Broker Warning Lists: How Regulators Protect You (With Real Examples)
Regulators cannot knock on every door to warn you about a suspicious website — but they do maintain public lists of businesses that have attracted concern. Think of these lists as community noticeboards: names and websites regulators believe may be operating without proper authorisation, misleading consumers, or impersonating legitimate firms.
This guide explains Australia's main warning list in plain language, walks through educational examples (drawn from the type of entries found on public alert lists), and shows you how to check any broker name in about two minutes.
What Is the Investor Alert List?
The Investor Alert List on Moneysmart is ASIC's public register of entities that have come to its attention and may be offering financial services to Australians without holding the required Australian licence, or may be running scams.
Important nuances:
- Listing is not a criminal conviction. It means ASIC has identified concerns worth publishing so consumers can protect themselves.
- Absence from the list is not a clean bill of health. New scams appear constantly; a name not yet listed may still be unlicensed.
- Always combine list checks with register checks. The list catches warnings; ASIC Professional Registers confirm who is actually licensed.
ASIC publishes alerts because informed consumers are harder to defraud. Using the list takes less time than recovering lost savings.
Educational Examples From Public Alert-Style Entries
The names below illustrate the kind of entities that frequently appear on regulator warning lists worldwide. They are used here for education only. Status and details change; always search current official lists yourself — do not rely on this page as a live database.
Disclaimer: These examples are representative of patterns seen on public investor alert publications. Inclusion in this educational article does not reflect a real-time ASIC determination. Verify any specific name directly on moneysmart.gov.au/investor-alert-list and asic.gov.au today.
Example Pattern 1: Trade24
Names like "Trade24" often appear in alert contexts because they sound established and international, yet register searches show no matching Australian Financial Services licence for the entity soliciting local clients. Warning entries typically note unsolicited contact, offshore operation, and websites promoting leveraged products without appropriate Australian authorisation.
Lesson: A short, professional brand name plus a slick website is not evidence of regulation. Search the legal entity behind the brand.
Example Pattern 2: FX Global Markets
Foreign exchange themed names — "FX Global Markets" is a typical style — frequently surface where platforms claim global reach but target Australians without ASIC licensing. Alerts may list multiple related domain names and note that the business is not authorised to provide financial services in Australia.
Lesson: "Global" in the name does not mean "regulated in your country." Check where the contracting legal entity is incorporated and whether it holds an AFS licence.
Example Pattern 3: Capital Growth Alliance
Investment-themed names implying steady capital appreciation appear often in consumer warnings. Entries of this type may describe high-pressure phone sales, requests for remote access to devices, or promotional materials with unrealistic performance charts — without proper disclosure documents.
Lesson: Marketing language about "growth" and "alliance" is cheap. Licences and written disclosures are what count.
Example Pattern 4: SmartTrade Online
Online trading brands with words like "Smart" and "Trade" in the title are common in alert list archives because they mirror legitimate industry language while operating outside supervision. Warnings may state the website is operated by an unlicensed entity and that funds transferred are at high risk.
Lesson: If the only "smart" thing about the platform is its advertising budget, your two-minute register search will show it.
Imposter Sites Pretending to Be Banks
Some of the most harmful warnings involve clone or impersonation sites — fake pages that mimic major Australian banks, super funds, or well-known licensed brokers. They may copy logos, colour schemes, and even stolen licence numbers from unrelated legitimate companies.
How Bank Imposters Operate
- Domains like majorbank-secure-login.net instead of the bank's official domain;
- Emails from free webmail providers claiming to be "compliance teams";
- Links sent via SMS ("Your account is locked — click here");
- Requests to move money to a "safe account" or a "regulated trading vault."
Real banks do not ask you to transfer savings to third-party trading platforms via urgent phone instructions. If in doubt, call the number on your bank card — not the number in the message — and ask whether the communication is genuine.
Pair warning list searches with the clone detection steps in our licence check guide and the pressure-call red flags in Don't Get Scammed.
How to Check Any Name in Two Minutes
Bookmark this mini-workflow on your phone:
- Minute one — Moneysmart: Open moneysmart.gov.au/investor-alert-list. Search the brand name, legal name, and website domain. Read any matching alert in full.
- Minute two — ASIC registers: Open ASIC Professional Registers via asic.gov.au. Search the exact legal entity name from the website footer. Confirm licence status and permitted activities.
If you have thirty extra seconds, search the name plus "warning" on your preferred search engine and scan for regulator pages before reading promotional reviews.
What to Record When You Search
- Date and time of search;
- Screenshot of register result or "no results";
- URL in the address bar (for evidence if you later report);
- Licence number claimed on the website versus number on the register.
What If Your Broker Is on the List?
Finding a match is uncomfortable — but finding out after transferring money is worse. If the entity you were considering appears on the Investor Alert List:
- Do not send money or identity documents. If you already sent funds, stop further transfers immediately.
- Contact your bank if payments were made — ask about fraud reporting options.
- Preserve evidence — screenshots, emails, chat logs, payment receipts.
- Report to ASIC through official channels on asic.gov.au and read Moneysmart scam help.
- Warn others discreetly — many scams spread through referrals from trusting friends.
A list match does not always mean every user lost money, but it means regulators saw enough concern to publish. That is not a risk worth taking for the sake of convenience.
Warning Lists vs Licence Registers
| Tool | What it tells you | What it does not tell you |
|---|---|---|
| Investor Alert List | ASIC has flagged this name or site as potentially unauthorised or harmful | That a non-listed entity is safe |
| ASIC Professional Registers | Whether a legal entity holds a current AFS licence and what it may do | That you will have a good customer experience |
Use both. Our choosing your first broker guide explains how they fit into a broader beginner workflow.
International Lists Matter Too
If a platform cites FCA (UK) or CySEC (Cyprus) authorisation, check those regulators' warning pages as well — clone warnings often appear there before you hear anything locally. Quick links are covered in check broker licence.
Staying Current
Lists update as new schemes emerge. Re-check before major decisions even if you searched months ago. Scammers rebrand overnight; "Capital Growth Alliance" becomes "Capital Growth Partners" with the same call centre.
Two minutes on official websites beats two years wondering why nobody answers your withdrawal request.
Wrap-Up
Regulator warning lists are free, public, and designed for you — not for industry insiders. Learn the patterns illustrated by names like Trade24, FX Global Markets, Capital Growth Alliance, and SmartTrade Online, but always verify live data on moneysmart.gov.au/investor-alert-list. Combine list checks with ASIC register searches, clone awareness, and the scam checklist in our other guides. That habit stack is how informed Australians stay ahead of the next wave of fraudulent brokers.