FCA Issues Urgent Investor Warning

The publicly-listed and regulated broker XTB has been illegally impersonated by an unauthorized firm in an attempt to scam investors, as warned by the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). This scam illegally uses the details of the legitimate XTB platform in its effort to deceive retail traders.

Investors should be aware that this is not the real XTB platform and should exercise caution when evaluating investment opportunities online that claim affiliation.

The clone
firm “XTB Trading World” has been contacting UK residents claiming to
be associated with XTB Limited, an FCA-authorized company. However, the FCA
confirmed this clone firm has no connection to the real XTB.

The
fraudsters are using the firm name to falsely present themselves as XTB. Attempts
to contact retail investors are made through the phone number +447424912789 and
the email address tradewithxtb@outlook.com. The FCA emphasizes the importance
of exercising extreme caution and avoiding any interaction with these scammers.

According
to the FCA warning, the XTB clone promotes financial services and products
to UK investors without authorization. This puts investors at risk of losing
money without recourse.

Source: FCA

Clones Are Everywhere

This is not
the first warning from the FCA against the XTB clone
Clone

A clone refers to a fraudulent attempt by an entity or individual to use the details of an authorized firm in a bid to convince people that they work that firm.This refers to a relatively new tactic that has seen fraudsters using the name, ‘firm registration number’, and address of firms and individuals authorized by regulators to suggest they are genuine. Clones are seemingly primitive techniques, though newly adopted by scammers that have evolved in the information era. As regulators push for

A clone refers to a fraudulent attempt by an entity or individual to use the details of an authorized firm in a bid to convince people that they work that firm.This refers to a relatively new tactic that has seen fraudsters using the name, ‘firm registration number’, and address of firms and individuals authorized by regulators to suggest they are genuine. Clones are seemingly primitive techniques, though newly adopted by scammers that have evolved in the information era. As regulators push for
Read this Term
. The last time the
regulator warned about people impersonating employees of the publicly listed
company was in March 2022. This year, the regulator from Italy blocked access
to the XTB Empire website, which is also a clone.

Just
yesterday (Wednesday), Finance Magnates informed about clones of the popular
retail trading
Retail Trading

In finance, retail trading refers to individual traders, trading through a broker, or on a platform. This can include novice traders and experienced traders. Trading and investing are divided into two categories, retail and institutional. Institutions include investment banks like JP Morgan or Citibank and global central banks like the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank. When we talk about retail trading however, we usually are referring to forex trading, but there are retail trade

In finance, retail trading refers to individual traders, trading through a broker, or on a platform. This can include novice traders and experienced traders. Trading and investing are divided into two categories, retail and institutional. Institutions include investment banks like JP Morgan or Citibank and global central banks like the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank. When we talk about retail trading however, we usually are referring to forex trading, but there are retail trade
Read this Term
brand Hargreaves Lansdown and retail banking giant Westpac. It
shows that the practice of creating fake firms, mirroring legitimate ones is, unfortunately, getting more common.

In
November, the FCA issued alerts regarding imposters of renowned platforms like
the social trading network eToro and those posing as publicly traded IG Group
members. Moreover, during that month, con artists misused the names and
trademarks of Santander and Saxo Bank.

How To Protect Yourself

Common tactics of clone firms
include cold-calling investors with investment offers, promoting
fake products not offered by the real firm, and asking investors to transfer
funds in unsafe ways. Victims often lose large sums of money to these scams,
with an average reported loss of £47,000.

Clone firms
take advantage of the trust placed in established financial brands and exploit
investors’ lack of awareness of fraud tactics. The FCA advises investors to only
deal with FCA-authorized firms, which can be checked on the Financial Services
Register. Dealing with unauthorized firms means forgoing certain investor
protections.

Investors
should also be wary of unsolicited contact about investment opportunities.
Carefully check any firm’s credentials before sending them money or sharing
personal information. Everyone can report scams to the FCA by calling the
authority or using their contact form.

