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Dubai Warning Issued After Fraudsters Impersonate a Legitimate DIFC Financial Firm
Abstract:A scam using the name of a genuine DIFC-based financial firm has prompted a fresh warning in Dubai, after fake websites, false contracts, and advance-fee requests were used to target investors.

A new scam alert in Dubai has drawn attention to a familiar but dangerous pattern in financial fraud: the misuse of a real firms name to create false credibility.
According to the warning, fraudsters have been using the name Nomura Investment International Plc. to present fake investment opportunities to potential victims. The name closely resembles that of a legitimate authorised firm operating through a branch in the Dubai International Financial Centre, but the two are not connected.
How the scam was presented
The scheme appears to have relied on several tactics designed to make the offer look genuine.
Fake investment contracts were circulated to investors, and at least some of the documents falsely suggested that the real DIFC-based firm was involved as a counterparty. The use of fabricated paperwork gave the impression that the offer was part of a formal investment arrangement, even though it was not.
Fraudsters also used websites that copied the firms name and referred to a supposed DIFC address. Those sites were not connected to the legitimate business or to any regulated entity.
In addition, unofficial phone numbers and email addresses were presented as if they belonged to the real firm. This helped create the appearance of direct contact with an established financial institution, even though the communications were part of the scam.
Advance-fee requests were part of the setup
One of the clearest warning signs in the case was the request for money upfront.
The alert noted that at least one victim was asked to pay an advance fee under the guise of an investment agreement. That detail matters because advance-payment demands are often one of the simplest ways to distinguish a real financial relationship from a fraudulent one.
In this case, the use of fake documents, copied identity details, and advance-fee requests formed a structure that looked professional on the surface but was built entirely on misrepresentation.
No connection to the real firm
The warning made clear that the name being used by the fraudsters is not incorporated or based in the DIFC and has never been authorised or licensed there.
It also stated that the real authorised firm has no connection to the impersonating entity or to any of the supposed investment schemes being promoted in its name.
That clarification is important because scams of this type do not always invent a brand from scratch. In many cases, they work by borrowing the reputation of a real firm and making only slight changes to the name, website, or contact details.
Why this type of scam is effective
Impersonation fraud works because it targets trust before it targets money.
A name that sounds familiar, a contract that looks formal, and contact details that appear corporate can be enough to lower a victims guard. Once that trust has been created, the request for funds can seem less suspicious than it otherwise would.
That is why these cases remain difficult for investors who rely too heavily on appearance. A website, a PDF agreement, or a company-style email signature can all be copied or fabricated. The real protection comes from independent verification of the firm, its contact details, and its regulatory status.
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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.
