Tarnished FX Broker Gives Identity Theft a New Dimension
Wednesday,24/07/2013|13:41GMTby
Adil Siddiqui
Choose your CEO? New Zealand's Financial regulator, the Financial Markets Authority, warns against a Forex broker that falsifies its offices, telephone numbers and who its owners are.
Identity theft usually revolves around innocent people's personal data being stolen and misused by criminals to conduct credit card fraud, however one extravagant financial services firm has taken identity theft to a new level. The firm stole the identity of a New Zealand based couple, created a glamorous profile of them with extensive qualifications and experience and pasted the details on their website, falsely claiming the couple as the company’s founders. Unfortunately the firm’s secret came out after authorities were informed about the very irregular arrangement.
After investigating the matter New Zealand’s financial regulator, Financial Markets Authority (FMA), has posted a warning against the financial services firm that provides trading in the popular FX and CFD derivatives market.
The FMA’s warning under the: Latest Warnings and Alerts section on their website headlined: Warning: Beware of offers from FX Promax Limited and FXpromaxltd.com.
The case has some peculiar elements in so far as the firm claims to be having a physical presence in New Zealand as well as two directors being from New Zealand.
In the FMA warning, the regulator states: “The Financial Markets Authority is warning the public against conducting business with or through an entity FXPromax Limited (which is not registered on the New Zealand Companies Register and it is not a registered financial service provider) and its associated website FXpromaxltd.com.
FMA believes that the information on the website concerning the business’ founders is fictitious and it is not currently operating from its purported New Zealand address, which is stated to be 350 Queens Street, Auckland.”
After reviewing the brokers site and third party websites that provide information relating to FXPromax; we can conclude that the concerns raised by FMA are evidently true. We tried to contact the firms; UK, Singapore, Chinese and New Zealand offices, however all the telephone numbers failed. The firm claims to be registered in the UK however on Companies House, the official data source for UK registered businesses, there is no registered firm in this name or a similar name.
Identity Theft
The proposed directors, Mr and Mrs Thomas’s details with a short profile are placed on the firm’s website. In a report in the Otago Daily, the couple found out about their supposed FX business and were alarmed to say the least, the couple who run a business called Promax in New Zealand were contacting by a man asking about their connection to FXPromax. "When we started looking at it we were horrified and contacted the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) and Financial Markets Authority," said Mr Thomas in a statement to Otago Daily.
The FMA confirmed this notion in their statement: “The website (wwwfxpromaxltd.com) names two New Zealanders as officers of FX Promax Limited. The named individuals are owners of a similarly-named New Zealand registered company but are not associated in any way with the operations of FX Promax Ltd or its website, nor is their conduct under investigation by FMA.”
According to date on the broker’s website, the firm offers the popular MT4 Trading Platform and a wide selection of payment channels. Forex magnates tried to create a demo or live account, however the links and data were void.
Extract from FXPromax website's Management section
New Zealand, the world’s least corrupt nation found itself victim of lapsed financial regulations that were misused by FX brokers. The country allowed international firms to set up their business and register their firm on a directory of financial services providers thus giving the impression that firms are regulated in the country. In many cases FX brokers were simply using New Zealand as an entry point and had no physical presence in the country.
The country’s financial watchdog has been reviewing the situation and over the last few months has been changing the way financial services firm can operate in New Zealand. The latest warning from FMA highlights the regulators commitment to cleaning up New Zealand.
Alternative Jurisdictions
FX is a high risk product and has evolved significantly since its inception as an investment product for retail investors in the late 90’s. Regulators in developed nations such as the UK’s FCA and Singapore’s MAS have recognised CFDs and spot FX and appreciate that as a regulator their responsibility is to educate and provide adequate information about the product, in addition their role is to ensure firms operate under the regulators rules and regulations.
For FX brokers who were unable to register in developed markets, NZ was an ideal alternative, however as the world of non-regulated FX is facing pressure from global regulators, the media and general awareness of clients, the FMA has started its vendetta against the firms and has started to; de-list, un-register and issue warnings about un-regulated firms operating in New Zealand. As a result firms will need to migrate to other lands.
The case shows that firms and individuals who want to commit mal-practises will go to great lengths to cover their tracks. With regulators taking more responsibility about the way business is conducted in financial services we can anticipate these types of incidents to be prevented.
