Zoomex has unveiled a package of system improvements designed to offer greater fairness and transparency in trading, custody, and fees. The platform described its redesign as a key change in terms of traceable execution, reserve visibility, and anti-tamper controls.
Zoomex describes its new design as a precision systems infrastructure that reduces information asymmetry and makes trading results auditable. The exchange notes that it has added a high-performance matching engine, transparent order and asset displays, and anti-market manipulation tools.
The company also announced the Transparent Vault, an enabling mechanism for users to verify proof of reserves and asset locations. The platform also promotes the security of cold wallets with multi-signatures and its low-cost commission system (maker/taker derivatives listed at 0.02% and 0.06% respectively, and spot commissions around 0.1%).
Zoomex announces the implementation of no KYC as a design decision intended to accelerate access for privacy-conscious users while maintaining security controls. The firm frames these elements collectively as the operationalization of “Proof Over Promises.”
Zoomex and its operational history
The company notes that it has five years of continuous operation and lists regulatory registrations and independent audits as evidence of its robustness. Materials published in early February 2026 cite licenses including Canada MSB, U.S. MSB, and registration with the NFA and AUSTRAC in Australia, and mention security reviews by firms such as Hacken.
Zoomex presents user-level examples intended to demonstrate operational reliability, including reports of large, successful withdrawals without additional delays. The coverage also acknowledges reported user complaints, notably account suspensions linked to fiat flows, and frames these as areas for clearer communication rather than core system failures.
For traders and risk managers, the practical implications are operational. Clear and auditable execution and explicit commission schedules reduce hidden costs and simplify P&L reconciliation. Anti-manipulation tools and visible reserves can reduce counterparty and liquidity risk if they function as described.
At the same time, regulatory disclosures and audit reports will be the primary source of information for evaluating these claims; further public audits or clarified procedures regarding account restrictions will directly impact counterparty risk assessments and margin planning.

