Alpaca has successfully extended its regulated investment services across the European Economic Area (EEA), now covering 29 countries. This strategic expansion provides a unified entry for fintech firms and financial institutions to offer regulated investment products throughout Europe with ease.
How Did the Expansion Unfold?
The effort unfolded via Alpaca’s unit in Spain, sanctioned by the Spanish National Securities Market Commission (CNMV) under the European Union’s MiFID II guidelines. In addition to its United Kingdom operations, this move empowers Alpaca to offer localized investment infrastructure to around 500 million potential customers.
Alpaca’s business operates an API-based brokerage platform specializing in account management, custody, and trading services. With this platform, business partners can leverage a pan-European service model without needing individual licenses in each country. This expansion builds on Alpaca’s recent acquisition of WealthKernel and a broader strategic push into Europe initiated last year.
By enabling access to 29 EEA markets through its regulated Spanish unit, Alpaca allows partners to focus on product launches while reducing the need to repeat licensing processes for each country.
Boosting Presence in the Digital Arena?
Indeed, Alpaca is strengthening its foothold in digital assets. It provides a robust infrastructure for stocks, ETFs, options, bonds, and cryptocurrencies, clearly positioning itself to cater to companies merging traditional securities and digital assets under centralized regulatory frameworks.
Utilizing such a regulated infrastructure mitigates compliance complexities for companies launching crypto investment services, facilitating seamless market access across diverse jurisdictions. Europe’s passporting mechanism, as a result, serves as a pivotal model for aspiring fintech and crypto enterprises aiming for expansive growth.
Several companies in Europe, such as eToro, Interactive Brokers, and Trading 212, already utilize similar regulatory models. Analogously, Alpaca intends to deliver investment infrastructure across the EEA markets via a singular regulatory authorization obtained in Spain.
- Alpaca streamlines market entry by negating the need for country-specific licenses.
- The API-based model accelerates product rollouts, bypassing time-consuming approval processes.
- MiFID II’s passporting principle is central to this strategy, consolidating regulatory approval.
This approach facilitates reduced time and regulatory burden for Alpaca’s business partners, ultimately allowing more focus on innovative product offerings rather than navigating exhaustive licensing protocols.
Once the notification process is complete, companies authorized in one EEA member country can expand much of their regulated services across the entire region.
In a further stride for global growth, Alpaca has initiated a collaboration with Eugene Investment & Securities of South Korea. This partnership aims to enhance the availability of Korean stocks to international investors, cementing Alpaca’s role as a pivotal brokerage platform.



