Abstract:ColmexPRO is exiting the CFD market and shifting toward equities and ETFs, while WikiFX still shows the broker as regulated in Cyprus and South Africa with an established operating history.

ColmexPRO is ending new client onboarding for CFDs as part of a broader shift in its product strategy. The broker says it will now focus more on equities, ETFs, and other exchange-traded instruments.
The move suggests that CFDs will no longer be the core of its offering. Instead, ColmexPRO appears to be steering the business toward listed products that are more commonly associated with direct market access rather than leveraged retail speculation.
At the same time, broker information currently displayed on WikiFX presents a different side of the picture: ColmexPRO remains listed as a regulated broker with an established operating history.

According to the current WikiFX profile, ColmexPRO holds an overall score of 7.79/10 and is shown as regulated in Cyprus, with a CySEC market making licence, alongside a South African FSCA derivatives trading licence. The profile also shows the broker as having been in operation for roughly 15–20 years.
The same page highlights stronger scores in areas such as software and risk control, which gives the broker a noticeably different profile from platforms that appear on WikiFX without verifiable licensing.
More broker information can be viewed here:
https://www.wikifx.com/en/dealer/4161716004.html
Viewed in that context, ColmexPROs withdrawal from CFDs looks less like a regulatory problem and more like a strategic business decision.
The broker is not presenting the move as a wind-down of operations altogether. Rather, it is repositioning its offering toward products that are more closely associated with direct market access and longer-term investing. For clients and market observers, the main takeaway is that the company appears to be narrowing its product focus, not disappearing from the market.
ColmexPRO is drawing a line under its CFD business and shifting attention toward equities, ETFs, and other exchange-traded products. That marks a meaningful change in how the broker wants to position itself going forward.
At the same time, current WikiFX data shows the company as still operating under recognized regulatory licences in Cyprus and South Africa, with a relatively long operating history behind it. Taken together, the latest move looks like a reorientation of the business rather than a question over whether the broker exists as a regulated entity.
WikiFX is a global broker information platform that provides broker profiles, licence records, risk alerts, and regulatory updates across multiple jurisdictions. It helps traders review a brokers background before opening an account or depositing funds.


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