Few cases reach the Cointiverse cartographer with their trail still legible. 247TradesFX is one of them — not because the operators were careless, but because their laundering geometry is now well-charted territory. What started as a routine intake turned into a multi-jurisdictional cartography exercise once the on-chain map began to fill in.
Cartography summary
Inflow geometry. The chain map shows fund inflow distributed across roughly twelve consumer-grade receiving addresses, with no single address dominating volume. This pattern is associated with platforms that rotate deposit identities to fragment the on-chain footprint.
Outflow geometry. Outflows concentrate sharply: a handful of intermediate addresses receive the majority of consolidated value before bridging or off-ramp. Concentration on the outflow side is the cartographer’s strongest signal of intermediated custody — and the strongest lever for recovery handles.
Bridge transfers. Cross-chain transfers are present in the 247TradesFX trail, with consistent patterns toward two specific bridge contracts. Bridge-stage analysis is where the map most often produces handle-grade evidence.
What the map enables
A chain map is not a refund — but it is the document on which refunds get built. For 247TradesFX cases, the map enables: compliance freeze requests at named exchanges, regulator filings (IC3, CFTC, SEC, Action Fraud where applicable) with on-chain evidence attached, civil-claim drafting with traceable counterparty identification.
Have you been involved with this entity?
Cointiverse maintains the case file index as an active forensic resource. If your loss event intersects with 247TradesFX, the cartographer can review your specific transaction hashes against the existing map.
[Open a Case →](/submit-a-case/) · [Run a Wallet Check](/wallet-checker/)
Disclaimer: Listing in the Cointiverse case file index reflects forensic review of on-chain behavior and victim reports. It is not an assertion of criminal liability.
