InvestingFox is pinned to our watch chart for a reason. When our cartographers traced the operation, the trail lined up with an official warning record rather than with any verifiable licence.
What the chart shows
InvestingFox claims to be a trademark of the company CAPITAL MARKETS, registered in Slovakia, and presents itself as a regulated and licensed entity under the supervision of the National Bank of Slovakia (NBS). While we can confirm that an entity named CAPITAL MARKETS does appear in the NBS’s official register, it is crucial to note that the NBS does not regulate leveraged forex trading or Contracts for Difference (CFDs), the core services typically offered by platforms like InvestingFox. Therefore, even if CAPITAL MARKETS is indeed supervised by the NBS for certain financial activities, it is not authorized to provide forex or CFD trading services under Slovak or EU regulatory frameworks. This means InvestingFox lacks the necessary authorization to operate legally as a retail forex broker in this jurisdiction. Therefore, InvestingFox appears to be a scam.
Red flags on the map
- No verifiable licence for the jurisdictions it targets
- Withdrawal friction: new fees or conditions appear at cash-out time
- Aggressive outreach through social platforms and messaging apps
- Dashboard balances that cannot be verified on-chain
If you have funds with InvestingFox
Do not pay anything further, whatever label the request carries. Gather your records now – transaction hashes, wallet addresses, payment receipts, and every conversation – because the strength of a case rests on that trail.
Cointiverse can chart where the funds moved and give you an honest read on whether a realistic path exists. Start a confidential case review – there is no obligation, and the first assessment is free.
