Retiree loses over RM337,000 in Facebook investment scam
Authorities warn public to verify financial transactions as pensioner duped by fake online investment
简体中文
繁體中文
English
Pусский
日本語
ภาษาไทย
Tiếng Việt
Bahasa Indonesia
Español
हिन्दी
Filippiiniläinen
Français
Deutsch
Português
Türkçe
한국어
العربية
Abstract:In the complex architecture of modern forex brokerage, there exists a specific category of firm that presents a particular challenge to the analytical observer: the "Janus-faced" broker. On one side, there is the facade of institutional solidity—licenses from reputable jurisdictions like Australia and Malaysia, a high "Influence Rank," and a sophisticated digital presence. On the other side lies a darker operational reality characterized by profit reversals, opaque execution policies, and friction-heavy withdrawal processes.

By WikiFX Special Editorial
In the complex architecture of modern forex brokerage, there exists a specific category of firm that presents a particular challenge to the analytical observer: the “Janus-faced” broker. On one side, there is the facade of institutional solidity—licenses from reputable jurisdictions like Australia and Malaysia, a high “Influence Rank,” and a sophisticated digital presence. On the other side lies a darker operational reality characterized by profit reversals, opaque execution policies, and friction-heavy withdrawal processes.
Our deep-dive analysis of XS (XS.com) reveals a platform exhibiting exactly this duality. While holding a decent WikiFX Score of 6.09, suggesting a mid-tier level of reliability, the underlying data conveys a different narrative. The discrepancy between XSs marketing posture and the experiences of its most profitable traders suggests a structural conflict of interest that warrants immediate attention from the global trading community.
The most alarming indicator in the recent XS data stream does not concern technical failures or platform outages, but rather a deliberate administrative response to client profitability. In the retail trading sector, a brokers integrity is best tested not when a client loses, but when they win significantly.
In early 2025, a particularly illustrative case emerged from the United Arab Emirates. A trader, anticipating market volatility following the U.S. elections, deposited $38,000 and subsequently generated profits totaling $127,888 via an MT5 account. According to the complaint lodged with WikiFX, XS did not facilitate the withdrawal of these funds. Instead, the brokerage terminated the account, citing “abuse of trading conditions” and “swap arbitrage strategies”—despite the traders assertion that no futures contracts were traded, rendering swap arbitrage technically impossible in that context. The outcome was a forced reversal of all profits, leaving the trader with only their principal deposit.

(Evidence: A Notification of Profit Reversal cited in the UAE case review, February 2025)
This is not an isolated incident of friction. A similar narrative surfaced from Brazil in March 2025, where a trader generating a modest $1,400 profit faced accusations of “negotiation abuse.” Much like the UAE case, management threatened to debit the account, placing the client in an indefinite administrative limbo.

When a brokerage systematically applies vaguely defined “abuse” clauses to nullify legitimate market gains, it suggests the firm may be operating a “B-Book” model (acting as the counterparty to trades) without adequate risk management. In such a setup, client profit equals broker loss, creating a perverse incentive to invalidate successful trades retroactively.
To the casual observer, XS appears heavily regulated. However, a forensic audit of their regulatory status reveals a “patchwork” framework. While they possess top-tier licensing, clients must be acutely aware of which specific entity they are contracting with. A license in Australia does not protect a client onboarded under a Seychelles entity.
Current WikiFX regulatory data highlights significant discrepancies in their compliance standing. While the Australian (ASIC) and Malaysian (LFSA) licenses appear active, the status of their operations in South Africa and Cyprus raises flags regarding their commitment to global compliance standards.
| Regulator | Regulator Jurisdiction | License Type | Current Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seychelles FSA | Seychelles | Retail Forex License | Offshore Regulated |
| Australia ASIC | Australia | MM (Market Maker) | Regulated |
| Malaysia LFSA | Malaysia (Labuan) | Money Broking | Regulated |
| South Africa FSCA | South Africa | Financial Service Provider | Exceeded Business Scope |
| Cyprus CYSEC | Cyprus | STP/MM | Unverified |
The “Exceeded Business Scope” status in South Africa is particularly concerning for a broker expanding its global footprint. It implies the firm may be offering services or products that go beyond what their local license permits, operating in a regulatory gray zone. Furthermore, the “Unverified” status with CySEC (one of Europes primary watchdogs) leaves a significant gap in their European safety credentials.
While marketing materials often tout “raw spreads” and “lightning execution,” WikiFX‘s quantitative assessment of XS’s trading environment paints a starkly different picture. The platform received an overall Trade Environment Grade of D—a rating that technically contradicts its acceptable overall score.
The data reveals a “Fast but Slippery” execution model.
High speed combined with poor slippage control is a hallmark of asymmetric execution. In layman's terms, orders allow for instant entry, but often at a price inferior to what was clicked, or profitable positions are closed with negative slippage that erodes gains. While the Cost Grade is AAA (indicating low spreads on paper), the hidden cost of slippage likely negates this benefit for high-frequency or news traders.
(Evidence: Correspondence regarding delayed commission withdrawals, September 2025)
Liquidity looks different from the inside than it does from the outside. For XS, the inflow of deposits appears seamless (fully digital, instant), but the outflow mechanism shows signs of severe friction.
Reports from late 2024 through September 2025 indicate a pattern where withdrawals—particularly those involving commissions or substantial principal—trigger exhaustive “compliance reviews.”

