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Olivia is a skilled writer and her journey into financial content creation began during her undergraduate studies in economics, where she developed a passion for making complex financial topics understandable for the average reader. Olivia ‘s career path led her to various roles in financial journalism and content management, where she honed her skills in crafting informative and engaging articles.
As the content manager at traderhelpbook.com, Olivia plays a crucial role in developing and curating educational content tailored to traders of all levels. Her mission is to demystify trading concepts and provide clear, actionable insights. Olivia ‘s ability to blend technical expertise with accessible language ensures that our platform remains a valuable resource for both novice and experienced traders alike. Her dedication to accuracy and clarity helps uphold our commitment to providing trustworthy information.
Meet our Orange LTD review — an in‑depth look at a platform whose representatives claim to offer clients professional trading and investment solutions. The company tries to attract users with all sorts of promises: the best trading tools, a state‑of‑the‑art trading platform, and 24/7 expert support. However, traders who’ve seen even more lavish offers from scammers begin to suspect they’re being invited into yet another scam project. Can this firm be trusted? You’ll find the answer below.
The broker paints a rosy picture of its honest operations, claiming to hold a license from a European regulator. We don’t take such claims at face value without documentary proof. Yet the project owners have seriously attempted to convince traders of the legality and legitimacy of their operations by providing a link to a registry entry and a copy of a license in the website footer.
However, things aren’t so straightforward. The link leads not to any European business registry, but to the UK and Northern Ireland Companies House database.
This document raises several red flags:
Regarding regulation, we know full well that companies operating as brokers in the UK must obtain a license from the local financial regulator — the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).
However, as we can see, the actual Irish company has operated without such a permit. The broker, meanwhile, claims to operate under a license from the European regulator FINAEU and even provides a copy of the license allegedly issued by them. Well, every experienced trader knows that licensing of European brokers is handled exclusively by local regulators, and all information about companies operating in accordance with MiFID directives is aggregated by the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), where data on regulated firms can be found.
FINAEU is not listed among the authorities authorized to regulate financial market activities. Moreover, the highly reputable German regulator BaFin already issued a warning stating that FINAEU is a fake regulator created online by scammers.
By the way, it doesn’t exist online, and all mentions of it appear only on scam brokers’ websites such as Orange LTD. The document fabricated by its staff is hosted on the company’s own subdomain, and the text itself easily reveals at least two names of the fake regulator.
Thus, we see that the platform:
For experienced traders, this information is more than enough to identify the project as a scam. To help newcomers, we publish this orange-ltd.org review.
The official website doesn’t provide any information about the date when Orange LTD was established. Apparently, the project owners hoped users would believe it represents a real company and would consider its age from the date shown in the registration record. To obtain objective data, we used the WHOIS service.
As we can see, the operational domain orange-ltd.org was registered on 21 May 2025. This means the platform has been in existence for only 7 months. However, it turns out this domain is not the first one used by scammers. Previously, their official website was hosted on orange-ltd.com, which was registered slightly earlier, on 8 May 2025.
In August, regulators from Austria, Germany, Belgium, and several other European countries published a scam alert. It stated that the broker, which claims to hold a license from a non‑existent regulator, was created by scammers. The project owners were forced to switch to a new domain with the same name but in the .org zone.
As a result, the reviews currently available online have been collected over just a few months. Consequently, there are very few of them, only 2 on Trustpilot. The scammers are now making another attempt to build a positive reputation for their project: both comments praise the broker and its terms.
The above is far from being all the issues one can uncover even during the first acquaintance with Orange LTD. Plenty of problems also exist within the personal account area.
For instance, to register as a new client, users need to fill out a very basic form with just their first and last name and contact information. They receive an active account immediately after submitting it. What can the account holder do? Pretty much anything, for example, fund the account and execute trades.
Meanwhile, the broker’s owners didn’t even bother to:
And this is a company claiming to hold a European license! It violates most provisions of the MiFID directives. After this, it’s simply laughable to think anyone would believe in the legitimacy of this pseudo‑company’s services.
Users will only be required to undergo verification when submitting a withdrawal request. However, it’s unclear what exactly they need to confirm, since the broker doesn’t know anything about its clients beyond their first and last names.
First, when getting acquainted with the broker, we evaluated the design and content of the company’s official website pages. We can say that our impression was far from positive. The navigation structure and page layout with numerous info boxes leave much to be desired; the color scheme, to put it mildly, wasn’t chosen particularly well. However, the most curious feature is that navigation links cannot be opened in a new tab or window. We never figured out what the developers were trying to achieve with this approach.
Although the company’s website has only a few pages (just six), there are plenty of examples of their excellent content. For instance:
In short, the owners of Orange LTD appear to have tasked the developers with putting something on the website, just to simulate the platform’s online presence. However, the developers, it turns out, have no understanding of either the specifics of brokerage services or traders’ interests. And experienced traders won’t open or crucially fund accounts until they receive the necessary information (which they will never get with such a website). However, this only concerns traders with some experience and knowledge. For newcomers whose main goal is to earn as much as possible as quickly as possible, this approach might actually work.
Perhaps the only page that somewhat meets our expectations for broker website content is Account Types. Here, traders can find some characteristics of trading accounts. Still, it’s worth noting that the amount of information here is no greater than on other similar platforms.
As we can see, this page presents some of the most important trading terms:
In total, Orange LTD offers clients 7 tariff plans.
The information in the table is quite telling:
It’s also worth noting other features. They primarily target market newcomers who hope to learn trading while actually trading. Orange LTD responded to this demand swiftly. However, in the personal account we found no webinar programs, no invitations to joint trading sessions with experts, etc. We have a well‑founded view that these offers are just another lure for traders, and the more money you deposit, the sweeter the bait appears.
Overall, it seems the platform uses every available means to appropriate clients’ funds. Does this approach surprise you? It doesn’t surprise us, we’re fully convinced that honest trading with this pseudo‑company was never an option.
The company didn’t even spare a dedicated page on its official website to list its contact information. Instead, it placed contacts in the footer, where users can find:
The broker’s office address is dutifully copied from the registration details of a real Irish firm, and thus has nothing to do with the platform’s actual location. The company publishes no other addresses.
It also shows no desire to burden its support team with phone calls or live chat (we seem to have just invented a good explanation for the absence of both chat and phone numbers). It would also be interesting to know why the firm doesn’t publish links to social media pages. We know that scam platforms avoid them for several reasons: