LMAX International Review

Updated: April 2, 2026
LMAX International
Views124

Fast Facts

Contact Info and Support

Traffic information

CategoryMetricsMeaning
RatingsGlobal Rank-
Country Code-
Country Rank-
Category Rank-
Engagement metricsVisits0
Bounce Rate0
Pageviews per Visit0
Avg. Visit Duration0
Estimated monthly visitsDecember 20250
January 20260
February 20260
Traffic sourcesSocial-
Paid Referrals-
Mail-
Referrals-
Search-
Direct-

About LMAX International

LMAX Global is a trading name of LMAX Broker Limited, authorised and regulated by the UK Financial Conduct Authority under firm reference number 783200, providing FX, metals, and commodities execution services via the LMAX Exchange central limit order book model with no “last look” execution.

LMAX Exchange is a trading name of LMAX Limited, authorised and regulated by the UK Financial Conduct Authority under firm reference number 509778, operating as a multilateral trading facility offering institutions spot FX, precious metals, and indices trading with central limit order book infrastructure and no “last look” execution.

LMAX Broker Europe Ltd is authorised by the Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission under licence number 310/16, offering clients in the European Economic Area access to LMAX liquidity and execution.

LMAX Digital is regulated by the Gibraltar Financial Services Commission as a Distributed Ledger Technology provider for execution and custody services, enabling institutional trading in digital assets.

LMAX Exchange Singapore is licensed as a Recognised Market Operator by the Monetary Authority of Singapore, facilitating central limit order book trading in Non‑Deliverable Forwards (NDFs) in Singapore and London.

Who it’s for

  • Institutional clients, brokers, and professional traders with high liquidity and connectivity needs, seeking direct market access and low-latency execution.
  • Entities requiring transparent, exchange-style execution using central limit order book model without “last look.”
  • Clients needing multi-jurisdictional regulatory coverage across the UK (FCA), EU (CySEC), Gibraltar (GFSC), and Singapore (MAS RMO).

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Regulated across multiple reputable jurisdictions (FCA, CySEC, GFSC, MAS RMO) with clear licence numbers.
  • Central limit order book execution with no last‑look and strict price/time priority.
  • Segregated client funds and institutional-grade infrastructure with ultra‑low latency and global matching venues.

Cons

  • Not suitable for retail or low-frequency traders due to high minimum requirements and institutional focus.

Page loaded in 477.00 ms