The Milton network has allegedly robbed elderly people via boiler rooms, cryptos and FIAT.
Using AI can prevent the recurrence of such incidents, but regulators are hesitant to involve private companies' technology.
Op-ed
Screenshot from a BBC documentary
The recent BBC expose on the ripples of the Milton
Group Scandal, which involve mass fraud of trading scams especially of the
elderly, has set the UK media into a frenzy. The scamming network has allegedly
robbed elderly people, not just, via boiler room scams, but via cryptocurrencies and FIAT currencies, in a worldwide attempt for unjust enrichment.
Yet, this is not the first time that fraud has popped up in
the EU, UK or other states such as Israel. The Milton scandal surfaced in
2020, and since then the same operatives have continued with their daily
illegal business as if nothing has changed.
Screenshot from the BBC documentary
This has led many consumers and international regulators to scrutinize the Member State regulators to see
whether the liability of non-detection falls upon the central banks. This also
leads to the question, who are the central banks accountable to? The public or their own respective regulators?
Last week, we witnessed the approval of MiCA, the
Markets in Crypto Assets Regulation of the EU by the European Parliament,
which means that finally, some of the uncertainty when it comes to crypto
assets will be resolved on a pan-European level.
With that said, the majority of crypto fraud that has taken place during the past few years has stemmed from unregulated CFD trading
platforms that have evolved from binary options schemes. A significant
watchful eye and criticism have been placed upon regulators worldwide
that have not sufficiently tackled these issues.
Central banks and financial intelligence units (FIUs),
which are in charge of licensing trading platforms and crypto
exchanges, have been scrutinized not just by the European Securities and Markets
Agency (ESMA) but by consumers that were targeted by CFD boiler rooms and
other crypto-forex fraud. This leads to the question of accountability and traceability
by regulators.
The compliance teams that form the licensing and
inspection of the licenses are caught in a severe case of Catch-22. On the
one hand, the compliance teams need to examine an infinite amount of data
submitted to the regulator, without an option to screen or detect unusual
or suspicious transactions due to the high volume of material submitted.
This issue was raised by the Estonian FIU back in
August 2020 when the amount of fraudulent crypto exchanges surpassed the amount
of legitimate financial institutions, and, as such, the Estonian FIU decided to
cancel the majority of licenses and increased the regulatory threshold to an
alarming degree.
Yet, this is not the
response many have wished for. The
consumers of the platforms and the international regulators (not on a
Member State level) are under the impression that sufficient safeguards were not
taken. Hence, the issue of digitalization
of the AML process has become a much-needed resource of FIUs.
In cases where the FIU were stuck with the detection of
anomalies in the AML quarterly reports by the financial institutions, it was
presumed that the FIUs will at least try and find a solution, and not a
post-mortem one, that will enable any sort of detection of fraudulent activity
from FIAT currency to cryptocurrency and vice versa.
This is the same case for liquidity providers and for market makers, who have been highlighted for money laundering and terrorist financing cases.
A similar argument was raised by the Egmont Group
in their last meeting and in the FATF Recommendations and has been highlighted
by the recent updates to the EBA Recommendations.
Thus, the recent scandals, the recommendations
of the international organizations and the market conditions all lead to the
inescapable conclusion that there is an inherent need for AML AI technologies
to solve the overload on the regulators and their respective compliance teams
as well as to minimize the amount of duress on the regulators.
Just as much as the binary options schemes have evolved
into CFD frauds, which in turn evolved into crypto liquidity frauds, the criticism
pouring over the regulators' heads may be solved by implementing the correct AML
AI technology that should detect the problematic transactions, prior to the
approval of the quarterly or yearly license, and not in retrospect.
Technologies are now
available in the market, yet regulators are hesitant to involve private
companies' technology, white-labeled or not. This approach should change, mainly
because it is not humanly possible to assess the amount of regulatory material
received.
Regulators may be of the impression that they are
accountable to their respective states only. Yet, in today’s market, regulators
are accountable to their respective end-clients, the financial
institution’s clients who are left at the mercy of the financial institution.
