
INFINOX Capital UK Profit Rises 17% Following Shift to Institutional Trading
INFINOX Capital Limited reported a 17% increase in annual profit for 2025, despite a sharp fall in revenue after exiting the retail trading segment to focus on institutional trading.
According to the company’s latest filings, profit for the financial year rose to £912,230, up from £896,498 in 2024. The improvement came even as turnover declined 37% to £2,321,255, reflecting the broker’s transition away from retail CFDs and toward its institutional IXO Prime business.
The shift in strategy supported stronger cost efficiency. Cost of sales fell to £132,539 from £376,684 a year earlier. Gross profit totaled £2,188,716, compared with £3,312,524 in 2024, while administrative expenses declined 16% to £1,909,403.
Operating profit for the year stood at £280,684, down from £884,833 in the prior period. Profit before tax matched that figure. A deferred tax credit of £631,546 lifted total comprehensive income to £912,230.
The directors described the performance as satisfactory and reaffirmed confidence in the firm’s institutional focus. “The business remains well capitalized to take advantage of future opportunities,” the annual report stated.
INFINOX said it will continue to develop the IXO Prime platform, which provides liquidity and prime brokerage-style services to brokers, money managers, professional clients, and fintech firms. The company confirmed it does not plan to re-enter the retail trading market.
Client assets under management declined to £4.99 million from £5.40 million the previous year. Management expects further operational efficiencies as the institutional offering scales.
The update follows recent action by INFINOX’s institutional division to suspend new institutional trading for several CFD brokers amid suspected market conduct breaches. The firm said the measures were taken to protect platform integrity and maintain its reputation within global institutional trading markets.
