SCAM AWARENESS EDUCATION SERIES

Stay up to date on the latest scam company sightings. 

Advanced cyber tracking and profiling technology can identify where they are hiding.

If you think you are possibly already a victim, contact us today!

Top Warning Signs of an Unauthorized Forex or Crypto Website

New Forex and cryptocurrency trading platforms appear almost daily. Many are legitimate but a significant number are unauthorized, fraudulent, or outright scams designed to steal your money. Knowing how to spot the red flags can save you from devastating financial losses.

Here are the most common and critical warning signs that a forex or crypto website is unauthorized or unsafe:

1. No Valid Regulatory License (or Fake License Numbers)

Legitimate brokers and exchanges are regulated by reputable authorities such as:

  • FCA (UK)
  • ASIC (Australia)
  • CFTC/NFA (USA)
  • MAS (Singapore)
  • BaFin (Germany)

Red flags:

  • No regulation mentioned at all
  • Claims to be “registered” in offshore havens like Seychelles, Marshall Islands, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Vanuatu, or Belize without a recognizable top-tier license
  • License number provided but doesn’t match the official regulator’s public registry (always verify directly on the regulator’s website)
  • Fake regulator logos or cloned license certificates

2. Unrealistic Profit Promises

Any website promising “guaranteed returns,” “200% monthly profit,” “risk-free trading,” or “daily 1–5% gains” is almost certainly a scam. Both forex and crypto markets are volatile; no legitimate platform can guarantee profits.

Common scam phrases:

  • “100% profitable trading robot”
  • “Passive income with zero risk”
  • “We trade for you and guarantee returns”

3. Pressure to Deposit Quickly + Massive Bonuses

Scammers create urgency to stop you from doing proper research.

Warning signs:

  • “Limited-time 100–500% deposit bonus”
  • “Bonus expires in 24 hours”
  • “Only 3 spots left for VIP account”
  • Bonuses that come with impossible withdrawal conditions (e.g., 30–50x trading volume before you can withdraw your own money)

4. Withdrawal Problems or Excuses

This is the ultimate test. If you can deposit easily but face endless delays, extra fees, or account freezes when trying to withdraw, it’s a huge red flag—even if everything else looked legitimate.

Common excuses:

  • “Your account is under audit”
  • “You need to pay a 10–30% tax/fee first”
  • “Submit notarized documents”
  • Sudden “technical issues” that last weeks

5. Cloned or Copycat Websites

Scammers copy the exact design of well-known legitimate brokers but use a slightly different domain.

Examples of suspicious domains:

  • binance-login.net
  • etoro-trading.co
  • plus500fx.net
  • coinbase-pro.io

Always type the official URL yourself or use bookmarks. Check for HTTPS and the correct domain spelling.

6. Poor Website Quality & Grammar Mistakes

Professional brokers invest heavily in their websites. Scammers often don’t.

Look for:

  • Broken English or machine-translated text
  • Low-resolution logos and images
  • Generic stock photos instead of real team photos
  • No physical address or only a fake one (search the address on Google Maps)
  • Missing or vague “About Us,” “Contact,” or “Legal” pages

7. No Transparent Ownership or Team Information

Legitimate companies proudly display their leadership team, office locations, and company registration details.

Red flags:

  • “Our team has 50+ years of experience” with no names or LinkedIn profiles
  • Company registered less than 1–2 years ago (check via Who.is or local company registries)
  • Anonymous founders (“Satoshi Team,” “Crypto Experts,” etc.)

8. Trading Platform You’ve Never Heard Of

Many scams force you to download a custom or white-labeled platform that looks professional but is actually controlled by the scammer.

Dangerous signs:

  • A proprietary web trader with no third-party verification
  • Insistence on downloading a desktop app (.exe file) from an unknown source

9. Unsolicited Contact & Recovery Scams

If someone contacts you first via WhatsApp, Telegram, Instagram, or dating apps promising trading profits, it’s almost always a pig-butchering or romance scam.

Also beware of “recovery experts” who promise to get your money back from a previous scam—for an upfront fee.

10. Lack of Segregated Client Funds & Cold Storage Proof

Reputable crypto exchanges publish proof-of-reserves and use cold storage. Forex brokers must keep client funds in segregated accounts.

If the website says nothing about fund safety or insurance, walk away.

Quick Checklist Before Depositing

  1. Check regulation on the official regulator website
  2. Search “[broker name] scam” or “[broker name] review” on Google.
  3. Verify domain age (Who.is)
  4. Start with a small test deposit and try to withdraw it immediately
  5. Never share your screen or allow remote access

Final Thought

If something feels too good to be true, it almost certainly is. Taking 10–15 minutes to verify a broker or exchange can save you from losing your entire investment. Always choose established, properly regulated platforms—even if the returns seem slightly lower—because the only return that matters is getting your money back when you want it.

Stay safe and trade only with authorized, transparent platforms.

 

Remember, awareness is your strongest defense.   

Contact us if you’d like more information on how cyber intelligence can help you locate scammers.

Please share this guide with friends and colleagues.

Get in touch today and receive a free phone consultation.

author avatar
Terry Lawrence

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *