Working with more counterparties can create challenges, but a few will create counterparty risks.
Some banks see opportunities to increase their FX business.
A survey of UK-based CFOs published in October by MilltechFX found that 62% believed there was a lack of transparency in the FX market that could be attributed at least in part to a reliance on a small number of counterparties. An average corporate was working with just three counterparties and only 1% had five or more counterparties.
Almost three-quarters (73%) of the UK-based CFOs surveyed said they were looking to diversify their FX counterparties, a figure that rose to 88% in a similar survey of North American CFOs published in July.
Corporate Strategy for FX Counterparties
Eric Huttman, CEO at MillTechFX
"It can take months, even years, to set up banking relationships and our research shows the majority of corporates only work with three banks,” says Eric Huttman, the CEO of MillTechFX. “It is therefore positive to see that most corporates are looking to diversify their FX counterparties. This is not only beneficial from a risk management perspective but has the added benefit of providing corporates with the ability to compare prices, aiding transparency and enabling best execution.”
Antoine Jacquemin, the Global Head of Market Risk Advisory & Head of Corporate Sales Europe Ex-France (FX and rates) at Societe Generale agrees that the move by corporates to diversify their pool of FX counterparties has been driven by companies looking to replace some banks that were in their FX panel group and disappeared during the first half of the year.
“The average corporate client would have somewhere between ten and 20 banks on their panel,” he explained. “I would be surprised if they were trying to double the amount of banks they are doing FX with, but they are adding numbers at the margin.”
Jacquemin reckons the number of banks that are not necessarily top FX counterparts to corporates but are looking to become more important is also contributing to this trend. This is especially true for those who lend to corporate clients because clients tend to share their ancillary business with the group of banks that are lending to them.
Antoine Jacquemin, Global Head of Market Risk Advisory at Societe Generale
“Then we have to consider that corporates have FX requirements in emerging or even frontier markets,” he said. “The average treasurer or CFO will want adequate competition for every currency, which by definition would require a pretty large panel group because different banks have different capabilities.”
Concentration of Counterparty Risks
Corporates who limit their banking partnerships benefit from not having to manage and divide their finite FX wallet across numerous counterparties. In so doing, they have also become more comfortable asking for analysis, advice, and bespoke content.
However, working with a small number of banking partners leads to a greater concentration of counterparty risk observed Scott Sinawi, the Head of Corporate Sales for Global Markets Americas at BNP Paribas.
“This can be managed by only trading with the highest credit quality banks and also managing positions – and resultant exposures – across banks,” he mentioned.
“Another downside to working with fewer banks would be the potential for gaps in pricing certain currency pairs and structures. This too can be offset by careful selection of banking partners who can provide liquid and competitive pricing in both G10 and emerging market foreign exchange products.”
When asked whether March's banking crisis in the US and the collapse of Credit Suisse encouraged corporates to review their FX banking relationships, Sinawi suggested comprehensive counterparty review pre-dates the events of 2023.
Scott Sinawi, Head of Corporate Sales, Global Markets Americas at BNP Paribas
“The 2008 global financial crisis was the real impetus behind corporates giving greater scrutiny to counterparty risk,” he stated. “Credit Suisse – and to a lesser extent the US regional bank crisis – was just another reminder of the importance of maintaining a diverse, creditworthy group of FX bank counterparts.”
“We did not see the need from corporates to diversify and/or increase the number of FX banks they work with,” Sinawi added. “Most of the corporate clients we see do not work with US regionals for their FX hedging needs.”
A Conundrum
On one hand, working with a smaller group of FX banks means managing fewer relationships and having fewer 'mouths to feed.' However, this also leads to less competitive bidding for trades and fewer opportunities for research and other banking resources.
Julie Ros, the Strategic Advisor to the Foreign Exchange Professionals Association, pointed out that the association has noticed a trend towards prioritizing partnerships with global systemically important banks, rather than than expanding the number of banking relationships, particularly in the early part of this year.
Deciding on the number of counterparties is a collaborative process for corporates. CFOs typically favour a relatively tight roster of banks known for their execution reliability. Yet, banks aiming to boost their FX revenues must evaluate whether the potential business justifies the partnership. Corporations must also engage with a variety of financial institutions that can provide adequate credit and ensure comprehensive coverage of their FX requirements while fostering competitive pricing.
Corporations may believe the more banks they work with the more chance they have of getting the best price, but Jacquemin said this does not take account of operational considerations.
“The more banks you go to, the more complex your processes are – and if it takes you much more time to execute deals, you are sitting on additional risk,” he observed.
