Russia's regulated forex market posted a record quarterly trading volume of $68.6 billion in Q1 2026. The number tells a story of growth. The data behind it tells a different one.
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The latest statistical report from the market's self-regulatory organization reveals a sector that is less a competitive market than a structured monopoly with a long tail of inactive accounts.
One Firm, 90% of Volume
Of the total quarterly volume, 90.6% came from clients of a single firm: Alfa-Forex. There are three licensed forex dealers in Russia. Two of them, combined, account for less than 10% of turnover.
Whatever the headline figure implies about market health, the competitive structure doesn't support it. Total registered client accounts grew 8% year-on-year to 183,023. Active accounts — those with actual trading activity — numbered 24,011. It means that 's 87% of all open accounts sitting dormant, with minimal or no funds, with 83,000 accounts have zero balance.
The gap is almost certainly a product of bank-run marketing campaigns that reward account opening with perks, without requiring any actual capital commitment. It creates a client count that looks like a mass market and functions like a waiting list.
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The average balance across all 183,023 accounts is $444 — down from $975 at end-2022. Among active traders, the figure is $3,390. The divergence between those two numbers is the real structure of this market: a small, concentrated group of well-capitalized traders generating almost all of the volume, surrounded by a large pool of nominal accounts.
It reflects regulatory decisions made several years ago, when the central bank of Russia revoked licenses from a number of retail forex brokers, consolidating the domestic market around a small group of bank-affiliated dealers.
Much of the retail flow moved offshore as a result, leaving the regulated segment with a narrower and more concentrated client base
What This Means For the B2B Industry
The Russian forex market is not a mass-market opportunity waiting to be unlocked. The roughly 40 million retail investors often cited for Russia’s stock market have no equivalent in forex.
The real addressable market is the active segment — fewer than 25,000 traders with higher balances who generate the bulk of trading flow. That's where the volume is and where the competitive pressure actually plays out.
Record turnover alongside 90% concentration points to a market that remains structurally limited despite rising volumes.