Abstract:OvalX, formerly known as ETX Capital, was a forex and contracts for differences (CFDs) broker based in London. It was reported that Chief Executive Luca Merolla informed all the company staff on Wednesday about this permanent closing on 17th March 2023.

OvalX, formerly known as ETX Capital, was a forex and contracts for differences (CFDs) broker based in London. It was reported that Chief Executive Luca Merolla informed all the company staff that 17th March 2023 will be the last operation day for OvalX.

OvalX urges clients to transfer their accounts and positions, and funds to Capital.com if they still wish to continue trading, however, they are not obliged to do so.

When Swiss private equity fund Guru Capital acquired ETX Capital in October 2020, it was then renamed OvalX in May 2022. The deal was thought to have been sponsored by the US-based venture capital firm Jump Capital. As a result, Jump Capital, whose partner Saurabh Sharma joined Monecor's Board, owned Monecor. The brand shut down after a few years, despite the initial objectives under Guru Capital's management to increase its market presence and look for investment possibilities in active firms operating in the EMEA and APAC region.
Due to erratic investments and macroeconomic circumstances, Moncore reported a pre-tax loss of £9.2 million in 2021, the first full year under Guru's leadership. After deducting taxes, it had a net loss of £6.8 million as opposed to a net profit of £428,000 the year before.
The platform's operations suffered that year as trade revenue decreased due to Brexit from £31.7 million the previous year to £24.1 million. Although its funding sales climbed 39 per cent thanks to its professional clientele, its spread revenues decreased by 45 per cent year over year.


If you have spent even a week inside trading communities lately, you already know the pitch by heart. Pass a quick "challenge," get handed a funded account worth tens of thousands of dollars, and keep up to 80% of everything you make. No risking your own savings, no slow grind of building capital from scratch — just skill, a small fee, and a fast track to the big leagues. It is the exact dream every new trader is secretly chasing, and an entire industry has sprung up to sell it. XPO Fund is one of the louder voices selling that story right now. Its website is slick, its plans sound generous, and its marketing leans hard on words like "industry's lowest fee" and "fast payouts." But before you reach for your card, there is one number sitting quietly on this firm's profile — a number it would rather you scroll past — that every experienced trader would beg you to look at first. And no, it is not the profit split. Let's pull XPO Fund apart piece by piece: what it actually is, who is real

Every broker with a marketing budget now slaps the letters "ECN" on its homepage. Few of them actually deliver what those letters promise. For a serious trader — a scalper, a day trader, an algo trader, anyone whose edge lives or dies on execution quality — the gap between a true ECN broker and a market maker wearing an ECN costume can quietly cost you hundreds of pips a year in slippage, requotes, and inflated spreads. So we cut through the marketing, looked at the brokers that genuinely offer raw pricing and deep liquidity, and cross-checked every one of them on WikiFX. Here are the six ECN accounts that actually earn the label in 2026 — ranked. First, a short primer, because understanding ECN is what lets you judge these brokers properly.

If you have been shopping around for a forex broker and landed on FX Novus and VCG Markets, you have stumbled onto a genuinely instructive pair. On the surface they look like cousins: both are relatively young, both wave around multi-asset trading and tight spreads, and both operate from the kind of offshore corners of the world that should make any beginner slow down. But dig into the data on WikiFX and the two part ways sharply. One carries active, screaming red flags. The other is merely standing in a yellow zone. Neither is what a cautious newcomer would call "safe" — but understanding how they differ is exactly the kind of lesson that protects your money. Let's put them head to head, decode the jargon along the way, and reach an honest verdict.

There are few feelings in trading more sickening than this one: you funded your account, you walked away confident your money was safe, and when you came back to check on it, the platform calmly informed you that your login details were wrong. Not your trades — your very identity, locked out. And on the other side of that login screen sits a balance you can no longer touch and a support team that has gone silent. That is the heart of a complaint filed against New Frontier on WikiFX. One trader reported depositing 40,500 pesos, returning to log in with the exact email and password they had registered, and being told the data was "incorrect" — which, in their words, meant their earnings had simply been taken. Customer service, they said, did not react. Let's look closely at this broker, what makes its profile so unsettling, and why verification here is not optional.