Mubasher Trade adds futures brokerage as new activity upon FRA approval

Cairo – Mubasher: Egypt’s Financial Regulatory Authority (FRA) has issued Decision No. 599 of 2026 which approved granting Mubasher for Securities and Bonds (Mubasher Trade) the license to practice the activity of futures contracts brokerage.

The new activity will be added to the purposes previously licensed by the FRA for Mubasher Trade, upon the resolution issued on 26 February 2026.

The decision will be implemented from the date of its issuance, with the relevant departments of the FRA to execute it in their respective areas.

The decision came after submitting the futures contracts brokerage activity for approval to the FRA’s Incorporation and Licensing Committee in its session No. 70 which was held on 26 February 2026, subject to the framework of the provisions of the Capital Market Law No. 95 of 1992 and its executive regulations, as well as the laws and decisions regulating non-banking financial companies’ (NBFCs) activities.

Under the FRA’s Decision No. 599 of 2026, the activity of futures contracts brokerage is added to Mubasher Trade's existing activities, which include brokerage in securities and bonds.

The new license reflects Mubasher Trade's direction towards expanding its services in the Egyptian capital market and enhancing its role in supporting advanced trading mechanisms, especially with the growing interest in financial derivatives and futures contracts that had been witnessed recently.

On 17 February 2026, the FRA announced a resolution outlining the requirements and licensing conditions for futures brokerage, aiming to complete the legislative and regulatory framework for the derivatives market, enhance risk management efficiency, ensure the readiness of operating companies, maintain market stability, and protect investor rights.

The authority’s Decision No. 7 of 2026, which was issued on 14 January 2026 by the Board of Directors chaired by Mohamed Farid, Minister of Investment and Foreign Trade and former FRA Chairman, enacts a comprehensive framework of financial, technical, and administrative mandates.

The resolution requires applicants to have a minimum issued and paid-in capital of EGP 50 million (or its foreign currency equivalent). In addition, companies must comply with ownership structure regulations and shareholder ratios as per the rules governing non-banking financial activities, specifically Decision No. 177 of 2024.

The resolution mandates a cash insurance deposit equal to 0.5% of the issued and paid-in capital to cover financial liabilities arising from regulatory breaches.

Additionally, a non-refundable application fee of EGP 5,000 is required for license review.

On the technical side, brokerage companies must possess a secure, integrated technological infrastructure. This includes centralized servers, licensed operating systems, advanced data protection, and an effective internal control system.

To ensure business continuity, the companies must maintain a secondary operational site physically separate from the main headquarters.

The resolution obligates companies to develop a comprehensive Risk Management Operational Manual. This manual must detail the identification, measurement, and monitoring of market, credit, concentration, operational, and liquidity risks, alongside mitigation and reporting policies to ensure regulatory compliance and operational sustainability.

Administrative governance standards require board members to possess a clean legal record and a “good reputation.”

The majority of the board, including the Chairman, must have at least five years of experience in exchange-traded markets.

The Managing Director must be dedicated exclusively to executive management, and the Operations Manager must have a minimum of seven years of relevant experience.

Futures brokerage firms must staff a minimum of 12 key positions, including the CEO, Operations Manager, Trading Manager, Risk Manager, Internal Controller, AML/CFT Officer, CFO, Account Manager, Internal Auditor, Floor Trader (Contracts), IT & Information Security Officer, and HR Manager. Specific technical expertise is required for leadership roles.

To safeguard participants, companies must verify a client’s financial solvency before executing orders. They are required to manage escrow accounts, monitor client positions daily based on settlement prices, and satisfy margin requirements.

The FRA said companies may also join clearing and settlement company as “Settlement Members” subject to governing rules.

FRA mandates strict client data confidentiality and the use of its standardized contract templates, which must explicitly detail collateral, fees, and default protocols. The resolution strictly prohibits “no-loss” guarantees or loss-capping representations.

Firms must provide a Risk Disclosure Statement at onboarding, to be updated annually or upon any material amendment.

The FRA stated that companies must retain physical records for a minimum of five years and electronic records for 15 years, ensuring FRA has full access for inspections. The authority reserves the right to conduct on-site examinations to verify ongoing compliance with these requirements.

The resolution organizes the transition for existing securities brokerages wishing to add futures brokerage to their license. They must meet capital and equity requirements, be free of active administrative measures, and submit comprehensive technical and financial documentation.

Licensed futures brokerage firms operating at the time of the resolution’s issuance are granted a three-month grace period to regularize their status. This period may be extended upon FRA’s approval of a justified request.

Mubasher Contribution Time: 01-Mar-2026 00:18 (GMT)
Mubasher Last Update Time: 01-Mar-2026 00:18 (GMT)