Spotware Opens cTrader to AI Agents as MCP Wave Catches Up With Retail Trading

Thursday, 14/05/2026 | 12:50 GMT by Damian Chmiel
  • Two new Model Context Protocol servers let AI tools place trades, manage positions and control charts in cTrader through natural-language prompts.
  • The launch follows TraderEvolution's first-party MCP rollout in January, while competitors pursue different routes into agentic AI.
ctrader agent

Spotware Systems has opened the cTrader platform to artificial intelligence agents, releasing two Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers and a workflow library that let third-party AI tools place trades, manage positions and run technical analysis through plain-language prompts.

The Limassol-based vendor calls the package cTrader AI Agent Connect and says it works with Claude Code, ChatGPT Codex, Cursor and Gemini CLI.

What the Servers Actually Do

cTrader AI Agent Connect ships in two pieces. A remote MCP server runs through cTrader Web and covers account operations, order and position management and market data queries.

Traders generate a configuration token in the platform settings and paste it into their AI client of choice. A local MCP server, which requires cTrader Windows, exposes a wider set of functions and extends control to the desktop workspace itself.

The vendor has also published a skills library, framed as ready-made AI workflow instructions for common trading routines. Traders can adapt the workflows rather than building prompts from scratch.

Ilia Iarovitcyn, CEO of Spotware.
Ilia Iarovitcyn, CEO, Spotware Systems.

Ilia Iarovitcyn, chief executive of Spotware Systems, said in a statement that AI agents are now "active participants in how traders analyse markets and execute trades."

The company has been pushing beyond cTrader's traditional boundaries in recent months, with the CEO telling FinanceMagnates.com at iFX EXPO Dubai earlier this year that AI would sit at the center of the 2026 roadmap.

TraderEvolution Got There First

Although the press release positions cTrader AI Agent Connect as "the first built-in AI agent solution in FX/CFD trading,” In January, TraderEvolution Global released its own MCP server.

Third-party MCP integrations have also existed for cTrader for some time. Developers have published open-source MCP servers on GitHub that connect Claude and similar agents to cTrader accounts via the platform's public API, and vendors such as TraderWAI offer hosted MCP endpoints covering cTrader, TradeLocker and Tradovate.

Moreover, brokerage XBTFX has been advertising its own AI trading API with MCP support as a standard account feature.

What is genuinely new in the Spotware release is the official, vendor-supported nature of the connection, alongside the local server's ability to reach into the Windows desktop workspace.

Rival Platforms Are Picking Different AI Lanes

The platforms cTrader competes with have moved into AI through different doors. MetaQuotes integrated an OpenAI-based coding assistant into MetaEditor for MetaTrader 5 users and has improved ONNX support to run machine learning models inside Expert Advisors.

The company has not shipped a first-party MCP server, and the available MT5 MCP integrations are community projects.

Devexperts has taken a third route, layering multiple AI products on top of DXtrade rather than exposing the platform as an agent endpoint.

The vendor integrated AI BI's analytics tooling for brokers and prop firms, embedded TechSignals' AI analysis into its DXcharts library and most recently rolled out Grenadier, an order book anomaly detector for DXtrade clients.

Broker-side integrations are accelerating too. FP Markets and Hantec Markets are among the brokers plugging Acuity Trading's AI signal tooling into their offerings, and Acuity itself has been buying its way into adjacent AI providers to round out its product set.

None of those vendors expose trade execution to an external LLM, however, which is what makes the cTrader local server materially different.

AI Now Sits Closer to the Order Button

The shift in MCP-based integrations is less about AI itself, which retail platforms have advertised for years, and more about proximity to execution.

That changes the risk profile in ways retail platforms have not historically had to answer for. The MCP, developed by Anthropic and released in late 2024, was originally framed as a bridge between LLMs and productivity tools or data sources rather than live brokerage accounts.

Security researchers have flagged prompt injection and tool-permission risks in the broader protocol, separate from any specific platform implementation.

In March, two engineers at Revolut's crypto exchange built a working market-making system in roughly half an hour using AI tools, an episode that fed an ongoing conversation about how much of a retail trading platform's value sits in the front-end interface once an agent can talk directly to the underlying API.

Spotware Pushes Beyond a Single-Platform Identity

The AI Agent Connect release fits a pattern Spotware has been telegraphing since the start of the year.

The vendor launched cBridge in March, positioning itself as an infrastructure provider rather than a single-platform shop, and last month signed FundingRock as the latest prop firm running its evaluations on cTrader.

