The firm, JNFX Ltd, which was UK-regulated in the payment and FX sector, entered into special administration on November 24, 2025, under the provisions of the UK Insolvency Regulations applicable to payment and e-money institutions. It is an indicator of increasing regulatory intervention and creates some significant potential risks for customers and brokers associated with these firms.
What has happened?
- In the UK, JNFX Ltd was permitted by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to operate as an international money transfer business for businesses. On 24 November 2025, the company entered a special administration process under the Payment and Electronic Money Imposition (Insolvency) Regulations (2021).
- As part of this process, the company entered into a voluntary undertaking on 20 November 2025, placing limits on the way that it carried out its business activities.
- At present, the joint special administrators appointed to JNFX (Azets Holdings Ltd: Louise Brittain & Matthew Richards) will be assuming overall responsibility for managing customer claims and managing a return of funds as appropriate to estates.
Why does this matter?
• For brokers and clients: The announcement of the FCA's proposals relating to JNFX creates increased regulatory scrutiny of FX/payment-service firms, especially those serving corporate clients in the FX space. In the event of an insolvency, the return of client funds and potential compensation may become quite complicated.
• For the FX/payment-services market: This announcement serves to highlight the operational risk associated with the FX/payment-services industry and stresses the need for brokers and clients to conduct due diligence in assessing their firm's financial viability, regulatory status, and to develop a contingency plan.
• For the financial services regulatory environment: By allowing a regulated firm to enter into special administration, the FCA may apply additional scrutiny to other regulated brokers to ensure that they maintain strong financial, compliance, and operational standards, especially regarding segregated funds, capital adequacy, and payment service obligations.
WikiLix Insight
WikiLix has found that any assessment of brokers who provide FX or payment transfer services, regulated by the FCA or a similar regulatory body, should take into account the broker's financial status and any insolvency risk, as well as whether they segregate client funds and how they arrange the administration of client accounts.
Additionally, traders operating in the corporate/client non-retail segment of an FCA-regulated broker's firm will have fewer protections than retail clients (i.e., the FSCS compensation scheme is only for retail clients); therefore, if an FCA-regulated broker's client is a corporate entity. If that broker subsequently becomes insolvent (as with JNFX), this should lead to increased caution towards that broker.
If WikiLix provides a broker rating matrix, it would have to increase the level of operational risk for any FCA-regulated brokers that also offer services related to corporate/payment client accounts unless those brokers provide unambiguous disclosures regarding how they segregate clients' funds, what back-up liquidity they have, and what their procedures are if they become financially insolvent.