Identity theft usually revolves around innocent people's personal data being stolen and misused by criminals to conduct credit card fraud, however one extravagant financial services firm has taken identity theft to a new level. The firm stole the identity of a New Zealand based couple, created a glamorous profile of them with extensive qualifications and experience and pasted the details on their website, falsely claiming the couple as the company’s founders. Unfortunately the firm’s secret came out after authorities were informed about the very irregular arrangement.
After investigating the matter New Zealand’s financial regulator, Financial Markets Authority (FMA), has posted a warning against the financial services firm that provides trading in the popular FX and CFD derivatives market.
The FMA’s warning under the: Latest Warnings and Alerts section on their website headlined: Warning: Beware of offers from FX Promax Limited and FXpromaxltd.com.
The case has some peculiar elements in so far as the firm claims to be having a physical presence in New Zealand as well as two directors being from New Zealand.
In the FMA warning, the regulator states: “The Financial Markets Authority is warning the public against conducting business with or through an entity FXPromax Limited (which is not registered on the New Zealand Companies Register and it is not a registered financial service provider) and its associated website FXpromaxltd.com.
FMA believes that the information on the website concerning the business’ founders is fictitious and it is not currently operating from its purported New Zealand address, which is stated to be 350 Queens Street, Auckland.”
After reviewing the brokers site and third party websites that provide information relating to FXPromax; we can conclude that the concerns raised by FMA are evidently true. We tried to contact the firms; UK, Singapore, Chinese and New Zealand offices, however all the telephone numbers failed. The firm claims to be registered in the UK however on Companies House, the official data source for UK registered businesses, there is no registered firm in this name or a similar name.
Identity Theft
The proposed directors, Mr and Mrs Thomas’s details with a short profile are placed on the firm’s website. In a report in the Otago Daily, the couple found out about their supposed FX business and were alarmed to say the least, the couple who run a business called Promax in New Zealand were contacting by a man asking about their connection to FXPromax. "When we started looking at it we were horrified and contacted the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) and Financial Markets Authority," said Mr Thomas in a statement to Otago Daily.
The FMA confirmed this notion in their statement: “The website (wwwfxpromaxltd.com) names two New Zealanders as officers of FX Promax Limited. The named individuals are owners of a similarly-named New Zealand registered company but are not associated in any way with the operations of FX Promax Ltd or its website, nor is their conduct under investigation by FMA.”
According to date on the broker’s website, the firm offers the popular MT4 Trading Platform and a wide selection of payment channels. Forex magnates tried to create a demo or live account, however the links and data were void.
Extract from FXPromax website's Management section
New Zealand, the world’s least corrupt nation found itself victim of lapsed financial regulations that were misused by FX brokers. The country allowed international firms to set up their business and register their firm on a directory of financial services providers thus giving the impression that firms are regulated in the country. In many cases FX brokers were simply using New Zealand as an entry point and had no physical presence in the country.
The country’s financial watchdog has been reviewing the situation and over the last few months has been changing the way financial services firm can operate in New Zealand. The latest warning from FMA highlights the regulators commitment to cleaning up New Zealand.
Alternative Jurisdictions
FX is a high risk product and has evolved significantly since its inception as an investment product for retail investors in the late 90’s. Regulators in developed nations such as the UK’s FCA and Singapore’s MAS have recognised CFDs and spot FX and appreciate that as a regulator their responsibility is to educate and provide adequate information about the product, in addition their role is to ensure firms operate under the regulators rules and regulations.
For FX brokers who were unable to register in developed markets, NZ was an ideal alternative, however as the world of non-regulated FX is facing pressure from global regulators, the media and general awareness of clients, the FMA has started its vendetta against the firms and has started to; de-list, un-register and issue warnings about un-regulated firms operating in New Zealand. As a result firms will need to migrate to other lands.
The case shows that firms and individuals who want to commit mal-practises will go to great lengths to cover their tracks. With regulators taking more responsibility about the way business is conducted in financial services we can anticipate these types of incidents to be prevented.
Exclusive: The5ers Founders Enter Brokerage Business with CySEC-Licensed “TSG.”
Marketing in 2026 Audiences, Costs, and Smarter AI
Marketing in 2026 Audiences, Costs, and Smarter AI
As brokers eye B2B business and compete with fintechs and crypto exchanges alike, marketers need to act wisely with often limited budgets. AI can offer scalable solutions, but only if used properly.
Join seasoned marketing executives and specialists as they discuss the main challenges they identify in financial services in 2026 and how they address them.
