Amy Meyer-O’Brien has taken on the role of Chief LegalOfficer for US at Plus500, following a long legal career in the derivatives andbrokerage sector. Fourteen Years at R.J. O’BrienBefore joining Plus500, Meyer-O’Brien spent 14 years at R.J.O’Brien. She served as Senior Director, Deputy General Counsel, Corporate fromJuly 2021 to February 2026.Earlier, she worked as Associate General Counsel, SeniorCorporate Attorney, Attorney and Junior Attorney at the firm. She started herfinancial markets legal career as a Contract Attorney at Citadel InvestmentGroup in 2010.In another recent executive move, Plus500 appointed NickScarf as Chief Executive Officer of its Australian entity, effective thismonth, as it continues to strengthen its presence in the local market. Scarfjoined from Marex, where he most recently served as Chief Operating Officer forAustralia and New Zealand, and he brings experience from senior leadershiproles across several trading and brokerage firms.Read more: Plus500 Halts New CFD Onboarding in Spain amid Tough Marketing RulesPlus500’s US arm is in expansion and consolidation modearound its futures brokerage, rather than going through headline-grabbingrestructurings.Long-Term Clients Now Play a Bigger RoleLast year, it entered the US futures market by acquiringCunningham Commodities and Cunningham Trading Systems in 2021, and it nowserves US clients through Plus500 US Financial Services LLC, a CFTC‑registeredFCM and NFA member.The expansion is paying off, with Plus500 recently revealing that about half of its 2025 OTC revenue came from customers who have traded onits platform for more than five years. This figure is double the 24 percentshare reported three years earlier and offers a rare look into client longevityat a CFD broker, a sector often criticized for short customer lifecycles andhigh churn.In its year-end trading update, the London-listed fintechreported roughly $792 million in revenue and around $348 million in EBITDA forthe year ended December 31, both beating Bloomberg consensus estimates of$757.7 million and $345.8 million. Three years ago, clients with more than five years oftrading history accounted for just under a quarter of OTC revenue; by lastyear, their contribution had climbed to 50 percent, underlining the growingweight of long-standing customers in Plus500’s business mix.This article was written by Jared Kirui at www.financemagnates.com.