MBBO

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CheckBroker register › MBBO
AC-503726

MBBO

⚠ Flagged on the register · High risk

We checked MBBO against the AskCheck register. It has been reported (2023) and carries the red flags below. Treat it with extreme caution.

Why it’s flagged

⚑ Reported by our community & upstream sources
Named in relation to NFA (U.S.)

What we found

While MBBO claims to be operated by Coinftx, a company with headquarter in Singapore and operation centers in the United States, South Korea, and Hong Kong, our research has found no evidence to support its legitimacy in forex markets. Especially, we would like to emphasize that in the US, the authority to regulate futures and derivative markets rests with the National Futures Association (NFA). Brokers operating in the US must be an NFA member in order to offer financial products or services legally. As such, the licenses this broker provided, including the MSB license by the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and the registration certificate, don't necessarily indicate a broker's legitimacy. We searched for MBBO on the NFA website but did not find any matching records, indicating that MBBO is illegally engaging in forex activities. In essence, MBBO is not overseen by any recognized financial regulatory body. Entrusting this broker with investors' funds is highly risky, as there are no legal protections in place to safeguard the funds. It is unequivocally a scam.

Assessment source: FastBull BrokersView.

What to do next

  1. Stop sending money. Don’t make another deposit, pay a “tax” or “release fee”, or share remote-access to your device.
  2. Gather your evidence. Save statements, chat logs, transaction IDs and the wallet addresses you paid to.
  3. Report it to your regulator and to local police / action-fraud line so it’s on the official record.
  4. Add your report here so the next person searching this name is warned — report MBBO.
  5. Verify on the register. Cross-check the full entry on the SentFunds register before you trust anyone offering to help.
Beware recovery scams. After a loss, fraudsters often return posing as “recovery agents” who guarantee your money back for an up-front fee. AskCheck is a free public checker — we don’t recover funds and we don’t guarantee funds can be recovered. Never pay anyone who promises a guaranteed recovery.

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