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eflow posts 23% client growth & 56 new deployments

Wed, 21st Jan 2026

Regulatory compliance software provider eflow has reported 23% growth in its client base during 2025, alongside 56 new deployments of its modular surveillance and monitoring products.

The company linked the increase in demand to changes in trading activity and oversight. It cited wider use of automated and algorithmic trading, higher market volatility and more complex regulatory expectations. It also pointed to a rising focus on explainability in surveillance processes.

eflow said the 56 deployments reflected a mix of new client wins and broader take-up among existing customers. It recorded 40 new or expanded client relationships across its product suite. It also said 14% of current clients expanded their use of its technology during the year.

New products

During 2025, eflow launched PATH AI. The company described it as a product for compliance teams that work on alert investigations. It said the tool provides contextual information and explainable insights through a conversational interface.

eflow said users can analyse alert history and identify behavioural patterns. It also said users can generate case summaries for audit processes. The company said the system references data and tracks conversations for reporting.

eflow also announced enhancements to its TZEC suite. The updates include new eComms surveillance and archiving modules. The company said it priced data extraction at USD $0.20 per GB. It compared that figure with up to USD $50 per GB from legacy providers.

The company also gave a deployment estimate. It said a full deployment can take as little as 90 days.

Client wins

eflow named Finalto and Mirae Asset Securities UK among its client wins in 2025. It described Finalto as a global liquidity provider. It said both firms selected its technology to centralise trade surveillance and best execution monitoring.

eflow said surveillance teams face pressure as regulators focus on market abuse typologies and on the quality of internal controls. It also said traditional rules-based monitoring tools struggle with more complex trading activity.

Partnerships

eflow said it added partnerships during the year. It named EXANTE and said the partnership enhanced market data depth. It also named AI specialist DHI and said the partnership enabled the integration of AI-generated risk scoring into its surveillance technology.

Senior hires

eflow also reported three senior appointments. It appointed Kristian Frost Pedersen as Chief Financial Officer. It appointed Michael De Jongh as Chief Growth Officer. It appointed Ross Pearson as Head of AI.

The company said the hires formed part of preparations for increased demand in its target markets.

Market pressures

Compliance functions in financial services have faced increased scrutiny from regulators in recent years. Many firms have also increased spending on trade surveillance, communications monitoring, and reporting systems. eflow said the trend continued through 2025.

"Our strong growth in 2025 reflects a clear market shift. Between geopolitical uncertainty, significant market volatility, and increasing regulatory complexity, firms can no longer rely on siloed surveillance as regulators target increasingly sophisticated manipulation and scrutiny of surveillance capabilities intensifies. Clients expanded their use of our platform, driving 56 new technology deployments in 2025 - clear evidence that an integrated approach delivers measurable value. As AI reshapes both trading behaviour and regulatory expectations, the firms that succeed in 2026 and beyond will be those investing in surveillance technology that can match this complexity while maintaining the transparency regulators demand," said Ben Parker, Chief Executive Officer, eflow.

eflow said it now serves more than 140 clients across five continents. The company said its customers include buy-side and sell-side firms.

eflow said it enters 2026 with a focus on expanding in Europe, North America and Asia-Pacific and on developing AI-powered, explainable surveillance technology.