“For the most liquid pairs, I would be very surprised if the average rate was materially different across any number of banks.”
Increased counterparty diversification means greater competition, which Sinawi has accepted can improve pricing for the client. “However, it may become harder for banks to justify limited capital and human resources to expend on clients as a result,” he added.
A survey of UK-based CFOs published in October by MilltechFX found that 62% believed there was a lack of transparency in the FX market that could be attributed at least in part to a reliance on a small number of counterparties. An average corporate was working with just three counterparties and only 1% had five or more counterparties.
Almost three-quarters (73%) of the UK-based CFOs surveyed said they were looking to diversify their FX counterparties, a figure that rose to 88% in a similar survey of North American CFOs published in July.
Corporate Strategy for FX Counterparties
Eric Huttman, CEO at MillTechFX
"It can take months, even years, to set up banking relationships and our research shows the majority of corporates only work with three banks,” says Eric Huttman, the CEO of MillTechFX. “It is therefore positive to see that most corporates are looking to diversify their FX counterparties. This is not only beneficial from a risk management perspective but has the added benefit of providing corporates with the ability to compare prices, aiding transparency and enabling best execution.”
Antoine Jacquemin, the Global Head of Market Risk Advisory & Head of Corporate Sales Europe Ex-France (FX and rates) at Societe Generale agrees that the move by corporates to diversify their pool of FX counterparties has been driven by companies looking to replace some banks that were in their FX panel group and disappeared during the first half of the year.
“The average corporate client would have somewhere between ten and 20 banks on their panel,” he explained. “I would be surprised if they were trying to double the amount of banks they are doing FX with, but they are adding numbers at the margin.”
Jacquemin reckons the number of banks that are not necessarily top FX counterparts to corporates but are looking to become more important is also contributing to this trend. This is especially true for those who lend to corporate clients because clients tend to share their ancillary business with the group of banks that are lending to them.
Antoine Jacquemin, Global Head of Market Risk Advisory at Societe Generale
“Then we have to consider that corporates have FX requirements in emerging or even frontier markets,” he said. “The average treasurer or CFO will want adequate competition for every currency, which by definition would require a pretty large panel group because different banks have different capabilities.”
Concentration of Counterparty Risks
Corporates who limit their banking partnerships benefit from not having to manage and divide their finite FX wallet across numerous counterparties. In so doing, they have also become more comfortable asking for analysis, advice, and bespoke content.
However, working with a small number of banking partners leads to a greater concentration of counterparty risk observed Scott Sinawi, the Head of Corporate Sales for Global Markets Americas at BNP Paribas.
“This can be managed by only trading with the highest credit quality banks and also managing positions – and resultant exposures – across banks,” he mentioned.
“Another downside to working with fewer banks would be the potential for gaps in pricing certain currency pairs and structures. This too can be offset by careful selection of banking partners who can provide liquid and competitive pricing in both G10 and emerging market foreign exchange products.”
When asked whether March's banking crisis in the US and the collapse of Credit Suisse encouraged corporates to review their FX banking relationships, Sinawi suggested comprehensive counterparty review pre-dates the events of 2023.
Scott Sinawi, Head of Corporate Sales, Global Markets Americas at BNP Paribas
“The 2008 global financial crisis was the real impetus behind corporates giving greater scrutiny to counterparty risk,” he stated. “Credit Suisse – and to a lesser extent the US regional bank crisis – was just another reminder of the importance of maintaining a diverse, creditworthy group of FX bank counterparts.”
“We did not see the need from corporates to diversify and/or increase the number of FX banks they work with,” Sinawi added. “Most of the corporate clients we see do not work with US regionals for their FX hedging needs.”
A Conundrum
On one hand, working with a smaller group of FX banks means managing fewer relationships and having fewer 'mouths to feed.' However, this also leads to less competitive bidding for trades and fewer opportunities for research and other banking resources.
Julie Ros, the Strategic Advisor to the Foreign Exchange Professionals Association, pointed out that the association has noticed a trend towards prioritizing partnerships with global systemically important banks, rather than than expanding the number of banking relationships, particularly in the early part of this year.
Deciding on the number of counterparties is a collaborative process for corporates. CFOs typically favour a relatively tight roster of banks known for their execution reliability. Yet, banks aiming to boost their FX revenues must evaluate whether the potential business justifies the partnership. Corporations must also engage with a variety of financial institutions that can provide adequate credit and ensure comprehensive coverage of their FX requirements while fostering competitive pricing.
