Every entity in this index passes through the Cointiverse cartography pipeline before it is pinned to the chart. Corex Market 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.
What the chart shows
Corex Market claims to operate under the name Corex Financing Broker LLC and is based in the United Arab Emirates. Thorough checks in the official registers of the UAE’s key financial regulators—the Securities and Commodities Authority (SCA), the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA), and the Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates (CBUAE), there exists no record of Corex Financing Broker LLC being licensed or authorized by any of these regulatory bodies. Additionally, Corex Market states to be regulated in the United States under the name CorexMarket Ltd by the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). While there is indeed a registration under this name in the FinCEN database, FinCEN is not a financial regulator and does not license or supervise forex trading activities. Registration with FinCEN does not authorize a company to offer brokerage services or engage in foreign exchange trading in the U.S.
Red flags on the map
- Appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list
- 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
If you have funds with Corex Market
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.
