A quiet cost war may be reshaping how retail traders access crypto markets. FxPro, the self-described #1 global broker, announced it has completely eliminated spreads on major cryptocurrency CFD pairs and a range of index products. The move, detailed in the original PRNewswire release , removes what has long been a friction point for short-term and high-frequency crypto traders who rely on tight pricing.
For a broker to offer zero spread on Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other digital assets, the economics of order flow need to shift. Typically, spreads compensate brokers for carrying inventory risk and covering liquidity provider costs. Eliminating them suggests FxPro has built out enough internal matching depth, or has secured sufficiently deep liquidity from external venues, to absorb the slippage itself. Traders might see this as a headline-grabbing discount, but the real question is what the broker charges elsewhere — in overnight financing, commissions, or by widening spreads during volatile windows.
Why Zero Spreads Reshape Retail Flow
The spread is often the biggest hidden tax on active trading. Removing it can mean the difference between a scalping strategy that slowly leaks capital and one that stays in the green. For brokers, the zero-spread model forces a shift toward volume-based revenue, where higher turnover compensates for tighter margins. It is a model borrowed from the equity brokerage space, and its arrival in crypto CFDs is a signal that competition for retail flow is intensifying.
This is not happening in isolation. Across broker platforms, the push to cut trading costs on crypto products coincides with a period of unusually high retail interest in digital assets. The recent tokenization wave and institutional adoption of real-world assets, crossing $20 billion on-chain , have legitimized the asset class in the eyes of traditional brokerages. Meanwhile, the kind of wild price swings that produce weekly gainers like TON and SIREN ensures demand for nimble execution stays elevated.
A Structural Shift in Broker Economics
For years, crypto CFD spreads were wide by design. Liquidity was fragmented, and the risk of rapid adverse moves pushed market makers to charge a premium. The move to zero on major pairs implies that underlying spot liquidity has improved enough to support narrower synthetic pricing. It also implies that FxPro, and likely its competitors, are betting that the volume uplift from being the cheapest venue will outweigh the loss of spread revenue.
The catch is that zero-spread conditions rarely apply universally. Weekend gaps, low-volume altcoins, and chaotic market events can all cause sudden re-widening. Brokers may also offset the cost by slightly adjusting rollover fees, which go unnoticed by many traders. A careful reading of the fine print will be necessary before anyone celebrates the end of trading costs.
Regulatory Cloud Hanging Over Broker Crypto Offerings
Even as brokers sweeten their terms, the legal status of retail crypto derivatives remains uneven across jurisdictions. In the U.S., the ongoing legislative battle over crypto market structure shows how close the industry is to rules that could dramatically change which assets brokers are permitted to offer. Globally, regulators continue to scrutinise the marketing of high-risk products to retail clients. A broker offering zero spreads on crypto may attract the wrong kind of regulatory attention if user protections are not clearly communicated.
For the moment, the FxPro move looks like an aggressive land grab. If it sticks and other brokers follow, the cost of trading crypto on CFDs will drop across the industry. That could bring more day traders into the fold and force tighter spreads on the underlying spot exchanges themselves. But the full picture will only become clear once traders compare the total cost of a round-trip trade — commissions, overnight swaps, and all — with what was paid before the spread was erased.