In China (September 2025), a partner attempted to withdraw $28,000 in accumulated commissions. The request was met with a 14-day review loop and repetitive demands for “selfie verification,” which, even after submission, did not result in fund release.

(Evidence: User report citing month-long delays, September 2025)
This behavior—stalling large withdrawals under the guise of security checks—is a classic liquidity management tactic often utilized by brokers facing capital crunch issues or those attempting to discourage partners from leaving the platform.
The tragedy of XS is that on the surface, it possesses the infrastructure of a Tier-1 brokerage. With an Influence Rank of A and a modern MT5 stack, it has the tools to be a market leader. However, market leadership requires an alignment of interest with the client—something currently missing from the XS equation.
The prevailing evidence suggests that XS operates comfortably only when clients are losing or trading small volumes. When faced with professional profitability or large withdrawal requests, the “institutional” facade cracks, revealing an aggressive risk-mitigation strategy that treats client profits as operational threats.
For the global investor, the presence of an ASIC license is reassuring, but it is not a shield against the behavior observed in the Offshore and Asian branches of the firm. Until XS resolves the “Exceeded Business Scope” issues in South Africa and eliminates the predatory use of “abuse clauses” to retake client profits, WikiFX advises extreme caution. The platform currently presents a high-risk environment for profitable traders, despite its glossy exterior.
Identities of the traders involved in the case studies have been withheld for privacy.
Disclaimer: The information provided in this review is based on data and user complaints available in the WikiFX database as of the current reporting period. Forex trading involves significant financial risk and may not be suitable for all investors. Regulatory statuses can change; traders are advised to verify real-time data on the WikiFX app before depositing funds.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.

Authorities warn public to verify financial transactions as pensioner duped by fake online investment

Failed to withdraw funds from the BDSWISS trading account despite multiple attempts? Did the broker reject your fund withdrawal application without any reason? Did the high slippage lead to massive capital losses? Was the customer support team far from ideal? Many traders have reported these issues online. In this BDSWISS review article, we have examined several such complaints against the forex broker.

When your capital is at risk, trust isn't just a feeling - it's something you can measure. For traders thinking about using the broker Evest, one question is impossible to avoid: Is Evest a trusted partner for your investments, or does it put your investments at serious risk? The answer to this important question, "Is Evest Safe or Scam?", isn't found in the company's ads. You find it by comparing what the broker officially says with the real, often worrying experiences of actual users. This review won't rely on guessing. Instead, we'll take a deep look at the broker's legal status and, more importantly, the number and types of real Evest complaints. Our research is based on public information, mainly from the worldwide broker research platform, WikiFX, to show the truth about Evest's reputation.

XPO Markets, a Comoros-based brokerage entity, is in the news for negative reasons. These include the alleged INR 3,100 crore fund scam complaint filed by 3 lakh Indians in November 2025. Such a scam puts a serious question mark on the authenticity of this forex broker. In this XPO Markets review article, we have highlighted the million-dollar scam along with the risk parameters associated with this broker.