Spotware says cTrader serves more than 11 million traders across 300-plus brokers and prop firms.

Spotware Systems has opened the cTrader platform to artificial intelligence agents, releasing two Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers and a workflow library that let third-party AI tools place trades, manage positions and run technical analysis through plain-language prompts.

The Limassol-based vendor calls the package cTrader AI Agent Connect and says it works with Claude Code, ChatGPT Codex, Cursor and Gemini CLI.

What the Servers Actually Do

cTrader AI Agent Connect ships in two pieces. A remote MCP server runs through cTrader Web and covers account operations, order and position management and market data queries.

Traders generate a configuration token in the platform settings and paste it into their AI client of choice. A local MCP server, which requires cTrader Windows, exposes a wider set of functions and extends control to the desktop workspace itself.

The vendor has also published a skills library, framed as ready-made AI workflow instructions for common trading routines. Traders can adapt the workflows rather than building prompts from scratch.

Ilia Iarovitcyn, CEO of Spotware.
Ilia Iarovitcyn, CEO, Spotware Systems.

Ilia Iarovitcyn, chief executive of Spotware Systems, said in a statement that AI agents are now "active participants in how traders analyse markets and execute trades."

The company has been pushing beyond cTrader's traditional boundaries in recent months, with the CEO telling FinanceMagnates.com at iFX EXPO Dubai earlier this year that AI would sit at the center of the 2026 roadmap.

TraderEvolution Got There First

Although the press release positions cTrader AI Agent Connect as "the first built-in AI agent solution in FX/CFD trading,” In January, TraderEvolution Global released its own MCP server.

Third-party MCP integrations have also existed for cTrader for some time. Developers have published open-source MCP servers on GitHub that connect Claude and similar agents to cTrader accounts via the platform's public API, and vendors such as TraderWAI offer hosted MCP endpoints covering cTrader, TradeLocker and Tradovate.

Moreover, brokerage XBTFX has been advertising its own AI trading API with MCP support as a standard account feature.

What is genuinely new in the Spotware release is the official, vendor-supported nature of the connection, alongside the local server's ability to reach into the Windows desktop workspace.

Rival Platforms Are Picking Different AI Lanes

The platforms cTrader competes with have moved into AI through different doors. MetaQuotes integrated an OpenAI-based coding assistant into MetaEditor for MetaTrader 5 users and has improved ONNX support to run machine learning models inside Expert Advisors.

The company has not shipped a first-party MCP server, and the available MT5 MCP integrations are community projects.

Devexperts has taken a third route, layering multiple AI products on top of DXtrade rather than exposing the platform as an agent endpoint.

The vendor integrated AI BI's analytics tooling for brokers and prop firms, embedded TechSignals' AI analysis into its DXcharts library and most recently rolled out Grenadier, an order book anomaly detector for DXtrade clients.

Broker-side integrations are accelerating too. FP Markets and Hantec Markets are among the brokers plugging Acuity Trading's AI signal tooling into their offerings, and Acuity itself has been buying its way into adjacent AI providers to round out its product set.

None of those vendors expose trade execution to an external LLM, however, which is what makes the cTrader local server materially different.

AI Now Sits Closer to the Order Button

The shift in MCP-based integrations is less about AI itself, which retail platforms have advertised for years, and more about proximity to execution.

That changes the risk profile in ways retail platforms have not historically had to answer for. The MCP, developed by Anthropic and released in late 2024, was originally framed as a bridge between LLMs and productivity tools or data sources rather than live brokerage accounts.

Security researchers have flagged prompt injection and tool-permission risks in the broader protocol, separate from any specific platform implementation.

In March, two engineers at Revolut's crypto exchange built a working market-making system in roughly half an hour using AI tools, an episode that fed an ongoing conversation about how much of a retail trading platform's value sits in the front-end interface once an agent can talk directly to the underlying API.

Spotware Pushes Beyond a Single-Platform Identity

The AI Agent Connect release fits a pattern Spotware has been telegraphing since the start of the year.

The vendor launched cBridge in March, positioning itself as an infrastructure provider rather than a single-platform shop, and last month signed FundingRock as the latest prop firm running its evaluations on cTrader.

Spotware says cTrader serves more than 11 million traders across 300-plus brokers and prop firms.

About the Author: Damian Chmiel
Damian Chmiel
  • 3548 Articles
  • 110 Followers
About the Author: Damian Chmiel
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
  • 3548 Articles
  • 110 Followers

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