 staff,
having grown its headcount by 32 employees while targeting 42 more hires. More
staff, more office space, and now unannounced on-site visits, the supervisory
machine is clearly shifting into a higher gear.
Damian Chmiel is a Senior Analyst & Editor at Finance Magnates with more than 15 years of experience in the CFD and online trading industry. Active as both a trader and journalist since 2010, he focuses on broker coverage, fintech innovation, and regulatory developments across Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.
His work includes interviews with C-level leaders at major brokerages and fintech platforms, as well as co-authoring Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry benchmarking reports. Damian’s reporting is data-driven, market-aware, and grounded in direct industry engagement. His analysis and commentary have also been cited by external media outlets, including Investing.com, Binance, The Asset, Stockhead, and Dispatch.
Education:
MA in Finance and Accounting, Cracow University of Economics
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