Zoomex posts $5.25B daily futures, expands licenses

Zoomex reported $5.25 billion in daily futures volume for May and expanded regulatory registrations to FINTRAC, FinCEN, the NFA and AUSTRAC.

Zoomex reported $5.25 billion in 24-hour futures volume for May and said it expanded its regulatory registrations to include FINTRAC in Canada, FinCEN in the United States, NFA registration for U.S. derivatives and AUSTRAC in Australia. The company also published monthly trading and product metrics and noted additional compliance integrations implemented during the month.

The exchange reported more than $893 million in open interest, a capital turnover ratio of roughly 5.8 times per day, and the BTC/USDT perpetual as its top futures pair with about $2.06 billion in daily futures volume. Zoomex reported the spot market exceeded $326 million on a day that reflected a 15.21% day-over-day increase.

Zoomex described technical performance metrics as central to its May activity. The matching engine operated at millisecond speeds with sub-10 millisecond execution latency and slippage near 0.03% on 1 BTC orders. The company reported more than 3 million registered users across over 35 jurisdictions and a product catalog of more than 700 trading pairs, including Perpetual USDT contracts, inverse perpetuals and spot options.

Product activity in May included a zero-capital trading competition with a $600,000 prize pool, two hosted audio events on X Spaces, a Bitcoin Pizza Day campaign and a World Cup promotion with $300,000 in prizes. The company also announced a real-world spending card and said it offers global equity access via USDT.

On compliance, Zoomex listed active registrations and memberships that predate the May updates. Those items include Canada money services business registration with FINTRAC, U.S. MSB registration with FinCEN, NFA registration relevant to U.S. derivatives markets, AUSTRAC registration in Australia and membership in the Korea CODE VASP Alliance. The company noted that Korea CODE membership enables integration with the FATF Travel Rule and encrypted transmission of sender and receiver identity data during transfers. Zoomex cited an independent Hacken security audit as part of its platform assurance.

The company outlined structural limits on capital policy, stating it has not issued a platform token, has no venture capital ties or incubation investments, and maintains ring-fenced user funds that the firm says cannot be used for other purposes. Financial and operational figures for May were issued alongside the product launches and regulatory updates.

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