Maven Trading Enters the Crypto Arena With New WenCrypto Prop Platform

The prop firm industry continues to expand into digital assets, and the latest entrant is Maven Trading. The Prague-headquartered firm has officially launched WenCrypto, a standalone brand built entirely around cryptocurrency funded trading. The move places Maven alongside a growing list of proprietary trading companies betting that crypto-native traders deserve purpose-built infrastructure rather than retrofitted forex platforms.

WenCrypto went live on March 16, 2026, offering funded accounts ranging from $5,000 to $100,000, with a third account tier expected to follow in the coming weeks. The platform is designed exclusively for the crypto markets, giving traders access to Bitcoin and Ethereum at 5:1 leverage and a selection of altcoins at 2:1 leverage. A profit split structure allows funded traders to retain a competitive share of their gains once they clear the firm’s trading challenge.

The new brand operates through Maven’s entity registered in St Lucia, a jurisdiction that has become increasingly popular among prop firms seeking a flexible regulatory environment. All trading on the WenCrypto platform runs on simulated accounts, a model that has become standard across the funded trader space as firms manage risk exposure while still offering traders the experience of real market conditions.

Maven’s decision to spin off a dedicated crypto brand reflects a broader shift taking place across the industry. Over the past year, several firms have launched or announced crypto-specific funded trader offerings. Most recently, former institutional derivatives traders from JP Morgan and Dresdner Kleinwort unveiled a Hong Kong-based crypto prop venture, while Crypto Street debuted its own funded program earlier this month with accounts up to $200,000 and profit splits as high as 90 percent.

The timing is no coincidence. Digital asset markets have seen a resurgence of volatility and retail interest heading into mid-2026, and prop firms are positioning themselves to capture demand from traders who prefer the 24/7 nature of crypto over traditional forex and futures sessions. For firms like Maven, which already operate successful forex and indices programs, adding a crypto vertical is a natural extension of their business model.

However, the crypto prop space is not without its challenges. Regulatory scrutiny continues to tighten globally, and firms operating in crypto face additional questions around licensing and compliance that their forex counterparts are only beginning to address. The simulated trading model used by WenCrypto may offer some insulation from regulatory pressure, but as the industry matures, traders will be watching closely to see which platforms deliver on their promises of reliable payouts and transparent rules.

For aspiring funded traders looking to specialize in digital assets, the growing number of crypto-focused prop offerings means more choice than ever before. Maven’s WenCrypto joins an increasingly competitive field, and its success will likely depend on execution quality, payout reliability, and the strength of its trading infrastructure in a market that never sleeps.