Corporations may believe the more banks they work with the more chance they have of getting the best price, but Jacquemin said this does not take account of operational considerations.
“The more banks you go to, the more complex your processes are – and if it takes you much more time to execute deals, you are sitting on additional risk,” he observed.
“For the most liquid pairs, I would be very surprised if the average rate was materially different across any number of banks.”
Increased counterparty diversification means greater competition, which Sinawi has accepted can improve pricing for the client. “However, it may become harder for banks to justify limited capital and human resources to expend on clients as a result,” he added.
Paul Golden is an experienced freelance financial journalist with a strong institutional background. Over the past two decades, he has written for globally recognised financial publications, covering topics such as market structure, regulation, trading behaviour, and economic policy.
iSAM Moves to New London Headquarters after New Cyprus and Hong Kong Offices
Hannah Hill on Innovation, Branding & Award-Winning Technology | Executive Interview | AXI
Hannah Hill on Innovation, Branding & Award-Winning Technology | Executive Interview | AXI
Recorded live at FMLS:25, this executive interview features Hannah Hill, Head of Brand and Sponsorship at AXI, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following AXI’s win for Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025.
In this wide-ranging discussion, Hannah shares insights on:
🔹What winning the Finance Magnates award means for AXI’s credibility and innovation
🔹How the launch of AXI Select, the capital allocation program, is redefining industry standards
🔹The development and rollout of the AXI trading app across multiple markets
🔹Driving brand evolution alongside technological advancements
🔹Encouraging and recognizing teams behind the scenes
🔹The role of marketing, content, and social media in building product awareness
Hannah explains why standout products, strategic branding, and a focus on innovation are key to growing visibility and staying ahead in a competitive brokerage landscape.
🏆 Award Highlight: Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #MostInnovativeBroker #TradingTechnology #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview #AXI
Recorded live at FMLS:25, this executive interview features Hannah Hill, Head of Brand and Sponsorship at AXI, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following AXI’s win for Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025.
In this wide-ranging discussion, Hannah shares insights on:
🔹What winning the Finance Magnates award means for AXI’s credibility and innovation
🔹How the launch of AXI Select, the capital allocation program, is redefining industry standards
🔹The development and rollout of the AXI trading app across multiple markets
🔹Driving brand evolution alongside technological advancements
🔹Encouraging and recognizing teams behind the scenes
🔹The role of marketing, content, and social media in building product awareness
Hannah explains why standout products, strategic branding, and a focus on innovation are key to growing visibility and staying ahead in a competitive brokerage landscape.
🏆 Award Highlight: Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #MostInnovativeBroker #TradingTechnology #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview #AXI
Executive Interview | Dor Eligula | Co-Founder & Chief Business Officer, BridgeWise | FMLS:25
Executive Interview | Dor Eligula | Co-Founder & Chief Business Officer, BridgeWise | FMLS:25
In this session, Jonathan Fine form Ultimate Group speaks with Dor Eligula from Bridgewise, a fast-growing AI-powered research and analytics firm supporting brokers and exchanges worldwide.
We start with Dor’s reaction to the Summit and then move to broker growth and the quick wins brokers often overlook. Dor shares where he sees “blue ocean” growth across Asian markets and how local client behaviour shapes demand.
We also discuss the rollout of AI across investment research. Dor gives real examples of how automation and human judgment meet at Bridgewise — including moments when analysts corrected AI output, and times when AI prevented an error.
We close with a practical question: how retail investors can actually use AI without falling into common traps.
In this session, Jonathan Fine form Ultimate Group speaks with Dor Eligula from Bridgewise, a fast-growing AI-powered research and analytics firm supporting brokers and exchanges worldwide.
We start with Dor’s reaction to the Summit and then move to broker growth and the quick wins brokers often overlook. Dor shares where he sees “blue ocean” growth across Asian markets and how local client behaviour shapes demand.
We also discuss the rollout of AI across investment research. Dor gives real examples of how automation and human judgment meet at Bridgewise — including moments when analysts corrected AI output, and times when AI prevented an error.
We close with a practical question: how retail investors can actually use AI without falling into common traps.
Brendan Callan joined us fresh off the Summit’s most anticipated debate: “Is Prop Trading Good for the Industry?” Brendan argued against the motion — and the audience voted him the winner.
In this interview, Brendan explains the reasoning behind his position. He walks through the message he believes many firms avoid: that the current prop trading model is too dependent on fees, too loose on risk, and too confusing for retail audiences.
We discuss why he thinks the model grew fast, why it may run into walls, and what he believes is needed for a cleaner, more responsible version of prop trading.
