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Stockbrokers2026

Regulator profile ·

ESMA — European Securities and Markets Authority

Tracked byUpdated

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) is the EU's independent securities and markets supervisor. ESMA does NOT directly licence forex or CFD providers — individual firm authorisation is granted by national competent authorities (NCAs) such as BaFin, AMF, CySEC, CBI and MFSA. ESMA sets the technical standards and product-intervention rules they enforce.

Jurisdiction
European Union (EU-27) and European Economic Area · firm authorisation by national competent authorities.
Founded
2011
Mandate
Established by Regulation (EU) No 1095/2010 as part of the European System of Financial Supervision. ESMA writes Regulatory Technical Standards (RTS) and Implementing Technical Standards (ITS) under MiFID II/MiFIR, MAR, EMIR and other instruments; runs cross-EU registers; and conducts product-intervention measures binding on all member states.
Consumer protection
ESMA does not directly compensate retail investors. Compensation operates at the national level — typically up to €100,000 per depositor for bank deposits and €20,000-€70,000 for investor protection — administered by each member state's scheme. ESMA's product-intervention powers (e.g. negative balance protection) bind national supervisors.
Retail leverage caps
ESMA's 2018 product-intervention measures introduced harmonised retail leverage caps now permanent across the EU/EEA: 1:30 on major FX pairs, 1:20 on minor FX pairs and gold, 1:10 on commodities and major equity indices, 1:5 on individual equities, 1:2 on cryptoasset CFDs. Binary options for retail clients are permanently banned.
Public register
ESMA hosts cross-EU registers — investment-firm passporting notifications, prospectuses, MiFID waivers — but individual licence verification is done at national-NCA level. For firm authorisation, look up the appropriate national register (e.g. BaFin, REGAFI, MFSA Register). Open register
Dispute resolution
ESMA does not handle individual investor complaints. Cross-border disputes are coordinated through FIN-NET, the network of national financial-services ombudsmen. Domestic disputes go to the appropriate national ombudsman (FOS in UK, Médiateur de l'AMF in France, etc.).
Editor notes
When a broker advertises «ESMA-regulated» it actually means «authorised by an EU national competent authority and subject to ESMA-set rules». Verify the actual licensing NCA via the broker's legal entity disclosure — the EU passport lets a CySEC-licensed firm market across the EU/EEA, but the home-state regulator (CySEC in this example) is who supervises and where complaints land.

Brokers we track with a ESMA licence

No brokers

No tracked broker currently holds a ESMA licence in our database.