Comoros-licensed broker Bold Prime has gone live with Takeprofit Tech’s liquidity bridge on its MetaTrader 5 (MT5) stack, upgrading the way it connects to liquidity providers and manages order flow. Takeprofit Tech, a Cyprus-based brokerage software vendor, says its bridge routes orders, aggregates quotes, and supports hybrid execution models across FX, CFDs, and crypto-linked instruments.
Bold Prime operates primarily across Asian and Middle Eastern markets under an offshore Union of Comoros license (International Brokerage and Clearing House, license no. 31896). The broker framed the bridge deployment as a move to tighten execution control and improve resilience across different volatility regimes.
This isn’t Bold Prime’s first Takeprofit integration. The broker previously installed Takeprofit’s Dynamic Leverage and Real Margin Stopout modules, which automatically reduce leverage when markets turn choppy and can cut positions before balances hit zero, limiting tail-risk losses for clients in fast moves.
Why does a liquidity bridge matter for execution quality?
Liquidity bridges are now standard infrastructure for brokers running MT4/MT5. They sit between the trading platform and external liquidity venues, allowing the broker to aggregate pricing, choose routing rules, and decide what gets A-Booked (sent to market) versus B-Booked (internalized). In plain terms, bridges are execution engines—if they’re good, spreads tighten and slippage stabilizes; if they’re weak, the broker risks poor fills during volatility.
Takeprofit says its bridge can handle up to 1,500 quotes per second and maintain sub-30ms tick-to-trade latency under light load. It supports 30+ liquidity providers and five major crypto exchanges, giving MT5 brokers access to deeper cross-venue price discovery.
For crypto-adjacent traders, that crypto-exchange connectivity matters. Even if a broker offers crypto CFDs rather than spot, the pricing and hedging often rely on exchange feeds. Better aggregation can reduce the mismatch between what traders see on-screen and what the broker can hedge externally—especially during weekend gaps or sudden Solana/BTC-led volatility spikes.
Investor Takeaway
How does this fit Takeprofit Tech’s broader expansion?
Takeprofit Tech has been rolling out bridges and risk modules across offshore and regional brokers in 2025. Recent deployments include an MT5 bridge for St Lucia-registered PFH Markets and integrations with other niche brokers targeting specific client segments. The pattern is clear: smaller or offshore brokers are investing in institutional-style execution tooling to compete on performance, not just leverage or promotions.
That arms race is partly defensive. Retail traders now compare execution almost the way they compare exchanges: quote freshness, slippage in news, and whether stops behave sensibly. If a broker wants to keep clients who can move to low-fee crypto venues in minutes, it needs serious plumbing. Takeprofit’s “bridge + dynamic risk” package is designed to offer that without forcing brokers to rebuild MT infrastructure from scratch.
What’s the regulatory overhang — and why should traders care?
Here’s the uncomfortable part of the story. Bold Prime’s upgrade comes under an offshore Comoros framework, which provides lighter oversight than top-tier regulators. Offshore licensing isn’t automatically fraudulent, but it changes the risk calculus: client protections, dispute resolution, and leverage rules are typically weaker.
Bold Prime also carries regulatory baggage. In February 2023, the Financial Commission (FinCom) expelled the broker from membership after repeated failures to comply with its rules. As a result, Bold Prime clients lost access to FinCom’s dispute-resolution channel and its Compensation Fund, which can cover eligible claims up to €20,000 for members in good standing.
Separately, Malaysia’s Securities Commission added Bold Prime to its Investor Alert List for operating without authorization in the country, warning local investors that they are not protected under Malaysian securities laws when dealing with the firm.
So while the Takeprofit Bridge may tighten execution, it doesn’t erase prior compliance issues or the practical limits of offshore protection. For traders, those two dimensions—platform performance and regulatory safety—need to be evaluated together.
Investor Takeaway
Bottom line: Bold Prime’s Takeprofit Bridge rollout is a meaningful technical upgrade that could improve pricing and order handling for MT5 traders, including those trading crypto-linked CFDs. But the broker’s offshore Comoros licensing and history of expulsions and alerts keep the risk conversation front and center. In retail derivatives, the best setup is still a two-part equation: good execution and strong protection.