This is Brendan at his frankest — sharp, grounded, and very clear about what changes are overdue.
Brendan Callan joined us fresh off the Summit’s most anticipated debate: “Is Prop Trading Good for the Industry?” Brendan argued against the motion — and the audience voted him the winner.
In this interview, Brendan explains the reasoning behind his position. He walks through the message he believes many firms avoid: that the current prop trading model is too dependent on fees, too loose on risk, and too confusing for retail audiences.
We discuss why he thinks the model grew fast, why it may run into walls, and what he believes is needed for a cleaner, more responsible version of prop trading.
This is Brendan at his frankest — sharp, grounded, and very clear about what changes are overdue.
Elina Pedersen on Growth, Stability & Ultra-Low Latency | Executive Interview | Your Bourse
Elina Pedersen on Growth, Stability & Ultra-Low Latency | Executive Interview | Your Bourse
Recorded live at FMLS:25 London, this executive interview features Elina Pedersen, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following her company’s win for Best Connectivity 2025.
🔹In this wide-ranging discussion, Elina shares insights on:
🔹What winning a Finance Magnates award means for credibility and reputation
🔹How broker demand for stability and reliability is driving rapid growth
🔹The launch of a new trade server enabling flexible front-end integrations
🔹Why ultra-low latency must be proven with data, not buzzwords
🔹Common mistakes brokers make when scaling globally
🔹Educating the industry through a newly launched Dealers Academy
🔹Where AI fits into trading infrastructure and where it doesn’t
Elina explains why resilient back-end infrastructure, deep client partnerships, and disciplined focus are critical for brokers looking to scale sustainably in today’s competitive market.
🏆 Award Highlight: Best Connectivity 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #BestConnectivity #TradingTechnology #UltraLowLatency #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview
Recorded live at FMLS:25 London, this executive interview features Elina Pedersen, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following her company’s win for Best Connectivity 2025.
🔹In this wide-ranging discussion, Elina shares insights on:
🔹What winning a Finance Magnates award means for credibility and reputation
🔹How broker demand for stability and reliability is driving rapid growth
🔹The launch of a new trade server enabling flexible front-end integrations
🔹Why ultra-low latency must be proven with data, not buzzwords
🔹Common mistakes brokers make when scaling globally
🔹Educating the industry through a newly launched Dealers Academy
🔹Where AI fits into trading infrastructure and where it doesn’t
Elina explains why resilient back-end infrastructure, deep client partnerships, and disciplined focus are critical for brokers looking to scale sustainably in today’s competitive market.
🏆 Award Highlight: Best Connectivity 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #BestConnectivity #TradingTechnology #UltraLowLatency #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @BlueberryMarketsForex , a forex and CFD broker operating since 2016, offering access to multiple trading platforms, over 1,000 instruments, and flexible account types for different trading styles.
We break down Blueberry’s regulatory structure, including its Australian Financial Services License (AFSL), as well as its authorisation and registrations in other jurisdictions. The review also covers supported platforms such as MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, TradingView, Blueberry.X, and web-based trading.
You’ll learn about available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, share CFDs, and crypto CFDs, along with leverage options, minimum and maximum trade sizes, and how Blueberry structures its Standard and Raw accounts.
We also explain spreads, commissions, swap rates, swap-free account availability, funding and withdrawal methods, processing times, and what traders can expect from customer support and additional services.
Watch the full review to see whether Blueberry’s trading setup aligns with your experience level, strategy, and risk tolerance.
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Blueberry #BlueberryMarkets #BrokerReview #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #FinanceMagnates #TradingPlatforms #MarketInsights
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @BlueberryMarketsForex , a forex and CFD broker operating since 2016, offering access to multiple trading platforms, over 1,000 instruments, and flexible account types for different trading styles.
We break down Blueberry’s regulatory structure, including its Australian Financial Services License (AFSL), as well as its authorisation and registrations in other jurisdictions. The review also covers supported platforms such as MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, TradingView, Blueberry.X, and web-based trading.
You’ll learn about available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, share CFDs, and crypto CFDs, along with leverage options, minimum and maximum trade sizes, and how Blueberry structures its Standard and Raw accounts.
We also explain spreads, commissions, swap rates, swap-free account availability, funding and withdrawal methods, processing times, and what traders can expect from customer support and additional services.
Watch the full review to see whether Blueberry’s trading setup aligns with your experience level, strategy, and risk tolerance.
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Blueberry #BlueberryMarkets #BrokerReview #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #FinanceMagnates #TradingPlatforms #MarketInsights