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EU Market Structure: PFOF Ban to Reshape German Retail Trading Landscape by 2026
Abstract:European regulators confirm a strict ban on Payment for Order Flow (PFOF) effective June 2026, significantly impacting the German fintech landscape and altering retail equity market structure in the Eurozone.

Berlin/Brussels – The era of zero-commission trading funded by Payment for Order Flow (PFOF) faces a definitive legislative sunset across the European Union. Regulators have confirmed that the practice must cease by June 30, 2026, a move that will primarily force a structural overhaul within the German financial services sector.
Regulatory Divergence and Implementation
Under the revised MiFID/MiFIR framework, the EU aims to harmonize market transparency by eliminating PFOF—a practice where brokers route client orders to specific market makers in exchange for rebates. While the ban is technically EU-wide, the disruption is geographically concentrated:
- Germany is the only member state currently utilizing a temporary exemption, allowing domestic platforms to maintain the model until the 2026 cutoff.
- Major Eurozone economies, including various jurisdictions in France, The Netherlands, Spain, and Italy, have already prohibited or never meaningfully adopted the practice.
The European Parliament and ESMA argue that PFOF creates an inherent conflict of interest, incentivizing brokers to route orders based on rebate size rather than best execution price. This regulatory tightening underscores a widening divergence between EU market structure and the United States, where PFOF remains a standard component of retail liquidity.
Strategic Pivots in German Fintech
With the deadline approaching, major German neo-brokers are restructuring revenue streams to mitigate the loss of PFOF income, which has historically subsidized “free” trading models.
- Infrastructure Internalization: Trade Republic, Europes largest neo-broker by customer count, has secured a license to operate a multilateral trading facility (MTF). This move could allow the firm to internalize order matching and retain trading economics in-house.
- Revenue Model Shifts: Competitors such as Smartbroker and Scalable Capital are moving toward subscription-based models or transparent flat fees, signaling the end of the zero-cost marketing narrative in Germany.
- Broader Ecosystems: Polish-listed broker XTB is diversifying away from pure trading revenues by integrating multi-currency e-wallets, attempting to capture broader client liquidity flows.
While this regulatory shift primarily affects equity market structure, it highlights the continued push by Brussels for profound standardization across the European capital markets.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
