The Brokerage Industry Is at a Turning Point: What the Data Is Telling Us

Leverate, the Tel-Aviv headquartered serviced provider, has recently published an interesting article based on their research, on how the brokerage industry is at a turning point and how automation will be the game changer. Read below the highlights and find the full article here.

The brokerage growth playbook used to be simpler and leaner, allowing many companies to enter the market swiftly and scale in a matter of months. Add more acquisition channels. Add more tools. Add more workflows. Keep pushing volume through the machine. Today, that logic is getting weaker, as market saturation has infected the brokerage landscape. 


The industry is being squeezed by three forces at once. Acquiring users is getting more expensive. The stack behind the brokerage is getting more fragmented. Automation is shifting from a nice operational upgrade to a competitive requirement. 

In the same benchmark, API errors increased 16%, a sign that digital experiences are becoming more dependent on complex integrations behind the scenes. So, the 2026 brokerage market has less room for operational waste.

For brokers, acquisition alone does not create revenue. Value is created when a user moves from interest to verified account, from funded account to first trade, and from first trade to repeat engagement. If that path is slow, fragmented, or unclear, the business can appear busy while still underperforming.

More Tools Did Not Create More Control

The industry’s response to complexity was often more software. A new CRM for sales visibility. A portal for client onboarding. Another layer for payments. Another for affiliate tracking. Another for support. Another for analytics. Another for retention. Each one solved a local problem. Together, they often created a bigger one.

This is the uncomfortable part of modern brokerage infrastructure: more tools can make the business less coherent. Contentsquare’s benchmark found API errors rising 16% as customer digital journeys depend on more third-party services. That same logic applies to any operation built across too many disconnected systems. What looks integrated from the outside can still be brittle underneath.

And brokerages feel that brittleness in expensive places. Data does not sync cleanly. Teams do not see the same client state. Manual reconciliation grows. Response times slip. The business keeps functioning, but it starts needing more human effort just to hold itself together. The tech stack misalignment hasn’t gotten so out of hand, that companies often require separate experts for this job. These experts handle the hand-offs between different tools and try to create a synergy in tech stacks. However, with a faulty architecture in the root of the system, even the best experts can’t make different tools work in harmony. 

That is why fragmented stacks are no longer a minor IT complaint. They actively hinder teams from growing their user base or keeping existing clients happy.

Why the Infrastructure Partner Matters More Now

As the brokerage stack becomes central to growth, the role of the infrastructure partner changes, too. This is no longer just about finding a platform vendor, a portal vendor, a CRM vendor, and a payments setup that more or less fit together. It is about reducing operational drag before it compounds. It is about choosing an environment that supports speed without multiplying complexity. 

And considering the rising problem of segmented stacks, white-label solutions might be the way to go. Building out a brokerage tech stack from scratch can be an expensive endeavor. And, if the systems aren’t chosen carefully, the technical debt can accumulate quickly. With white-label solutions, the tech stacks are pre-built and tested for production. 

That is the strongest version of the Leverate argument heading into 2026. Leverate’s current positioning is built around an integrated brokerage environment rather than a loose collection of point solutions. Its brokerage offering combines trading infrastructure, CRM, liquidity, risk tools, and operational systems, while its MT4/5 setup is framed as part of a broader operating environment rather than a standalone deployment. Its Broker Portal is described as a control layer for configuration, performance visibility, and operational management.

That matters more now than it did a few years ago. When CAC was easier to absorb and automation was still peripheral, fragmentation was survivable. In a tighter market, it becomes expensive. And expensive complexity has a way of turning strategic decisions into infrastructure decisions very quickly.

Conclusion

The brokerage industry is not short on demand, technology, or ambition. The real culprits are inefficiency and a failure to design coherent systems on brokerage platforms, both customer-facing and backend. Acquisition is getting more expensive. Fragmentation is getting harder to carry. Automation is becoming more important, but also more dependent on the quality of the underlying stack.


That is why this feels like a turning point. Because the standard for operating well is rising. Brokers that understand these three hurdles and adapt first can achieve a strong position in the changing market.

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