Devexperts has connected DDXpro to its DXtrade platform, plugging another third-party vendor into a software ecosystem that has expanded sharply through partnership deals over the past 12 months. The two companies announced the integration today (Wednesday).
DDXpro, which operates under DigitX Ltd, sells dealing-desk supervision and operational support to brokerages and proprietary trading firms.
Under the DXtrade tie-up, its services become available to brokers and prop shops licensing the Devexperts platform, covering trade-flow monitoring, exposure tracking against internal risk limits, instrument and group configuration, and markup management.
The company said it also maintains matching engines and watches for suspicious activity patterns.
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Borislav Alendarov, head of trading operations at Devexperts, said the addition "gives our clients access to a range of tools and functionalities that can help them" manage scaling operations.
What DDXpro Brings to the DXtrade Stack
The pitch focuses on operational layers that have historically sat inside broker dealing-desk teams. DDXpro said its remit also includes ongoing trade-flow supervision, monitoring across multiple environments, and platform support as trading volumes scale. The firm did not disclose service tiers, pricing, or any launch clients for the DXtrade integration.
Outsourcing those functions to a specialist vendor offers one route to scaling without expanding internal dealing-desk headcount, though it also concentrates sensitive activities such as exposure management in the hands of a third party.
"As brokerages and proprietary trading firms scale their trading environments, maintaining stable execution conditions" matters more, Martin Petkov, head of sales operations at DDXpro, said in a statement.
Vendor Buildout Accelerates Across the Platform Space
DXtrade has spent the past year bolting external providers onto its platform at a steady clip. In January, Devexperts plugged in Arizet Labs' full PropTech suite, covering CRM, risk engine, and real-time challenge-rule enforcement for prop firms.
In March, theScreener was wired in for equity research, with Gold-i's Visual Edge added the same month for automated scalper detection and A/B booking controls.
May has already brought further additions. Devexperts integrated Advanced Markets liquidity into DXtrade earlier this month, taking the total number of liquidity routes available through the platform to more than 100 when counting a separate Tools for Brokers bridge connection.
Compliance vendor TRAction and Huddlestock's investment-as-a-service product joined the lineup in the past two months.
The pattern is not unique to Devexperts. Spotware launched cBridge in March, its first standalone product positioned beyond cTrader, which the firm said could cut broker bridge costs by up to 80%.
Match-Trade Technologies bolted TeamForce client management onto Match-Trader earlier this year after wiring in Centroid Solutions' risk and bridge modules. Platform vendors are competing less on a single execution engine and more on the depth of plug-and-play services available out of the box.
Prop Trading Demand Drives the Push for Operational Depth
The integration arrives as the proprietary trading sector continues to push platform vendors toward broader operational coverage.
Devexperts onboarded more than 40 prop firms to DXtrade in a single year before expanding the platform to include futures trading, and has been positioning the product as a MetaTrader alternative for funded-trader programs that left the MetaQuotes ecosystem.
Industry estimates put the prop trading market above $10 billion in 2025, with the five largest funded-trader programs paying out roughly $325 million to traders over the year, according to data from Prop Firm Match cited in earlier FinanceMagnates.com reporting. FundedNext alone accounted for around a third of that total.
The dealing-operations layer DDXpro targets is less visible than risk engines or copy trading, but it tends to scale with volume, putting pressure on infrastructure teams whenever a prop firm or broker brings on new clients.
Specialist vendors offering managed coverage of those functions have so far remained a fragmented market.