Fake regulation and clone firms

Scam brokers love to display official-looking badges that link nowhere or cite a licence number that does not match their name. The badge means nothing until you verify it at the regulator's own site.

Fake badges and clone firms

Some sites show logos (FCA, CySEC, ASIC, NFA) that link nowhere, or cite a licence number registered to a different company. Others go further and impersonate a genuine licensed firm — a clone firm — using a real licence number with a slightly altered name, website or contact details.

Why you must verify at the source

A badge or number proves nothing on the broker's own page. It only counts when you find it on the regulator's register and the firm's website, email and phone match exactly. Any mismatch points to a clone of a legitimate, licensed firm.

How to spot it

  • Regulator badges that link nowhere or to the broker's own page
  • A licence number that does not match the company name
  • Regulation claimed only in a jurisdiction with no real oversight
  • Website, email or phone that differ from the register
  • Reluctance to state the exact regulated entity

How to protect yourself

  • Verify the licence on the regulator's own register, never via the broker's link
  • Check the website, email and phone match the register exactly
  • Cross-check the FCA Warning List and IOSCO I-SCAN
  • If anything mismatches, assume it is a clone and walk away
Verify a broker on the official register now