Attendees of this session will walk away with:
- A nuts-and-bolts account of acquisition costs across platforms and geos
- Analysis of today’s multi-layered audience segments and differences in behaviour
- First-hand account of how global brokers balance consistency and local flavour
- Notes from the field about intelligently using AI and automation in marketing
Speakers:
-Yam Yehoshua, Editor-In-Chief at Finance Magnates
-Federico Paderni, Managing Director for Growth Markets in Europe at X
-Jo Benton, Chief Marketing Officer, Consulting | Fractional CMO
-Itai Levitan, Head of Strategy at investingLive
-Roberto Napolitano, CMO at Innovate Finance
-Tony Cross, Director at Monk Communications
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #FintechMarketing #AI #DigitalStrategy #Fintech #Innovation
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As brokers eye B2B business and compete with fintechs and crypto exchanges alike, marketers need to act wisely with often limited budgets. AI can offer scalable solutions, but only if used properly.
Join seasoned marketing executives and specialists as they discuss the main challenges they identify in financial services in 2026 and how they address them.
Attendees of this session will walk away with:
- A nuts-and-bolts account of acquisition costs across platforms and geos
- Analysis of today’s multi-layered audience segments and differences in behaviour
- First-hand account of how global brokers balance consistency and local flavour
- Notes from the field about intelligently using AI and automation in marketing
Speakers:
-Yam Yehoshua, Editor-In-Chief at Finance Magnates
-Federico Paderni, Managing Director for Growth Markets in Europe at X
-Jo Benton, Chief Marketing Officer, Consulting | Fractional CMO
-Itai Levitan, Head of Strategy at investingLive
-Roberto Napolitano, CMO at Innovate Finance
-Tony Cross, Director at Monk Communications
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #FintechMarketing #AI #DigitalStrategy #Fintech #Innovation
Connect with us at:
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Much like their traders in the market, brokers must diversify to manage risk and stay resilient. But that can get costly, clunky, and lengthy.
This candid panel brings together builders across the trading infrastructure space to uncover the shifting dynamics behind tools, interfaces, and full-stack ambitions.
Attendees will hear:
-Why platform dependency has become one of the most overlooked risks in the trading business?
-Buy vs. build: What do hybrid models look like, and why are industry graveyards filled with failed ‘killer apps’?
-How AI is already changing execution, risk, and reporting—and what’s next?
-Which features, assets, and tools gain the most traction, and where brokers should look for tech-driven retention?
Speakers:
-Stephen Miles, Chief Revenue Officer at FYNXT
-John Morris, Co-Founder at FXBlue
-Matthew Smith, Group Chair & CEO at EC Markets
-Tom Higgins, Founder & CEO at Gold-i
-Gil Ben Hur, Founder at 5% Group
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #Trading #Fintech #FintechInnovation #TradingTechnology #Innovation
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
Much like their traders in the market, brokers must diversify to manage risk and stay resilient. But that can get costly, clunky, and lengthy.
This candid panel brings together builders across the trading infrastructure space to uncover the shifting dynamics behind tools, interfaces, and full-stack ambitions.
Attendees will hear:
-Why platform dependency has become one of the most overlooked risks in the trading business?
-Buy vs. build: What do hybrid models look like, and why are industry graveyards filled with failed ‘killer apps’?
-How AI is already changing execution, risk, and reporting—and what’s next?
-Which features, assets, and tools gain the most traction, and where brokers should look for tech-driven retention?
Speakers:
-Stephen Miles, Chief Revenue Officer at FYNXT
-John Morris, Co-Founder at FXBlue
-Matthew Smith, Group Chair & CEO at EC Markets
-Tom Higgins, Founder & CEO at Gold-i
-Gil Ben Hur, Founder at 5% Group
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #Trading #Fintech #FintechInnovation #TradingTechnology #Innovation
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
Educators, IBs, And Other Regional Growth Drivers
Educators, IBs, And Other Regional Growth Drivers
When acquisition costs rise and AI generated reviews are exactly as useful as they sound, performing and fair partners can make or break brokers.
This session looks at how these players are shaping access, trust and user engagement, and what the most effective partnership models look like in 2025.