The recent BBC expose on the ripples of the Milton
Group Scandal, which involve mass fraud of trading scams especially of the
elderly, has set the UK media into a frenzy. The scamming network has allegedly
robbed elderly people, not just, via boiler room scams, but via cryptocurrencies and FIAT currencies, in a worldwide attempt for unjust enrichment.
Yet, this is not the first time that fraud has popped up in
the EU, UK or other states such as Israel. The Milton scandal surfaced in
2020, and since then the same operatives have continued with their daily
illegal business as if nothing has changed.
Screenshot from the BBC documentary
This has led many consumers and international regulators to scrutinize the Member State regulators to see
whether the liability of non-detection falls upon the central banks. This also
leads to the question, who are the central banks accountable to? The public or their own respective regulators?
Last week, we witnessed the approval of MiCA, the
Markets in Crypto Assets Regulation of the EU by the European Parliament,
which means that finally, some of the uncertainty when it comes to crypto
assets will be resolved on a pan-European level.
With that said, the majority of crypto fraud that has taken place during the past few years has stemmed from unregulated CFD trading
platforms that have evolved from binary options schemes. A significant
watchful eye and criticism have been placed upon regulators worldwide
that have not sufficiently tackled these issues.
Central banks and financial intelligence units (FIUs),
which are in charge of licensing trading platforms and crypto
exchanges, have been scrutinized not just by the European Securities and Markets
Agency (ESMA) but by consumers that were targeted by CFD boiler rooms and
other crypto-forex fraud. This leads to the question of accountability and traceability
by regulators.
The compliance teams that form the licensing and
inspection of the licenses are caught in a severe case of Catch-22. On the
one hand, the compliance teams need to examine an infinite amount of data
submitted to the regulator, without an option to screen or detect unusual
or suspicious transactions due to the high volume of material submitted.
This issue was raised by the Estonian FIU back in
August 2020 when the amount of fraudulent crypto exchanges surpassed the amount
of legitimate financial institutions, and, as such, the Estonian FIU decided to
cancel the majority of licenses and increased the regulatory threshold to an
alarming degree.
Yet, this is not the
response many have wished for. The
consumers of the platforms and the international regulators (not on a
Member State level) are under the impression that sufficient safeguards were not
taken. Hence, the issue of digitalization
of the AML process has become a much-needed resource of FIUs.
In cases where the FIU were stuck with the detection of
anomalies in the AML quarterly reports by the financial institutions, it was
presumed that the FIUs will at least try and find a solution, and not a
post-mortem one, that will enable any sort of detection of fraudulent activity
from FIAT currency to cryptocurrency and vice versa.
This is the same case for liquidity providers and for market makers, who have been highlighted for money laundering and terrorist financing cases.
A similar argument was raised by the Egmont Group
in their last meeting and in the FATF Recommendations and has been highlighted
by the recent updates to the EBA Recommendations.
Thus, the recent scandals, the recommendations
of the international organizations and the market conditions all lead to the
inescapable conclusion that there is an inherent need for AML AI technologies
to solve the overload on the regulators and their respective compliance teams
as well as to minimize the amount of duress on the regulators.
Just as much as the binary options schemes have evolved
into CFD frauds, which in turn evolved into crypto liquidity frauds, the criticism
pouring over the regulators' heads may be solved by implementing the correct AML
AI technology that should detect the problematic transactions, prior to the
approval of the quarterly or yearly license, and not in retrospect.
Technologies are now
available in the market, yet regulators are hesitant to involve private
companies' technology, white-labeled or not. This approach should change, mainly
because it is not humanly possible to assess the amount of regulatory material
received.
Regulators may be of the impression that they are
accountable to their respective states only. Yet, in today’s market, regulators
are accountable to their respective end-clients, the financial
institution’s clients who are left at the mercy of the financial institution.
