Niivesh Capital

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CheckBroker register › Niivesh Capital
AC-500585

Niivesh Capital

⚠ Flagged on the register · High risk

We checked Niivesh Capital against the AskCheck register. It has been reported (2026) and carries the red flags below. Treat it with extreme caution.

Why it’s flagged

⚑ Offshore / shell registration

What we found

First, Niivesh Capitals claims to be regulated by the Anjouan Offshore Finance Authority (AOFA). While a matching entry exists in the AOFA system, the absence of an official website makes it difficult to verify. Moreover, the AOFA offers minimal regulatory oversight, and its licenses lack significant international recognition. Second, regarding its claim of being registered in Saint Lucia, please note that this only represents a standard International Business Company (IBC) incorporation. This is merely a company registration and does not constitute a valid license to operate as a forex broker. Third, the platform claims an association with TENX Capital, which is registered with the Mauritius FSC. However, our search found no record of Niivesh Capitals in the FSC system, nor was there any evidence proving a legitimate link between the two entities. In summary, although Niivesh Capitals presents multiple regulatory claims, the information is largely unverifiable and unreliable. Given these serious discrepancies, the platform appears to be 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 Niivesh Capital.
  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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