简体中文
繁體中文
English
Pусский
日本語
ภาษาไทย
Tiếng Việt
Bahasa Indonesia
Español
हिन्दी
Filippiiniläinen
Français
Deutsch
Português
Türkçe
한국어
العربية
FCA Issues Warnings Against Six Firms for Unauthorised Activities and Cloning
Abstract:UK’s FCA adds six firms to its warning list, including five unlicensed companies and one clone scam.

The UKs Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has added six new entries to its warning list, highlighting firms that are either operating without proper authorisation or impersonating legitimate financial entities. These actions aim to protect investors from increasingly sophisticated scams circulating online.
Unlicensed Operators on the Radar
According to the FCA, the following five firms are conducting financial activities without regulatory approval:
- Yalix Trader (www.yalix-trader.net)
- Trade MaxAir (www.trade-maxair.net)
- Starlight Stakemarket (www.starlightstakemarket.net)
- Solvency Digital Market (www.solvencydigitalmarkets.live)
- Apex Investment Advisor (www.apex-invesment-advisors.pro)
These entities are offering trading or investment services without being registered with the FCA—a legal requirement for operating within the UK. Investors dealing with these firms are unlikely to be covered by regulatory protections such as the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) or the Financial Ombudsman Service.
The FCA warns that despite professional-looking websites and promises of high returns, these firms pose significant risks to consumers, especially as they fall outside the regulatory perimeter.
Clone Alert: Fraudsters Imitating Licensed Firms
In a more deceptive twist, the FCA also flagged mfnclaims.support as a clone firm, meaning scammers are fraudulently using the identity of a legitimate FCA-authorised company to gain trust.
- Fake identity: mfnclaims.support
- Impersonated firm: A real FCA-authorised business (not named publicly by the FCA)
- Email in use: john.christopher@mfnclaims.support
Clone firms often adopt similar names, branding, or website structures to mislead victims into believing theyre dealing with a regulated business. The FCA urges all investors to verify firm details using the FCA Register before making any transactions.
Investor Reminder
If a company isn‘t listed on the FCA Register or shows warning signs such as unsolicited contact, unclear terms, or unreachable customer service, it’s likely unsafe. Always double-check details and be wary of firms operating without proper oversight.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
Read more

Grand Capital Doesn’t Feel GRAND for Traders with Withdrawal Denials & Long Processing Times
The trading environment does not seem that rosy for traders at Grand Capital, a Seychelles-based forex broker. Traders’ requests for withdrawals are alleged to be in the review process for months, making them frustrated and helpless. Despite meeting the guidelines, traders find it hard to withdraw funds, as suggested by their complaints online. What’s also troubling traders are long processing times concerning Grand Capital withdrawals. In this Grand Capital review segment, we have shared some complaints for you to look at. Read on!

ADSS Review: Traders Say NO to Trading B’coz of Withdrawal Blocks, Account Freeze & Trade Issues
Does ADSS give you plenty of excuses to deny you access to withdrawals? Is your withdrawal request pending for months or years? Do you witness account freezes from the United Arab Emirates-based forex broker? Do you struggle to open and close your forex positions on the ADSS app? Does the customer support service fail to respond to your trading queries? All these issues have become a rage online. In this ADSS Broker review article, we have highlighted actual trader wordings on these issues. Keep reading!

Israeli Arrested in Rome Over €50M Forex Scam
Interpol arrests Israeli man in Rome over €50M forex and crypto scam targeting German investors, with probes expanding across Europe.

Consob Targets Political Deepfake “Clone Sites” and Unlicensed Platforms in Latest Enforcement Round
New Consob blackouts expose cloned investment sites and illegal forex platforms; investors are urged to verify licences and domains before funding any account.
