OneBullEx upgrades to a new exchange layer infrastructure, targeting a new phase of the Latin American crypto market

OneBullEx recently unveiled a new exchange-layer infrastructure architecture, further integrating AI-powered process capabilities, order execution, and platform-level visibility into the core of the trading environment, accelerating the platform’s evolution from a “feature tool” to an “intelligent execution infrastructure.” This update comes at a time when the crypto derivatives market is increasingly prioritizing platform structure, trade process design, and operational transparency.

This shift is especially evident in Latin America. According to Chainalysis’s “2025 Global Crypto Geography Report,” between July 2022 and June 2025, the cumulative volume of crypto trading in Latin America approached $1.5 trillion. Of that, Brazil ranked first with $318.8 billion, followed by Argentina with $93.9 billion, Mexico with $71.2 billion, and Colombia with $44.2 billion. Over the same period, the region’s overall crypto adoption rate grew by 63% year over year.

These data indicate that the LatAm market has clearly moved beyond the early-adoption phase. Today, the focus has shifted from “whether the market can be entered” to “whether the platform can provide higher-quality support for users.”

At present, the mainstream experience for retail crypto traders in Latin America still relies heavily on signal-driven workflows: Telegram group alerts, social media forecasts, and push notifications from various apps. While these tools may provide directional reference, they struggle to offer effective support in process response under order execution and liquidity changes, as well as process transparency during rapid market fluctuations. In a region where 64% of crypto activity is conducted through centralized exchanges and the market operates 24 hours a day, execution quality itself translates into real costs. Stablecoins remain the most active crypto asset in the region’s trading, further amplifying the importance of precise order handling.

Why exchange-layer infrastructure is especially important in Latin America

Demand for cryptocurrencies in Latin America is driven by a set of real-world conditions that are not entirely the same as in other regions. Long-term inflation, volatility in local currencies, capital constraints, and a large need for cross-border remittances are all pushing users toward crypto assets—and this demand has long been about more than just speculative returns.

Chainalysis has also continued to point out that these macro pressures have become long-term driving factors behind crypto adoption in LatAm. Today, stablecoins account for a substantial share of crypto trading in the region; in several major fiat-stablecoin markets, stablecoins have even become a core source of trading activity. A senior official at the Central Bank of Brazil has also publicly stated that around 90% of the country’s crypto capital flows are related to stablecoins, mainly used for payments, cross-border transfers, and allocation of dollar-denominated assets.

When users’ crypto activity is intertwined with real needs such as saving, salary conversion, and cross-border settlement, the costs caused by poor order processing are amplified in ways that speculators may not necessarily be able to perceive clearly. For example, when BRL-USDT is highly volatile, a poorly timed market order may not only affect the trade outcome itself, but could also directly change the dollar value associated with a remittance, or the actual conversion cost of a cross-border purchase.

But in the Latin America market, the problem users face is clearly not limited to directional judgment. Differences in platform process support, order-processing capability, and execution transparency are becoming increasingly critical.

From signals to execution

In recent years, discussions around regulation and market structure have increasingly made a clear distinction between two different layers: one is signal generation, and the other is order execution and processing that actually occur in the trading process.

In a regulatory briefing on algorithmic trading, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) explicitly stated that merely using algorithms to generate trading signals does not constitute algorithmic trading. The real challenge in another layer is the trading execution itself—how orders are handled, when they are executed, how the structure is arranged, and whether the entire process has sufficient transparency and visibility, especially in a market environment that operates around the clock.

Looking across various markets, execution quality often depends on factors that many signal tools are not well-suited to handle, such as order size, execution timing, routing methods, and latency. Research in traditional financial markets has also repeatedly shown that details at the execution-operations level can have a material impact on order quality in fragmented or high-speed changing environments. Even though asset classes differ, this underlying logic still holds. For OneBullEx, the key to future platform competition lies in whether it can truly integrate AI, execution logic, order management, and risk control into the exchange layer.

Latin America’s change is unfolding in different ways

Brazil is the largest crypto market in Latin America, far surpassing other countries in scale. OneBullEx’s recent research on Brazil’s crypto futures market also shows that local user behavior and market structure are undergoing clear changes. Its stage-wise growth rate reaches 109.9%, with a significant portion of the growth driven by institution-level large trades. As market maturity increases, transparency, platform control capabilities, and trustworthiness are becoming factors users value more. Regulatory progress set to take effect in early 2026 further reinforces this trend. For platforms of all kinds, infrastructure quality is becoming a fundamental threshold that is impossible to bypass when entering the Brazilian market.

Argentina faces a different kind of pressure. In March 2026, Reuters reported that the country’s February inflation on a month-over-month basis was 2.9%, and annualized inflation is still as high as 33.1%. Although the peak has passed, financial decision-making remains highly sensitive in this environment. Argentine users are also among the highest groups in Latin America in terms of stablecoin adoption. For these users seeking purchasing-power protection, a platform’s performance in process management and order handling directly affects their real experience.

Mexico’s crypto market follows another logic. Kaiko’s research shows that in 2025, the trading volume trend denominated in MXN had begun to deviate from the regional pattern, and some users may be shifting toward remittance tools based on stablecoins and other alternative ways of withdrawing funds. Mexico’s largest local exchange, Bitso, has also stated that XRP and stablecoins occupy an important share of its trading volume, reflecting the structural role of cross-border remittances in Mexico’s crypto economy. For users who rely on stablecoin rails for cross-border transfers, exchange quality, execution timing, and order-handling methods directly affect the actual value of funds when they finally arrive.

Colombia, meanwhile, is gradually becoming a new center of demand growth under fiscal pressure. Kaiko’s report says that in early 2025, the country’s COP trading volume hit a record high, and USDT inflows are highly correlated with a weakening peso. As trading activity accelerates, the limitations of relying only on alerts and directional signals to respond to the market are becoming increasingly obvious, and platform capabilities in process support and order handling are therefore receiving even more attention.

Platform quality standards are rising

Across Latin America, the crypto market is becoming more mature—and more demanding. As adoption expands and stablecoin usage deepens, expectations around transparency, platform control capability, and order-processing quality are also rising in parallel.

In such an environment, beyond eye-catching features, platform quality increasingly depends on whether the underlying trading process is solid enough. Clear information disclosure, consistent control mechanisms, and a more transparent execution process are becoming more and more important, because users are actively looking for platforms they can understand and trust.

OneBullEx’s infrastructure upgrade is designed specifically to respond to this kind of market environment. When platform competition shifts from stacking features to process quality, transparency, and execution support, the ability of the underlying architecture becomes the key factor that determines value.

The value of AI isn’t just about prediction

For OneBullEx, the value of AI trading is not only reflected in prediction itself, but in integrating research, execution, risk control, and process support into a more complete set of exchange-layer capability. The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) research points to similar conclusions: currently, 35% of organizations have adopted advanced AI systems to some extent, and another 44% are planning to introduce them. The benefits that have already emerged largely come from AI optimizing end-to-end processes, rather than from isolated single-point tasks.

Placed in the trading environment, this means the value of AI should be reflected in more stable order execution, clearer process control, more efficient research coordination, and greater process transparency in a market operating around the clock. In markets like Latin America—where stablecoin trading, currency hedging, and derivatives trading intersect on the same platform, and users can’t constantly watch the order book—the support capability at the execution layer is exactly what prediction models can’t solve.

OneBullEx’s overall architecture embeds automated execution technology directly into the trading process, covering order management, systematic risk control, and full process transparency for every position and order. Within this architecture, products such as 300 SPARTANS further integrate strategy execution, process management, and research support into a unified platform environment, enabling AI capabilities to truly participate in the execution chain. Overall, OneBullEx focuses on building process support directly into the exchange-layer infrastructure.

The next dividing line in platform competition

Latin America’s crypto market has advanced to a stage where user experience cannot be defined solely by connectivity. Stablecoins dominate a large share of trading activity in the region, and users’ use cases are also continuously expanding.

As Latin America’s crypto market continues to mature, OneBullEx believes that the next phase of platform competition will be defined increasingly by AI-supported process intensity, execution stability, operational transparency, and exchange-layer support capabilities. This is exactly the direction anchored by OneBullEx’s latest infrastructure upgrade, and it will continue to define the core path for long-term platform building and product evolution.

About OneBullEx

OneBullEx is a new generation AI-driven derivatives trading platform, focused on building exchange-layer infrastructure, intelligent execution capabilities, and platform transparency. The platform offers USDT-settled perpetual contract products and continuously optimizes order handling, process management, and trading-environment visibility through AI-supported research, execution, and risk control capabilities. OneBullEx is supported by OneMore Group, and is committed to building a more stable, transparent, and efficient trading experience for users worldwide.

Website: www.onebullex.com

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