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
اردو
Italy Orders Blocking of Six Unauthorized Investment Websites
Abstract:Italy’s market regulator has ordered the blocking of six more unauthorized investment websites, many of them operating through linked client portals and webtrader pages.

Italys market regulator has ordered the blocking of six additional websites linked to unauthorized investment activity, continuing its campaign against online platforms operating without approval.
The latest action covers a group of broker-style websites, several of which were paired with separate login pages, webtrader links, or related client portals rather than relying on a single public homepage.
The websites named in the latest order
The websites targeted by the latest blocking order are:
- orbisolyx.com and webtrader.grumblinion-radiex.com — Orbisolyx
- fxc-capitals.com and client.fxc-capitals.com — FXC Capital
- oasisbf.com and trader.oasisbf.com — OasisBF
- imgpartners.cm, client.imgpartners.cm, and webtrader.imgpartners.cm — IMGPartners.cm
- auralyex.co and webtrader.possares-renoyx.com — Auralyex
- wexdor.com and webtrader.wexdor.com — Wexdor
With this latest measure, the total number of websites blocked by the Italian regulator since 2019 has risen to 1,718.
Linked portals remain a common feature
One of the clearest patterns in this latest batch is the repeated use of connected pages beyond the main website.
Several names on the list were accompanied by client pages, trader portals, or webtrader addresses, suggesting that the public-facing site was only one part of the full structure. This appears in cases such as FXC Capital, OasisBF, IMGPartners.cm, and Wexdor, while other names were paired with webtrader domains carrying entirely different address strings.
That kind of setup has become a familiar feature in online investment abuse. Instead of relying on a single domain, operators often build a cluster around the same project: a homepage for presentation, a portal for onboarding, and a separate trading page for logins and account activity.
Regulator continues focus on evolving online tactics
The same notice also pointed to the broader evolution of online fraud methods, including cloned websites, fake emails, fabricated public identities, and AI-generated content such as altered images, voices, and videos used to make unlawful offers appear more convincing.
The latest six-site action fits into that wider pattern. The websites do not appear as isolated pages, but as linked structures that combine branding, account access, and trading-style presentation under connected domains.
About WikiFX
WikiFX is a global broker information platform that provides broker profiles, licence records, risk alerts, and regulatory updates across multiple jurisdictions. It helps users review a platforms background before opening an account or transferring 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.