Ms. Rosenberg focuses on EU Law and regulation within the financial, defence, art, and maritime sectors. She has broad experience in digital banking and crypto licensing, implementation of AML/CTF regulatory frameworks for defence companies and art galleries, anti human trafficking, regtech software, tokenization of maritime logistics, formation of compliance teams, AML and Privacy for publicly listed companies. She serves as the leading of contact of EU Law in the Middle East, and has published at defence and financial magazines, consulted governmental entities on CTF and AML and has worked directly with FIUs in the EU and the GCC. Holds an LLB in EU Law from the European Law School, Maastricht University and an LLM in Company and Commercial Law from Erasmus School of Law, Erasmus University Rotterdam; is the head of the Eramus University Alumni Network in Israel, and is a board member of the Israel Security Business Union.
United Fintech Scores Sixth Backer Days After Barclays Deal
OnePrime’s Jerry Khargi on Infrastructure, Liquidity & Trust | Executive Interview
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Recorded live at FMLS:25 London, this exclusive executive interview features Jerry Khargi, Executive Director at OnePrime, in conversation with Andrea Badiola Mateos from Finance Magnates.
In this in-depth discussion, Jerry shares:
- OnePrime’s journey from a retail-focused business to a global institutional liquidity provider
- What truly sets award-winning trading infrastructure apart
- Key trends shaping institutional trading, including technology and AI
- The importance of transparency, ethics, and reputation in long-term success
- OnePrime’s vision for growth over the next 12–24 months
Fresh from winning Finance Magnates’ Best Trading Infrastructure Broker, Jerry explains how experience, mentorship, and real-world problem solving form the “special sauce” behind OnePrime’s institutional offering.
🏆 Award Highlight: Best Trading Infrastructure Broker
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, market insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #OnePrime #InstitutionalTrading #Liquidity #TradingInfrastructure #ExecutiveInterview
Recorded live at FMLS:25 London, this exclusive executive interview features Jerry Khargi, Executive Director at OnePrime, in conversation with Andrea Badiola Mateos from Finance Magnates.
In this in-depth discussion, Jerry shares:
- OnePrime’s journey from a retail-focused business to a global institutional liquidity provider
- What truly sets award-winning trading infrastructure apart
- Key trends shaping institutional trading, including technology and AI
- The importance of transparency, ethics, and reputation in long-term success
- OnePrime’s vision for growth over the next 12–24 months
Fresh from winning Finance Magnates’ Best Trading Infrastructure Broker, Jerry explains how experience, mentorship, and real-world problem solving form the “special sauce” behind OnePrime’s institutional offering.
🏆 Award Highlight: Best Trading Infrastructure Broker
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, market insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #OnePrime #InstitutionalTrading #Liquidity #TradingInfrastructure #ExecutiveInterview
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What makes an update worth covering in financial media?
According to Yam Yehoshua, Editor-in-Chief at Finance Magnates, editorial focus starts with relevance: stories that serve the industry, support brokers and technology providers, and help decision-makers navigate their businesses.
A reminder that strong financial journalism is built on value, not volume.
What makes an update worth covering in financial media?
According to Yam Yehoshua, Editor-in-Chief at Finance Magnates, editorial focus starts with relevance: stories that serve the industry, support brokers and technology providers, and help decision-makers navigate their businesses.
A reminder that strong financial journalism is built on value, not volume.
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This webinar will focuses on how brokers can create new revenue streams by launching or enhancing their liquidity business.
John Murillo, Chief Dealing Officer of the B2BROKER group, covers how:
- Retail brokers can launch their own B2B arm to distribute liquidity and boost profitability.
- Institutional brokers can upgrade their liquidity offering and strengthen their market position.
- New entrants can start from scratch and become liquidity providers through a ready-made turnkey solution.
Hosted by B2BROKER, a global fintech provider of liquidity and technology solutions, the session will reveal how to monetize liquidity, accelerate business growth, and increase profitability using the Liquidity Provider Turnkey solution.
📣 Stay updated with the latest in finance and trading! Follow Finance Magnates across our social media platforms for news, insights, and event updates.