The publicly-listed and regulated broker XTB has been illegally impersonated by an unauthorized firm in an attempt to scam investors, as warned by the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). This scam illegally uses the details of the legitimate XTB platform in its effort to deceive retail traders.

Investors should be aware that this is not the real XTB platform and should exercise caution when evaluating investment opportunities online that claim affiliation.

The clone
firm “XTB Trading World” has been contacting UK residents claiming to
be associated with XTB Limited, an FCA-authorized company. However, the FCA
confirmed this clone firm has no connection to the real XTB.

The
fraudsters are using the firm name to falsely present themselves as XTB. Attempts
to contact retail investors are made through the phone number +447424912789 and
the email address tradewithxtb@outlook.com. The FCA emphasizes the importance
of exercising extreme caution and avoiding any interaction with these scammers.

According
to the FCA warning, the XTB clone promotes financial services and products
to UK investors without authorization. This puts investors at risk of losing
money without recourse.

Source: FCA

Clones Are Everywhere

This is not
the first warning from the FCA against the XTB clone
Clone

A clone refers to a fraudulent attempt by an entity or individual to use the details of an authorized firm in a bid to convince people that they work that firm.This refers to a relatively new tactic that has seen fraudsters using the name, ‘firm registration number’, and address of firms and individuals authorized by regulators to suggest they are genuine. Clones are seemingly primitive techniques, though newly adopted by scammers that have evolved in the information era. As regulators push for

A clone refers to a fraudulent attempt by an entity or individual to use the details of an authorized firm in a bid to convince people that they work that firm.This refers to a relatively new tactic that has seen fraudsters using the name, ‘firm registration number’, and address of firms and individuals authorized by regulators to suggest they are genuine. Clones are seemingly primitive techniques, though newly adopted by scammers that have evolved in the information era. As regulators push for
Read this Term
. The last time the
regulator warned about people impersonating employees of the publicly listed
company was in March 2022. This year, the regulator from Italy blocked access
to the XTB Empire website, which is also a clone.

Just
yesterday (Wednesday), Finance Magnates informed about clones of the popular
retail trading
Retail Trading

In finance, retail trading refers to individual traders, trading through a broker, or on a platform. This can include novice traders and experienced traders. Trading and investing are divided into two categories, retail and institutional. Institutions include investment banks like JP Morgan or Citibank and global central banks like the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank. When we talk about retail trading however, we usually are referring to forex trading, but there are retail trade

In finance, retail trading refers to individual traders, trading through a broker, or on a platform. This can include novice traders and experienced traders. Trading and investing are divided into two categories, retail and institutional. Institutions include investment banks like JP Morgan or Citibank and global central banks like the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank. When we talk about retail trading however, we usually are referring to forex trading, but there are retail trade
Read this Term
brand Hargreaves Lansdown and retail banking giant Westpac. It
shows that the practice of creating fake firms, mirroring legitimate ones is, unfortunately, getting more common.

In
November, the FCA issued alerts regarding imposters of renowned platforms like
the social trading network eToro and those posing as publicly traded IG Group
members. Moreover, during that month, con artists misused the names and
trademarks of Santander and Saxo Bank.

How To Protect Yourself

Common tactics of clone firms
include cold-calling investors with investment offers, promoting
fake products not offered by the real firm, and asking investors to transfer
funds in unsafe ways. Victims often lose large sums of money to these scams,
with an average reported loss of £47,000.

Clone firms
take advantage of the trust placed in established financial brands and exploit
investors’ lack of awareness of fraud tactics. The FCA advises investors to only
deal with FCA-authorized firms, which can be checked on the Financial Services
Register. Dealing with unauthorized firms means forgoing certain investor
protections.

Investors
should also be wary of unsolicited contact about investment opportunities.
Carefully check any firm’s credentials before sending them money or sharing
personal information. Everyone can report scams to the FCA by calling the
authority or using their contact form.

FCAInvestorIssuesUrgentWarning
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