Tavira Financial Pulls Out of CFDs Business

UK-regulated Tavira Financial Limited, known for being an agency broker and execution specialist, is closing down its equities contracts for differences (CFDs) business, the company confirmed in its latest Companies House filing. It has already completed the majority of its closure process during the 2023-2024 fiscal year and will finish the remainder in the ongoing fiscal year.

CFDs Is No Longer Available

Although the brokerage did not provide any specific reason for the closure of its CFDs business, which it was building out of Dubai, it highlighted: “We have seen a reduction in some product lines within traditional brokerage revenues.”

Tavira hired Andrew Gibson, an industry veteran with three decades of experience, in early 2022 to develop its FX and CFDs products based out of Dubai. However, Gibson left the company last year to launch his own CFD brokerage.

A Profitable Year

Meanwhile, UK-registered Tavira generated over £31.7 million in revenue in fiscal 2024, which ended on March 31, an increase of almost 25 percent year-over-year. Most of its revenue was generated from its Dubai-based establishment, which brought in almost £19.9 million, followed by £8.8 million from the London location.

The company also has an office in Monaco, with only four full-time staff, which brought in £2.4 million in revenue. It also has an Australian branch that has been operating for the last two years and added a second Melbourne office last year. Australia only turned £714,000 in revenue, a jump of 95 percent, while its profitability increased by 125 percent.

The company further highlighted that it strengthened its headcount by 27 percent last fiscal year. Its UK and Dubai offices had 23 and 20 employees, respectively, at the end of the last fiscal year.

Furthermore, the company also turned a pre-tax profit of almost £1.14 million last fiscal year, recovering from a loss of £57,174. The net figure came in at a gain of £1.08 million, compared to a loss of £126,310 in the previous year.

UK-regulated Tavira Financial Limited, known for being an agency broker and execution specialist, is closing down its equities contracts for differences (CFDs) business, the company confirmed in its latest Companies House filing. It has already completed the majority of its closure process during the 2023-2024 fiscal year and will finish the remainder in the ongoing fiscal year.

CFDs Is No Longer Available

Although the brokerage did not provide any specific reason for the closure of its CFDs business, which it was building out of Dubai, it highlighted: “We have seen a reduction in some product lines within traditional brokerage revenues.”

Tavira hired Andrew Gibson, an industry veteran with three decades of experience, in early 2022 to develop its FX and CFDs products based out of Dubai. However, Gibson left the company last year to launch his own CFD brokerage.

A Profitable Year

Meanwhile, UK-registered Tavira generated over £31.7 million in revenue in fiscal 2024, which ended on March 31, an increase of almost 25 percent year-over-year. Most of its revenue was generated from its Dubai-based establishment, which brought in almost £19.9 million, followed by £8.8 million from the London location.

The company also has an office in Monaco, with only four full-time staff, which brought in £2.4 million in revenue. It also has an Australian branch that has been operating for the last two years and added a second Melbourne office last year. Australia only turned £714,000 in revenue, a jump of 95 percent, while its profitability increased by 125 percent.

The company further highlighted that it strengthened its headcount by 27 percent last fiscal year. Its UK and Dubai offices had 23 and 20 employees, respectively, at the end of the last fiscal year.

Furthermore, the company also turned a pre-tax profit of almost £1.14 million last fiscal year, recovering from a loss of £57,174. The net figure came in at a gain of £1.08 million, compared to a loss of £126,310 in the previous year.

This post is originally published on FINANCEMAGNATES.

  • Related Posts

    Weekly Recap: eToro Launches 24/5 Trading for Top 100 US Stocks, AETOS Surrenders FCA License

    eToro opens 24/5 trading on the top 100 US stocks In this week’s roundup of key industry developments, eToro, the publicly listed Israeli fintech firm, launched 24/5 trading for 100…

    Interactive Brokers’ Trading Activity Jumps 27% as Client Assets Surge

    Interactive Brokers Group reported a 27% year-on-year increase in daily trading activity in July, alongside sharp gains in client equity, account numbers, and margin lending. The brokerage said Daily Average…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Difference Between Technical and Fundamental Analysis in Forex

    • August 2, 2025
    Difference Between Technical and Fundamental Analysis in Forex

    Weekly Recap: eToro Launches 24/5 Trading for Top 100 US Stocks, AETOS Surrenders FCA License

    • August 2, 2025
    Weekly Recap: eToro Launches 24/5 Trading for Top 100 US Stocks, AETOS Surrenders FCA License

    What Is the Difference Between Pip and Point in Forex?

    • August 1, 2025
    What Is the Difference Between Pip and Point in Forex?

    Interactive Brokers’ Trading Activity Jumps 27% as Client Assets Surge

    • August 1, 2025
    Interactive Brokers’ Trading Activity Jumps 27% as Client Assets Surge

    What Is the Gold Standard and Why Do Some Countries Want It?

    • August 1, 2025
    What Is the Gold Standard and Why Do Some Countries Want It?

    What Is The Difference Between Core and Headline Inflation?

    • August 1, 2025
    What Is The Difference Between Core and Headline Inflation?