Key Themes:
- Building trader communities through education and local expertise
- Aligning broker incentives with long-term regional strategies
- Regional regulation and the realities of compliant acquisition
- What’s next for performance-driven partnerships in online trading
Speakers:
-Adam Button, Chief Currency Analyst at investingLive
-Zander Van Der Merwe, Key Individual & Head of Sales at TD Markets
-Brunno Huertas, Regional Manager – Latin America at Tickmill
-Paul Chalmers, CEO at UK Trading Academy
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #FinanceLeadership #Trading #Fintech #BrokerGrowth #FintechPartnerships #RegionalMarkets
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
When acquisition costs rise and AI generated reviews are exactly as useful as they sound, performing and fair partners can make or break brokers.
This session looks at how these players are shaping access, trust and user engagement, and what the most effective partnership models look like in 2025.
Key Themes:
- Building trader communities through education and local expertise
- Aligning broker incentives with long-term regional strategies
- Regional regulation and the realities of compliant acquisition
- What’s next for performance-driven partnerships in online trading
Speakers:
-Adam Button, Chief Currency Analyst at investingLive
-Zander Van Der Merwe, Key Individual & Head of Sales at TD Markets
-Brunno Huertas, Regional Manager – Latin America at Tickmill
-Paul Chalmers, CEO at UK Trading Academy
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #FinanceLeadership #Trading #Fintech #BrokerGrowth #FintechPartnerships #RegionalMarkets
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
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🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
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The Leap to Everything App: Are Brokers There Yet?
As the arms race to bundle investing, personal finance, and wallets under super apps grows fiercer, brokers are caught between a rock and a hard place.
This session explores unexpected ways for industry players to collaborate as consumer habits evolve, competitors eye the traffic, and regulation becomes more nuanced.
Speakers:
-Laura McCracken,CEO | Advisory Board Member at Blackheath Advisors | The Payments Association
-Slobodan Manojlović,Vice President | Lead Software Engineer at JP Morgan Chase & Co.
-Jordan Sinclair, President at Robinhood UK
-Simon Pelletier, Head of Product at Yuh
Gerald Perez, CEO at Interactive Brokers UK
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #FinanceLeadership #Trading #Fintech #Innovation
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
As the arms race to bundle investing, personal finance, and wallets under super apps grows fiercer, brokers are caught between a rock and a hard place.
This session explores unexpected ways for industry players to collaborate as consumer habits evolve, competitors eye the traffic, and regulation becomes more nuanced.
Speakers:
-Laura McCracken,CEO | Advisory Board Member at Blackheath Advisors | The Payments Association
-Slobodan Manojlović,Vice President | Lead Software Engineer at JP Morgan Chase & Co.
-Jordan Sinclair, President at Robinhood UK
-Simon Pelletier, Head of Product at Yuh
Gerald Perez, CEO at Interactive Brokers UK
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #FinanceLeadership #Trading #Fintech #Innovation
Connect with us at:
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Mind The Gap: Can Retail Investors Save the UK Stock Market?
Mind The Gap: Can Retail Investors Save the UK Stock Market?
As the dire state of listing and investment in the UK goes from a financial services problem to a national challenge, the retail investing industry is taken to task.
Join a host of executives and experts for a candid conversation about the future of millions of Brits, as seen from a financial services standpoint:
-Are they happy with the Leeds Reform, in principle and in practice?
-Is it the government’s job to affect the ‘saver’ mentality? Is it doing well?
-What can brokers and fintechs do to spur UK investment?
-How can the FCA balance greater flexibility with consumer protection?
Speakers:
-Adam Button, Chief Currency Analyst at investingLive
-Nicola Higgs, Partner at Latham & Watkins
-Dan Lane, Investment Content Lead at Robinhood UK
-Jack Crone, PR & Public Affairs Lead at IG
-David Belle, Founder at Fink Money
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #FinanceLeadership #Trading #Fintech #RetailInvesting #UKFinance
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
As the dire state of listing and investment in the UK goes from a financial services problem to a national challenge, the retail investing industry is taken to task.
Join a host of executives and experts for a candid conversation about the future of millions of Brits, as seen from a financial services standpoint:
-Are they happy with the Leeds Reform, in principle and in practice?
-Is it the government’s job to affect the ‘saver’ mentality? Is it doing well?
-What can brokers and fintechs do to spur UK investment?
-How can the FCA balance greater flexibility with consumer protection?
Speakers:
-Adam Button, Chief Currency Analyst at investingLive
-Nicola Higgs, Partner at Latham & Watkins
-Dan Lane, Investment Content Lead at Robinhood UK
-Jack Crone, PR & Public Affairs Lead at IG
-David Belle, Founder at Fink Money
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #FinanceLeadership #Trading #Fintech #RetailInvesting #UKFinance
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official