EXPERT
SCORE
Julia Nguyen brings a wealth of expertise in digital marketing and public relations to our team. Her career began with a passion for storytelling and connecting with audiences through compelling narratives. Julia’s journey in marketing started in a dynamic agency environment, where she honed her skills in campaign strategy, content creation, and community engagement.
Joining our team as a marketing specialist, Julia plays a crucial role in amplifying our mission and expanding our reach within the trading community. She crafts strategic marketing campaigns that resonate with traders worldwide, highlighting our platform’s unique value propositions and educational resources. Julia ‘s ability to leverage digital channels and analytics ensures that our messages reach the right audience at the right time.
Traders highly value fast order execution, exclusive client service, and reliable protection of their funds. Scam brokers know this very well and exploit it effectively: fraudsters promise access to modern trading terminals, hundreds or even thousands of assets, and competitive trading conditions. Finsea24, the subject of this analysis, falls into this category. Clients who trust the promises of this company risk losing all their invested funds irreversibly. To help users avoid such pitfalls, we have carefully analyzed the platform’s methods of operation.
We have little doubt that we are dealing with a scam broker. However, it would be premature to draw final conclusions before analyzing the official data.
The official website provides no hint of the company’s office location or registration. Moreover, the contact details do not even include phone numbers that could suggest the regions in which the platform operates. This essentially indicates that the broker has no official registration in any country. We attempted to find registration information in the OpenCorporates database, a global aggregator containing records of over 223 million legal entities worldwide.
As expected, no information about a company named Finsea24 was found. Our assumptions turned into certainty, the platform operates without registration and exists only online. Naturally, the broker cannot obtain a license from regulators in any jurisdiction. Accordingly, its provision of access to financial markets is entirely illegal, and trading is merely simulated.
It appears that this does not concern the project owners at all. They likely target novice traders who are unfamiliar with applicable laws or methods for identifying scam brokers. Clients are probably approached via cold calls using illegally obtained databases. Since inexperienced traders readily believe promises of high profits with minimal effort and risk, pseudo-brokers like Finsea24 continue to appear online and collect substantial sums from accounts.
The project creators also provided no information about its history. They do not even specify the founding date of this pseudo-broker. Therefore, we determined its operational period based on domain registration data, which are publicly available via services like WHOIS.
The results were as expected: according to WHOIS, the active domain was registered on June 23, 2025, and based on the last significant update, the broker’s website only became operational on August 13. Thus, at the time of our finsea24.com analysis, the platform had existed for less than four months.
Now let’s take a closer look at some of the statistics presented on Finsea24’s homepage. The site claims that the company has attracted over 250,000 traders, generating a monthly Bitcoin turnover equivalent to $2.2 billion. However, according to statistics from sources like Google, achieving such a number of registrations in the financial sector would require the broker’s website to receive around 17 million impressions in just two months, which is clearly impossible.
Moreover, for the claimed turnover to occur, each trader would have had to execute only $8,800 worth of trades over two months, which, even with 1:100 leverage, amounts to just $88 of the client’s own funds. In short, the broker’s creators are clearly not good with numbers.
Experts on specialized websites have a completely different opinion. For example, a review calls it a “one-day project” and warns traders that any funds deposited with this pseudo-broker will never be returned.
Another red flag indicating that Finsea24 is a scam broker appears in its trading conditions. The company claims to offer trading with a maximum leverage of 1:500. This allows users to operate with amounts many times higher than their actual capital. In practice, with only $100 in the account, a trader could open a $50,000 position. While this seems attractive for potentially multiplying profits instantly, in reality it turns trading into an uncontrolled gambling risk.
The leverage level directly affects two key factors that determine a deposit’s survivability:
With 1:500 leverage, only a minimal margin is required to open a trade. For a $50,000 trade at 1:500 leverage, the margin is just $100, leaving very little free capital to cover potential losses.
Example. You open a $50,000 trade with $1,000 in your account. The broker locks $100 as margin, leaving $900 free. At 1:500 leverage, a loss of just 1.8% of the position ($900 of $50,000) is enough to trigger a Stop Out, causing the trader to lose almost the entire deposit.
With 1:10 leverage, the same trade would require $5,000 margin, making it impossible to open the position with only $1,000. Even with a $5,000 deposit, a loss would need to reach 90% of the position value to trigger the Stop Out.
When trading with a small deposit and high leverage, even minor price movements (for example, 10–20 points or a few tenths of a percent) can be catastrophic. Using a large-volume lot dramatically increases the value of a point. If a 0.01-lot trade has a point value of $0.1, with 1:500 leverage, a single point could be worth $10 or more. This means losses accumulate dozens of times faster.
The risks of high leverage are not limited to mathematics; it also severely affects a trader’s psychological resilience. The possibility of investing $100 and instantly earning $500 creates euphoria. But when the market moves against the position, the speed at which the deposit melts causes panic and tilting. The user loses the ability to make rational decisions, increases losing positions (averages down), or disables StopLoss, hoping for a reversal, which almost always leads to complete account destruction.
Systemic risks also increase, such as:
Credit is due to the website developers — they made an effort to create a multi-page web resource and populate it with content. However, the results are underwhelming. For example, the Home Page is overloaded with advertising slogans that provide virtually no insight into the company or its offerings. Although visually the site looks decent, excessive graphics and animations slow page loading and make scrolling noticeably laggy.
At first glance, the page content seems better, but on closer inspection, this impression fades. For example:
Finsea24 does not provide any trading conditions. Even on the page with account types, only the minimum deposit and maximum leverage for each account are listed. The company offers five account types:
Other conditions, such as spreads and swaps, as well as parameters for placing pending orders, traders will have to figure out on their own, risking their own funds. At the same time, the other options in the account type table may leave a strong impression on beginners. For example, to participate in exclusive webinars or private events, it is enough to deposit 50,000 or 100,000 euros.
We see a typical scammer’s approach to disclosing trading conditions. They publish leverage, enticing novice traders with the illusion of quick and substantial profits. At the same time, there is no mention of trader costs (spreads, swaps). Interest in higher-tier accounts, which require a significant minimum deposit, is carefully stimulated. As the minimum balance increases, leverage also rises. Inexperienced users may think this expands profitable trading opportunities. In reality, it significantly increases risks, bringing the probability of losing large deposits to nearly 100%.
The contact page on the broker’s website looks very poor. The listed support options include only:
There are no addresses (despite the broker claiming 15 active offices) and no phone numbers. It seems the Finsea24 owners decided to save money and did not even rent virtual offices.
There are also no social media links in the contacts section. The project creators likely considered it impractical to spend time and resources creating and maintaining groups or channels, especially since no one expects this pseudo-broker to exist for long.