Federal Court orders California man permanent ban from CFTC/NFA, and to provide $410K in restitution and $1.2M penalty in connection with fraud, misappropriation and issuing false statements in a $2.5M commodity pool.
The complaint charged Gustaveson with fraud, misappropriation and issuing false statements in an approximate $2.5 million commodity pool scheme according to the CFTC’s injunctive action and subsequent filings.
The federal court order, which resolved the complaint filed last month by the CFTC, awarded restitution for defrauded commodity customers in the amount of $410,000, and a civil monetary penalty of $1.2 million against Gustaveson in connection with the commodity pool investment scheme, including a permanent ban from registering with the NFA/CFTC.
According to the statement by the CFTC today, to conceal his misappropriation, Gustaveson distributed false trading account statements to the pool participants that misrepresented the value of the pool, reported false profits, and failed to disclose his misappropriation of pool participants’ funds.
Scope of CFTC Findings
When his fraud was exposed, Gustaveson returned a significant portion of the pool participants’ funds, leaving $410,000 of the customers’ funds unpaid, the Order finds. As to the amount still owed, Gustaveson admitted that he spent the money on personal expenses, past-due taxes, and repaying a previous investor, according to the Order.
Whether these actions were devised as part of a long-term plan to defraud investors or whether they were a series of ill-made decisions based on greed or financial difficulties is less-relevant, as the more concerning aspect is the risks posed by the CPO structure in general with regards to how they can be used inappropriately as vehicles of fraud.
The risk posed to investment pool participants with regards to the credit-trustworthiness of pool operators is further exacerbated today as the increased need for greater protection of investor’s deposits from ponzi schemes and frauds - becomes ever so obvious.
This is not the case for other hedge fund-like structures or managed account programs where funds remain under the customer’s name at the brokerage house (FCM), in a CPO there are special entities created (such as limited partnerships) where the operator can move around funds quite easily. Assuming a large percentage of CPOs in the industry are fully legitimate and trustworthy and strive to uphold high degrees of commercial honor and aligned with their customer’s interest, these above-mentioned risks still exist.
Last but not least, such findings as stated above make an otherwise perfectly functioning CPO segment harder for existing CPO operators, as a result of any tainted perception by investors with regards to commodity pools. As a result, regulators are squeezed to consider ways to improve the process at the expense of remaining CPO operators who could be affected from subsequent regulatory tightening (although, this could benefit investors long term, if done right).
The paradox remains as to how the regulatory changes that can build markets and brokerage integrity - can evolve for the many, as a result of tragic financial losses caused from the illegal acts of the few. This case parallels a previous update from the CFTC today, regarding a forex related case brought to closure following a court order on the other side of the US coast. Comments regarding the structure of CPOs are welcome.
The complaint charged Gustaveson with fraud, misappropriation and issuing false statements in an approximate $2.5 million commodity pool scheme according to the CFTC’s injunctive action and subsequent filings.
The federal court order, which resolved the complaint filed last month by the CFTC, awarded restitution for defrauded commodity customers in the amount of $410,000, and a civil monetary penalty of $1.2 million against Gustaveson in connection with the commodity pool investment scheme, including a permanent ban from registering with the NFA/CFTC.
According to the statement by the CFTC today, to conceal his misappropriation, Gustaveson distributed false trading account statements to the pool participants that misrepresented the value of the pool, reported false profits, and failed to disclose his misappropriation of pool participants’ funds.
Scope of CFTC Findings
When his fraud was exposed, Gustaveson returned a significant portion of the pool participants’ funds, leaving $410,000 of the customers’ funds unpaid, the Order finds. As to the amount still owed, Gustaveson admitted that he spent the money on personal expenses, past-due taxes, and repaying a previous investor, according to the Order.
Whether these actions were devised as part of a long-term plan to defraud investors or whether they were a series of ill-made decisions based on greed or financial difficulties is less-relevant, as the more concerning aspect is the risks posed by the CPO structure in general with regards to how they can be used inappropriately as vehicles of fraud.
The risk posed to investment pool participants with regards to the credit-trustworthiness of pool operators is further exacerbated today as the increased need for greater protection of investor’s deposits from ponzi schemes and frauds - becomes ever so obvious.
This is not the case for other hedge fund-like structures or managed account programs where funds remain under the customer’s name at the brokerage house (FCM), in a CPO there are special entities created (such as limited partnerships) where the operator can move around funds quite easily. Assuming a large percentage of CPOs in the industry are fully legitimate and trustworthy and strive to uphold high degrees of commercial honor and aligned with their customer’s interest, these above-mentioned risks still exist.
Last but not least, such findings as stated above make an otherwise perfectly functioning CPO segment harder for existing CPO operators, as a result of any tainted perception by investors with regards to commodity pools. As a result, regulators are squeezed to consider ways to improve the process at the expense of remaining CPO operators who could be affected from subsequent regulatory tightening (although, this could benefit investors long term, if done right).
The paradox remains as to how the regulatory changes that can build markets and brokerage integrity - can evolve for the many, as a result of tragic financial losses caused from the illegal acts of the few. This case parallels a previous update from the CFTC today, regarding a forex related case brought to closure following a court order on the other side of the US coast. Comments regarding the structure of CPOs are welcome.
