CySEC Withdraws CIF License of OBR Investments Ltd (OBRInvest)
After the withdrawal of CIF Licence No. 217/13, what is the current status of OBRInvest? A regulatory review and risk assessment.
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Abstract:CySEC has given CFD brokers operating through EU branches in Cyprus until 8 May 2026 to submit last year’s statistical data, as wider supervisory checks continue across the sector.

CySEC has told EU investment firm branches operating in Cyprus to file their 2025 statistical data by 8 May 2026, using the regulators Transaction Reporting System. The requirement also extends to registered crypto-asset service providers, but the immediate market focus is on the CFD and investment-firm side of the industry, where Cyprus remains a major hub.
The filing must be completed electronically, and a submission is only treated as successful once the feedback file returns a no-error result. If errors appear, firms must correct the form and submit it again. CySEC also said feedback files are issued only during regular business hours, figures must be reported in euro, and missing the deadline may trigger administrative penalties. The regulator added that it will not send reminders.
CySEC made clear that the latest filing does not introduce a wider data grab. The forms follow the existing reporting structure, and the exercise is aimed at collecting last years statistics in the required format rather than expanding the scope of disclosure.
Even so, the timing is important for CFD brokers. The deadline arrives as Cyprus firms are already facing a more demanding supervisory cycle, with regulators paying closer attention not just to licensing status, but to how firms manage conduct, controls, and operational discipline in practice.
The filing instruction is landing alongside ESMAs 2026 Common Supervisory Action, which CySEC has already flagged to Cyprus investment firms. That review is focused on MiFID II conflicts of interest requirements when firms distribute investment products to retail clients. CySEC said the work will include both on-site inspections and desk-based reviews on selected firms.
For CFD brokers, that means the reporting deadline is arriving in a year when supervision is already tightening from another direction. The issue is no longer only whether firms submit forms on time, but whether internal arrangements hold up under closer review.
CySEC issued separate instructions for crypto-asset service providers registered in Cyprus, and they face the same 8 May 2026 deadline. But in practical terms, the reporting cycle is especially relevant for the broker sector because Cyprus continues to host a large concentration of firms active in retail trading and cross-border investment services.
That is why even an administrative reporting step can carry more weight than it first appears. In a jurisdiction where many firms operate at scale, deadlines like this become part of a broader test of reporting readiness, compliance process, and supervisory responsiveness.
For Cyprus-based CFD brokers operating through EU branches, the message from CySEC is straightforward: submit the required 2025 data electronically, make sure the file comes back without errors, and do not wait for a reminder. At the same time, firms are entering a supervisory period where reporting quality and internal controls are likely to receive more attention than before.

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