Connect with us today:
🔗 LinkedIn: / https://www.linkedin.com/company/financemagnates/
👍 Facebook: / https://www.facebook.com/financemagnates/
📸 Instagram: / https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates_official/?hl=en
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates?
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemag...
▶️ YouTube: / @financemagnates_official
This webinar will focuses on how brokers can create new revenue streams by launching or enhancing their liquidity business.
John Murillo, Chief Dealing Officer of the B2BROKER group, covers how:
- Retail brokers can launch their own B2B arm to distribute liquidity and boost profitability.
- Institutional brokers can upgrade their liquidity offering and strengthen their market position.
- New entrants can start from scratch and become liquidity providers through a ready-made turnkey solution.
Hosted by B2BROKER, a global fintech provider of liquidity and technology solutions, the session will reveal how to monetize liquidity, accelerate business growth, and increase profitability using the Liquidity Provider Turnkey solution.
📣 Stay updated with the latest in finance and trading! Follow Finance Magnates across our social media platforms for news, insights, and event updates.
Connect with us today:
🔗 LinkedIn: / https://www.linkedin.com/company/financemagnates/
👍 Facebook: / https://www.facebook.com/financemagnates/
📸 Instagram: / https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates_official/?hl=en
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates?
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemag...
▶️ YouTube: / @financemagnates_official
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Join us for an exclusive interview with Stephen Miles, Chief Revenue Officer at FYNXT, recorded live at FMLS:25. In this conversation, Stephen breaks down how modular brokerage technology is driving growth, retention, and efficiency across the brokerage industry.
Learn how FYNXT's unified yet modular platform is giving brokers a competitive edge—powering faster onboarding, increased trading volumes, and dramatically improved IB performance.
🔑 What You'll Learn in This Video:
- The biggest challenges brokerages face going into 2026
- Why FYNXT’s modular platform is outperforming in-house builds
- How automation is transforming IB channels
- The real ROI: 11x LTV increases and reduced acquisition costs
👉 Don’t forget to like, comment, and subscribe.
#FYNXT #StephenMiles #FMLS2025 #BrokerageTechnology #ModularTech #FintechInterview #DigitalTransformation #FinancialMarkets #CROInterview #FintechInnovation #TradingTechnology #IndependentBrokers #FinanceLeaders
Join us for an exclusive interview with Stephen Miles, Chief Revenue Officer at FYNXT, recorded live at FMLS:25. In this conversation, Stephen breaks down how modular brokerage technology is driving growth, retention, and efficiency across the brokerage industry.
Learn how FYNXT's unified yet modular platform is giving brokers a competitive edge—powering faster onboarding, increased trading volumes, and dramatically improved IB performance.
🔑 What You'll Learn in This Video:
- The biggest challenges brokerages face going into 2026
- Why FYNXT’s modular platform is outperforming in-house builds
- How automation is transforming IB channels
- The real ROI: 11x LTV increases and reduced acquisition costs
👉 Don’t forget to like, comment, and subscribe.
#FYNXT #StephenMiles #FMLS2025 #BrokerageTechnology #ModularTech #FintechInterview #DigitalTransformation #FinancialMarkets #CROInterview #FintechInnovation #TradingTechnology #IndependentBrokers #FinanceLeaders
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Charlotte reflects on the Summit so far and talks about the culture inside fintech banks today. We look at the pressures that come with scaling, and how firms can hold onto the nimble approach that made them stand out early on.
We also cover the state of payments ahead of her appearance on the payments roundtable: the blockages financial firms face, the areas that still need fixing, and what a realistic solution looks like in 2026.
In this interview, we sat down with Charlotte Bullock, Head of Product at The Bank of London, previously at SAP and now shaping product at one of the sector’s most ambitious new banking players.
Charlotte reflects on the Summit so far and talks about the culture inside fintech banks today. We look at the pressures that come with scaling, and how firms can hold onto the nimble approach that made them stand out early on.
We also cover the state of payments ahead of her appearance on the payments roundtable: the blockages financial firms face, the areas that still need fixing, and what a realistic solution looks like in 2026.