The IG Group South Africa exit is now complete, with the London-listed broker having closed its Sandton office and surrendered its local regulatory licences, while former chief executive Aphindile AB Bokleni has moved on to Investec’s Prime Services division.
IG Group confirmed the operational closure on 24 February 2026, laying off local staff in the process. The broker had previously had around 90 employees in the country, though the exact number made redundant in the final closure could not be confirmed.
A Decade in South Africa, Then a Phased Withdrawal
IG Markets South Africa Limited was established in 2010 and operated under a Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services (FAIS) licence, holding FSP No. 41393 with the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA), the South African regulator. That licence is now recorded as lapsed following IG’s full exit from the onshore market.
The withdrawal was staged. IG stopped offering services through its South African entity roughly nine months before the office itself closed. During that period, the local office continued functioning as a marketing hub. Clients were offered the option to transfer their accounts to one of IG’s offshore entities.
Central to the exit was IG’s decision to surrender its Over-the-Counter Derivatives Provider (ODP) licence. An ODP licence (a regulatory authorisation required to offer contracts for difference, or CFDs, in South Africa) had proved difficult for foreign brokers to obtain and maintain. Of the 70 non-bank firms on South Africa’s ODP licence register, four surrendered their licences and 26 withdrew their applications, with IG among the prominent names affected.
IG’s difficulties with the ODP regime stretch back several years. According to an FSCA regulatory notice from December 2020, IG Markets had confirmed its intention to seek a reconsideration by the Tribunal of the FSCA’s decision to decline its ODP licence application. That appeal process was part of a prolonged regulatory effort that ultimately did not produce a lasting licensed business.
Bokleni’s Path Through IG Group South Africa
Bokleni spent approximately 11 years at IG in total. He joined in trading services, moved into client operations management in India, and then returned to South Africa as part of the management team. He became Chief Operating Officer in July 2020 before being appointed Chief Executive Officer in December 2023, succeeding Robert van Eyden.
That CEO appointment came in the context of IG Group’s broader global restructuring, which included a workforce reduction affecting around 10 per cent of its employees. Bokleni’s tenure as CEO lasted about two and a half years, ending when the South African office closed entirely.
Before IG, Bokleni spent nearly two years at Vunani Private Clients in Sandton, working initially in business development and then as a Trade Support Specialist. His responsibilities there covered trade processing, client reporting, portfolio management, foreign exchange operations, settlement, and regulatory authorisations.
He has now joined Investec’s Prime Services division, according to his LinkedIn profile. Prime Services at a bank typically covers institutional brokerage, financing, and custody for professional clients, placing Bokleni in a different segment of the South African financial market from his CFD and retail derivatives background at IG.
What the IG Group South Africa Exit Means for the Wider Market
For retail investors watching the UK-listed broker space, IG Group’s full withdrawal from onshore South Africa reflects a pattern that has played out across several international CFD brokers in the country. The ODP licensing framework, introduced to bring CFD providers under FSCA supervision, imposed compliance costs and capital requirements that a number of firms judged unviable relative to the size of the local market.
IG Group remains listed in London and continues to serve South African clients through its offshore entities. The onshore chapter, which ran from 2010 to 2026, is now formally closed.
The key question for investors in IG Group (ticker: IGG on the London Stock Exchange) is whether the costs of the South African exit, including redundancy and licence surrender, have been fully absorbed, or whether further restructuring charges remain to be disclosed in upcoming results.

