Every entity in this index passes through the Cointiverse cartography pipeline before it is pinned to the chart. River Stone enters with its coordinates already flashing: an official warning record sits behind the listing, and the surrounding pattern matches operations our team has mapped many times before.
Reading the coordinates
It claims to be a company founded by a group of professionals in 2014. Strangely, they do not display any valid regulatory information about foreign exchange on their website, and even the most basic office address is not published. We checked the establishment date of its domain name and found that it was not established until 2025. It is therefore obvious that the important information provided on the website is questionable. Investors are advised to identify and stay away from it. In essence, River Stone is not regulated by any governing body. Entrusting it with investors' funds is highly risky, as there are no legal protections in place to safeguard the funds. River Stone appears to be a scam.
Red flags on the map
- Dashboard balances that cannot be verified on-chain
- Pressure to deposit more in order to unlock earlier deposits
- Appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list
- No verifiable licence for the jurisdictions it targets
If you have funds with River Stone
Stop sending money immediately – especially any payment framed as a tax, unlock fee, or verification deposit. Preserve everything: transaction hashes, wallet addresses, receipts, chat logs and emails. The paper trail is what a recovery review runs on.
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.
