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His career began in retail banking, where he honed his skills in assisting clients with various financial needs. Over the years, Daniel transitioned into supporting traders and investors, becoming well-versed in the intricacies of the trading industry.
At traderhelpbook.com, Daniel plays a pivotal role as the head of customer support. He is dedicated to ensuring that every user receives prompt and effective assistance. Daniel ‘s deep understanding of financial services and his commitment to customer satisfaction make him instrumental in providing a positive experience for our users. His friendly demeanor and problem-solving skills contribute to building trust and fostering long-term relationships with our community of traders and investors.
Don’t want to become a victim of yet another scam and lose all your money? Then this LFtrade overview is written just for you. This is a short guide about a scam platform that lures clients under the guise of a Forex/CFD broker. Here you’ll find out whether it has a license, whether its trading conditions are favorable, and whether non-trading operations are safe. We present all the evidence showing why you shouldn’t trust this fake company. Ready to learn the details? You’ll find them below.
We have no doubt that most of the broker’s current clients are market newcomers who can hardly tell a regulated company from a scam project. However, we have simple and convincing evidence that this is a scam platform.
Let’s start with registration. The footer of the site claims that LFtrade Crypto Ltd is a Swiss company. The Trading Agreement also suggests Swiss jurisdiction in section 13 (Jurisdiction), stating that the platform operates under Swiss law and any disputes are resolved in local courts.
However, no such company exists in the Swiss commercial register. Nor are there any firms with similar names.
In fact, when we didn’t see a company’s registration number anywhere on the site, we weren’t surprised. The reason is that the Swiss regulator, FINMA (whose license is mandatory for brokers registered in the country and operating there) imposes very strict disclosure requirements. These rules apply to both banks and brokerage firms and are designed to ensure financial transparency:
We even searched for LFtrade in the OpenCorporates database. Among 223+ million companies worldwide, we found only a Singaporean company called LFTRADE ADVISORS PTE. LTD.
Using the name LF Trade produced slightly more results: 12 companies worldwide use this name. However, none of them include “Crypto” in their title. From this, we can conclude:
On its About page, the broker presents a full story claiming it was founded in 2020 and became a global company by 2024–2025. Since these claims are unreliable, we checked the domain’s registration date using Whois.
As we can see, the domain was registered in July 2025. We were about to conclude that it had only existed for a couple of months at the time of writing our LFtrade review. However, while analyzing comments, we accidentally discovered that the broker initially operated on the domain lftrade.com. That domain is much older, it first appeared in February 2016. Judging by Web Archive snapshots, the company acquired it at the beginning of 2025 and was forced to change it by July. Why? We couldn’t find a clear answer, but we believe it was due to negative opinions on trading portals and/or inclusion in regulators’ blacklists.
The domain change, according to the project owners, allowed LFtrade to create a new image. And they really tried: since September 2025, 20 reviews have appeared on Reviews.io, and 10 on HelloPeter, all of them completely positive. Of course, we would like to believe that clients post genuine feedback every day, but after reading them, it’s clear the company heavily pays for these flattering posts, which have nothing to do with reality.
And that’s not the end of the story! Apparently, the project’s founders are very reluctant to part with this brand, as while we were preparing our review, a second domain change occurred. The broker now operates on the website lftrade.co, registered only on November 24, 2025. Incidentally, lftrade.co reviews are quite limited;; so far, we’ve only seen a few mediocre videos on YouTube.
We noticed that LFtrade offers clients leverage up to 1:200. At first glance, it looks very attractive: it allows opening a position 200 times larger than your own capital. For example, with only $100 in the account, a trader could control $20,000 worth of assets. But this is exactly the main trap. The higher the leverage, the more sensitive the account becomes to even the smallest price changes. A market move of just 0.5% against the position can wipe out the entire deposit.
For beginners, this situation is especially dangerous. They often underestimate the impact of volatility and open trades with their full deposit, without setting protective orders. As a result, a single bad entry or unexpected news event can liquidate the deposit. This benefits the broker: trades are forcibly closed via StopOut, the broker earns a profit, and the trader is left with nothing.
Leverage of 1:200 (or any high leverage) distorts market perception. When it seems possible to earn many times more than invested, risk is perceived as secondary. But in practice, the result is almost always the same, a loss of capital. That’s why, according to rules adopted by ESMA (European Securities and Markets Authority) in 2018, maximum leverage for retail clients is:
These levels are designed to protect investors reliably.
The developers of the broker’s official website clearly tried hard to meet the owners’ requirements. And they even managed to get a few things right, such as a reasonably pleasant design without excessive graphics or animations. However, the homepage, assembled from fragments of all the other pages, is not exactly what one would hope to see.
A closer look at the website’s content makes it clear that this creation is far from a proper broker’s web resource. The content problems are not few, they are MANY. Here are just a few examples:
Potential clients might also be “pleased” with the registration process. You fill out two forms, one for login information and one for personal details, and that’s it. No account is created, and you don’t even receive a confirmation email. Contacting support might help, but it’s not guaranteed. This favorite scammer trick does not surprise us; it appears on nearly every second scam site. The reason is clear: scammers don’t need a flow of registrations, they only want clients who are ready to deposit funds. And without personal contact, they can’t distinguish them.
Of course, normal traders are at least interested in the broker’s trading conditions. LFtrade, however, has done a great job of ignoring that interest: it simply does not provide any meaningful information.
Some details can be found in the account types table. However, the information there hardly qualifies as actual trading conditions. Here is what can be gleaned: the broker offers three account plans:

Ah yes, we almost forgot: no trading commissions are charged on any account types. That’s it, there are no other trading conditions available to clients. No spreads, no swaps, no MarginCall/StopOut levels, no position size limits are provided to traders.
We could assume that this decision was made so as not to scare off competitors. However, something tells us it’s more likely the result of the staff’s massive incompetence or figures that utterly fail compared to those of major licensed platforms.
Here are a few key points to keep in mind:
The incomplete disclosure of trading conditions, where potential clients do not receive sufficient information about trade parameters and available instruments, violates the requirements of all European regulators, including Swiss authorities. However, LFtrade seems unconcerned. They appear to be relying on inexperienced users’ fascination with large profits to prevent them from objectively assessing the risks of working with a virtual platform, where any successes are illusions and losses are reality.
Perhaps the only thing the broker does not hide is its contact information. However, it raises more questions than it inspires trust. On the Contact Us page and in the site footer, users can find:
The situation with the Geneva address is much more complicated. We are quite certain that the company does not have a “physical” office there. Otherwise, we would also see a room number. It’s possible that the address is virtual, rented solely as a mailbox to receive correspondence. Another possibility is that the address listed is simply the first available office building, with which the company has no actual connection. We believe the latter is more likely, since an unregistered company could face difficulties even renting a virtual office.
Naturally, the London phone number for a Swiss company amused us. The obvious conclusion: the number is also virtual and used for VoIP.
Thus, we have every reason to say that LFtrade has nothing real except an email address. By the way, the company also has no social media profiles. This is not surprising, as scam brokers usually do not create them. Maintaining channels or groups for several months is simply impractical. It seems the owners of this project act according to exactly these considerations.