Brokeree Solutions Launches PAMM Integration API to Extend Managed Accounts Beyond MetaTrader and cTrader | LeapRate | Online Trading Industry News, Broker Intelligence & Fintech Analysis
Brokeree Solutions has launched an Integration API for its PAMM money management system, enabling brokers, financial institutions, and crypto companies to embed managed account services directly into proprietary trading platforms and non-standard infrastructures — removing a longstanding dependency on MetaTrader and cTrader environments.
The release builds on Brokeree’s decade-long development of its PAMM system, which allows multiple investors to pool capital into a single strategy managed by a professional trader. The technology automatically handles profit and loss allocation, fee calculations, and investor reporting. With the new API, firms can now connect these capabilities to their own platforms regardless of their underlying technology stack.
“It gives companies a structured way to connect PAMM to their own platforms, regardless of the technology stack they have built around,” said Tatiana Pilipenko, Regional Head of Business Development (APAC, UK, Americas) at Brokeree Solutions. “We want PAMM to be available wherever there is demand for managed account services, and the API is what makes that possible.”
The launch follows Brokeree’s own industry research, which found that nearly 15% of approximately 1,000 retail brokers analysed globally already offer PAMM services — suggesting meaningful headroom for further adoption across the wider sector.
The PAMM Integration API arrives just weeks after Brokeree released a Social Trading Integration API, which similarly extended its copy trading technology beyond the major platform duopoly. Together, the two APIs represent a push to make Brokeree’s flagship investment tools universally deployable.
“Professional money management should not be restricted by trading infrastructure,” said Victor Ivanov, Regional Head of Business Development (EMEA) at Brokeree Solutions. “This release is about giving brokers and financial institutions the freedom to build managed account services into their offerings on their own terms.”