Belgium’s FSMA clarifies its position regarding Plus500 settlement

Maria Nikolova

The Belgian regulator says Plus500 did not have prospectus, approved by the FSMA, for CFD offering.

Plus500 Ltd (LON:PLUS) made some headlines this morning by posting a filing with the London Stock Exchange with regards to a settlement it had reached with Belgium’s financial regulator FSMA. As one may expect in such cases, Plus500’s statement was rather short and elusive, announcing merely that the company was fined EUR550,000 and that, under the settlement, it does not admit any guilt.

Several hours after that, Belgium’s financial markets authority also announced the settlement, providing more detail into the matter.

According to the FSMA statement, Plus500 (Plus500CY Ltd and Plus500UK Ltd, to be more precise) had failed to provide a prospectus for CFDs. The prospectus is necessary to describe the characteristics of an investment instrument offered to Belgian investors and to define the risks associated with this instrument.

Such prospectuses have to be approved by the FSMA before a given instrument is offered to Belgian residents.

The FSMA alleges that Plus500 did not have the necessary prospectuses to offer CFD trading in Belgium. On top of the fine and the publication of the associated announcement on FSMA’s website, Plus500 has to contact its Belgian clients and to offer them to terminate their contracts with the broker without any charges. Also, the broker agrees to close the website www.plus500.be and to indicate on its other websites that the trading instruments offered are not available to Belgian residents.

FSMA has been amid the first European regulators to take a harsh stance regarding high-risk derivatives. In August last year, following proposed regulatory changes by the FSMA, Belgium outlawed certain high-risk derivatives and binary options. The Belgian financial regulator had been warning against binary options brokers long before that but the August 2016 changes represented a decisive step on part of the nation’s authorities.

Meanwhile, other European regulators, like the Dutch AFM, are seeking to implement similar measures. The Netherlands’ financial regulator has proposed a ban on the advertising of harmful financial instruments like high-leverage CFDs and binary options, with the ban expected to take effect in the middle of 2017.

Read this next

Fintech

Sterling to provide risk and margin support for fixed income

“Firms must have the tools to effectively manage their risk across all asset classes. As yields rise, we see more exposure from clients in the fixed income space. We understand their need to measure and mitigate risk in a highly regulated environment.”

Retail FX

FXOpen launches HK share CFDs: Tencent, Alibaba, Xiaomi, Baidu

Hong Kong share CFDs will be commission-free for a limited period of time.

Retail FX

IronFX Celebrates an Award-Winning Start to 2024 with a Series of Industry Recognitions

IronFX, a global leader in online trading, has embarked on 2024 with a spectacular display of accolades that highlight its commitment to excellence and innovation in the competitive financial services sector.

Industry News

FIA urges CFTC to regulate use cases rather than AI itself

“We urge the CFTC to refrain from crafting new regulations that generally regulate AI because this approach presents certain well-known pitfalls. By approaching the issue from the perspective of AI as a technology, rather than the use case for the technology, corresponding regulations would likely necessitate a definition of AI. We anticipate that any attempt to properly define AI would be very challenging and require considerable resources.”

Education, Inside View

The Power of Public Relations in Finance: Shaping Perceptions & Building Reputation

It’s safe to say that the finance industry has faced its share of reputation crises over the years, from the 2008 financial collapse to the many scandals around irresponsible lending, political corruption, and even Ponzi schemes. 

Digital Assets

Crossover’s crypto ECN executed over $3 billion in Q1 2024

“Our growth is also driving continued increases in the percentages of trades that are ‘Order Crossing Order’ (OXO). Currently, roughly 10% of all trades executed on CROSSx are OXO, another differentiator in our platform’s capacity. This capacity and our unique execution model provide value to both the market maker and taker, as evidenced by our commercial model.”

blockdag

BlockDAG’s Explosive Presale Hits $20.3M In April Swaying Investors From XRP’s Price Trends Upward, & Polygon’s NFT Market

Learn about BlockDAG’s impressive $20.3M presale results, XRP’s price increase prospects, and the booming NFT market on Polygon among the top 10 cryptocurrencies.

Retail FX

Financial Commission warns of Eplanet Brokers

The Financial Commission, a self-regulatory compliance specialist for the financial services industry, is ramping up its scrutiny of unregulated brokerage firms. Today, the independent association warned against a company called Eplanet Brokers.

Retail FX

Dubai crypto exchange steps into prop trading

Dubai-based cryptocurrency trading platform, CoinW Exchange, marked its sixth anniversary by announcing a rebranding initiative and launching a proprietary trading product.

<