CySEC-regulated Prime of Prime documents spread stability across four major volatility events and launches a six-month fee waiver for Dubai-based brokers.
Match-Prime Liquidity has released comparative execution data from four major market stress events between September 2025 and March 2026, documenting spread stability, quote continuity, and fill rates across conditions that caused widespread degradation among competing liquidity providers.
The company has also announced a six-month waiver of its minimum monthly fee for new Dubai-based clients meeting baseline volume and deposit requirements – a move that Andreas Kapsos, Match-Prime CEO, frames as directly connected to the firm’s confidence in its stress-tested infrastructure.
Four Events, One Pattern
Between September 2025 and March 2026, Match-Prime documented its execution quality through four distinctly different stress events: the September NFP release, a CME Group infrastructure outage on 28 November, gold’s steepest single-day decline since 1983 on 30 January, and the Brent crude spike on 9 March tied to the Strait of Hormuz escalation.
Across all four, Match-Prime recorded tighter spreads and higher tick volumes than benchmarked competitors. During the most recent event – when Brent gapped over 30% on Monday’s open – Match-Prime maintained 99% of its standard order book depth, with both sides of the book remaining balanced throughout.
Full comparative data from all four events is available at Match-Prime’s website.
A Region Under Pressure
The March oil spike was not an isolated data point. Since late February, Dubai-based brokerages have been operating under sustained geopolitical stress – the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed, oil swinging between $85 and $120, gold pricing disrupted by shipment route closures. For brokers serving client bases with heavy gold and energy exposure, session volatility has become the norm.
“Brokers in this region are operating through sustained volatility across the instruments their clients trade most,” said Andreas Kapsos, CEO of Match-Prime Liquidity. “That is exactly the environment our infrastructure was built for – and we have the data to demonstrate that it holds.”
Infrastructure Behind the Numbers
Match-Prime attributes its consistency to infrastructure developed with Match-Trade Technologies.
At the core is Match-Trader PRO, which aggregates from multiple liquidity sources and automatically reroutes flow when any single source degrades – as it did during the CME outage, compensating in milliseconds without manual intervention.
That execution layer is filtered through HawkEye RMS, which monitors flow at the session level and distinguishes genuinely toxic patterns from legitimate activity driven by abnormal market conditions.
Both systems are designed by an in-house team of developers and dealing specialists who build around stress as the primary specification.
Six-Month Fee Waiver for Dubai Brokers
Alongside the performance data, Match-Prime has launched a promotional offer for Dubai-based brokers, waiving its minimum monthly fee for six months – representing savings of up to $12,000 on the full package or $6,000 on the standard package over the waiver period.
To qualify, brokers must simply maintain a minimum deposit of $100,000 and generate at least 150 million in monthly notional trading volume.
“We publish our stress-event data because we are confident in what it shows,” said Kapsos. “Waiving the monthly fee for six months is an extension of that confidence. We want brokers to evaluate us based on performance, not on switching costs.”
The offer applies to new Match-Prime clients based in Dubai and is available immediately, until the end of June 2026.
Transparency as Positioning
Match-Prime’s decision to publish comparative stress-event data is unusual for a Prime of Prime provider. Most LPs in the mid-market segment publish average spread figures and general execution statistics but do not release performance data tied to specific market events – particularly data that includes direct benchmarking against anonymous competitors.
The company has indicated it will continue documenting execution quality during future stress events, positioning the practice as a recurring element of its market communication rather than a one-off disclosure.
“Every LP claims reliability. The difference is whether you publish the evidence,” Kapsos concluded.