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What onboarding information is required for a privately owned financial institution?
These entities are not publicly traded and have less than 50% government ownership.Who are the key persons for a privately owned financial institution? Corporate officers: Persons with significant responsibility to control, manage, or direct the privately owned financial institution including executive officers, senior managers (for example, CEO, CFO, COO, Managing Member, General Partner, President, Vice President, or Treasurer), or any other persons who regularly perform similar functions.Published on 13 Oct 2023Updated on 27 Sept 2025134What onboarding information is required for the government-owned enterprise?
Government-owned enterprises are government agencies, ministries, companies, or funds with 50% or greater national or local government ownership. These entities are typically created to engage in commercial activities on behalf of the government.Who are the key persons for a government-owned enterprise?Published on 13 Oct 2023Updated on 19 Mar 202661What onboarding information is required for a privately owned company?
Private companies are privately owned entities that are not financial institutions, not publicly traded and have less than 50% government ownership. These entities are involved in many kinds of industries, such as manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, real estate, and construction. To verify as a privately owned operating company, please follow the steps below and submit the required documents and information. Who are the key people for a privately owned company?Published on 13 Oct 2023Updated on 12 Feb 2026277What's the Spot DCA (Martingale) bot and how do I use it?
For example, a multiplier of 1.5 will make each safety order 50% larger than the previous one. Price steps multiplier: adjusts the price gap between each safety order. This setting incrementally increases or decreases the gap between safety orders as the price changes. For example, with a 1% initial price step and a multiplier of 2, the safety orders will be placed at 1%, 3%, 7%, and so on (doubling the gap after each order). Stop loss (SL): another optional setting to limit losses.Published on 12 Feb 2025Updated on 17 Nov 20252Trading Fee Rules FAQ
Forced liquidation fee = Min(User’s taker fee rate × Contract Multiplier × Contract size × Number of contracts, 7% × mark price × Contract Multiplier × Contract size × Number of contracts) Options combo trades on RFQ can enjoy up to 50% discount on fees! For each underlying asset, trading fees are charged on legs from the side (buy or sell) with the higher notional. Only legs that incur a trading fee are counted towards the 30-day trading volume of the corresponding instrument.Published on 22 Mar 2024Updated on 26 Mar 20261,075Zero-Knowledge Proofs: what are zk-STARKs and how do they work? (zk-Stark V2)
For more technical details, such as how we adjust account numbers to fit the batch size or choose the right hash algorithm, check out this page.Advances in zk-PoR Version 2 Our zk-PoR Version 2 has made several advances from the previous version: Greater efficiency: It is now 50 times faster than the previous version. It takes 3 hours on a single 10-core machine, compared to previous version's 36 hours using nine 64-core machines.Published on 21 Oct 2024Updated on 11 Feb 202690Trading bot FAQ
For example, a multiplier of 1.5 will make each safety order 50% larger than the previous one. Price steps multiplier: adjusts the price gap between each safety order. This setting incrementally increases or decreases the gap between safety orders as the price changes. For example, with a 1% initial price step and a multiplier of 2, the safety orders will be placed at 1%, 3%, 7%, and so on (doubling the gap after each order). Stop loss (SL): another optional setting to limit losses.Published on 12 Feb 2025Updated on 11 Dec 2025
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