After more than two years of limited public communication, MyForexFunds CEO Murtuza Kazmi has provided an update on the company’s legal battle with the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the sudden account freezes in 2023, and plans for resuming operations.
In an exclusive interview with Finance Magnates, Kazmi reflected on the challenges the firm faced after the CFTC’s asset freeze and the subsequent legal proceedings following MFF’s shutdown in August 2023.
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He said the company was “blindsided” by the events and that he “had to beg, borrow funds from family and friends” to navigate the period. Kazmi added that MFF “would have won the case regardless” and suggested that a successful comeback could “bring the industry back to its prior glory,” potentially involving several major competitors.
MFF Unable to Communicate with Clients
Kazmi further detailed these events in a video released today (Monday), describing August 30, 2023, as “sudden, shocking, and completely out of our control,” and adding that “there was no opportunity to prepare, explain or protect the community that we have taken years to build.”
Kazmi said that systems, servers, infrastructure, and data were seized, leaving the company unable to communicate with clients while it focused on the legal dispute.
MFF Wins Case, Receives Legal Fees
Kazmi stated that the CFTC took more than three years to allege fraud. “Did they find anything? No. Why? The answer is simple. We never committed fraud,” he said. According to Kazmi, the agency “simply lied to the judge before getting a freeze order,” claiming that MFF misappropriated investor funds, which he said was false because MFF does not take deposits.
In May 2025, Kazmi said, the district court dismissed the case with prejudice, awarding legal fees to MFF and finding “no elements of fraud.” He criticized the lack of prior warning or complaints, noting that earlier transparency could have avoided “so much pain and uncertainty for traders, for staff, for the families.”
Kazmi Apologizes, Promises “Restored Client Access”
Kazmi expressed regret for the impact on clients, saying, “I want to say I'm sorry. I really do. Not because we did something wrong, but because of what you were put through.” He emphasized that restoring client access to data, accounts, and payouts is now a top priority.
He also reminded clients that MFF had paid out close to $300 million to customers over two years, and that the firm was built “by you for you.” Kazmi concluded with an update on payouts: “Anyone that had requested a payout prior to the freeze should be expecting communications from us shortly.”