LCG UK Slides into Losses as Revenue Drops 18% and Expenses Rise in 2025
Featured Videos
FM Daily Brief - 1 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 1 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 1 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 1 May 2026
iForex's CEO tells Finance Magnates the cost of their IPO delay. Also ahead: the US prediction markets legal battle splits in two, and the FCA greenlights onchain funds. It's Friday, the first of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex's CEO tells Finance Magnates the cost of their IPO delay. Also ahead: the US prediction markets legal battle splits in two, and the FCA greenlights onchain funds. It's Friday, the first of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex's CEO tells Finance Magnates the cost of their IPO delay. Also ahead: the US prediction markets legal battle splits in two, and the FCA greenlights onchain funds. It's Friday, the first of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex's CEO tells Finance Magnates the cost of their IPO delay. Also ahead: the US prediction markets legal battle splits in two, and the FCA greenlights onchain funds. It's Friday, the first of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Not All Video Reviews Are Created Equal | Finance Magnates
Not All Video Reviews Are Created Equal | Finance Magnates
Not All Video Reviews Are Created Equal | Finance Magnates
Not All Video Reviews Are Created Equal | Finance Magnates
Not All Video Reviews Are Created Equal | Finance Magnates
Not All Video Reviews Are Created Equal | Finance Magnates
We deliver fast, structured, neutral reviews covering regulation, platforms, leverage, payouts, and risk across brokers, prop firms, and fintech platforms.
Book your Finance Magnates video review: https://lnkd.in/dDubZJ2S
#FinanceMagnates #BrokerReview #PropTrading #Fintech #Forex #Crypto #CFD #TradingPlatforms #DigitalAssets
We deliver fast, structured, neutral reviews covering regulation, platforms, leverage, payouts, and risk across brokers, prop firms, and fintech platforms.
Book your Finance Magnates video review: https://lnkd.in/dDubZJ2S
#FinanceMagnates #BrokerReview #PropTrading #Fintech #Forex #Crypto #CFD #TradingPlatforms #DigitalAssets
We deliver fast, structured, neutral reviews covering regulation, platforms, leverage, payouts, and risk across brokers, prop firms, and fintech platforms.
Book your Finance Magnates video review: https://lnkd.in/dDubZJ2S
#FinanceMagnates #BrokerReview #PropTrading #Fintech #Forex #Crypto #CFD #TradingPlatforms #DigitalAssets
We deliver fast, structured, neutral reviews covering regulation, platforms, leverage, payouts, and risk across brokers, prop firms, and fintech platforms.
Book your Finance Magnates video review: https://lnkd.in/dDubZJ2S
#FinanceMagnates #BrokerReview #PropTrading #Fintech #Forex #Crypto #CFD #TradingPlatforms #DigitalAssets
We deliver fast, structured, neutral reviews covering regulation, platforms, leverage, payouts, and risk across brokers, prop firms, and fintech platforms.
Book your Finance Magnates video review: https://lnkd.in/dDubZJ2S
#FinanceMagnates #BrokerReview #PropTrading #Fintech #Forex #Crypto #CFD #TradingPlatforms #DigitalAssets
We deliver fast, structured, neutral reviews covering regulation, platforms, leverage, payouts, and risk across brokers, prop firms, and fintech platforms.
Book your Finance Magnates video review: https://lnkd.in/dDubZJ2S
#FinanceMagnates #BrokerReview #PropTrading #Fintech #Forex #Crypto #CFD #TradingPlatforms #DigitalAssets
FM Daily Brief - 30 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 30 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 30 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 30 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 30 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 30 April 2026
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 29 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 29 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 29 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 29 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 29 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 29 April 2026
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
Startrader posts three-point-one trillion dollars in first-quarter volume — up three hundred and forty percent from a year ago. Also ahead: Fintokei claims sub-second trader payouts, and eToro opens its premium subscription tier to all investors.
Startrader posts three-point-one trillion dollars in first-quarter volume — up three hundred and forty percent from a year ago. Also ahead: Fintokei claims sub-second trader payouts, and eToro opens its premium subscription tier to all investors.
Startrader posts three-point-one trillion dollars in first-quarter volume — up three hundred and forty percent from a year ago. Also ahead: Fintokei claims sub-second trader payouts, and eToro opens its premium subscription tier to all investors.
Startrader posts three-point-one trillion dollars in first-quarter volume — up three hundred and forty percent from a year ago. Also ahead: Fintokei claims sub-second trader payouts, and eToro opens its premium subscription tier to all investors.
Startrader posts three-point-one trillion dollars in first-quarter volume — up three hundred and forty percent from a year ago. Also ahead: Fintokei claims sub-second trader payouts, and eToro opens its premium subscription tier to all investors.
Startrader posts three-point-one trillion dollars in first-quarter volume — up three hundred and forty percent from a year ago. Also ahead: Fintokei claims sub-second trader payouts, and eToro opens its premium subscription tier to all investors.