EXPERT
SCORE
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.
Another Forex/CFD broker that claims to work with more than a quarter of a million market participants promises clients “championship-level” trading speeds. Traders are told to expect only the best: from cooperation with a company literally showered with industry awards and prizes to supposedly ultra-favorable trading conditions. However, the reality users face is radically different from this glossy picture. In the Rockwell Invest review, we explain why we consider this project a scam, how the company deceives its clients, and what traders should do to avoid losing their money. All materials about this creation of fraudsters can be found below.
It is worth starting with the rather striking promise of trading at Formula 1 speeds. This slogan could have impressed us with its originality, but there is one problem: this broker is far from the first to use it. Such phrases are easy to remember, so it did not take us long to find a couple of companies that used almost identical wording on their homepage banners — PlusCapitalAdvisor and BTC Trading Pro. Incidentally, their websites turned out to be almost identical. We are pleased to inform you that this friendly family of scam projects has a new member: Rockwell Invest differs from them only by name.
Take, for example, the statistics displayed on the homepage. The site’s creators did not even bother to change a single figure. As in the previous cases, we see claims of 232,000 client accounts, a total balance of 3 billion USD, and an average client income of 7.2 million USD per day. At the same time, the contradictory figure of only 15,000 active traders is still there.
We did not even need to recalculate anything: in earlier reviews we already showed that the average deposit is around $13,000, while the average client earns only about $480. In short, the legend is the same, the data are unreliable, and of course such figures do nothing to build trust in the company.
That said, the Rockwell Invest website does feature one notable difference. While the first two companies provided information about their registration and licenses in Canada, which we were able to convincingly refute, this latest incarnation of the scam platform’s team chose not to provide any such details at all. The only information we could find on the pages of this newly launched pseudo-broker was a reference to a headquarters in London and several phone numbers with UK, Swiss, and Canadian country codes.
On the About Us page, the project’s creators confidentially explain to visitors that they do not publish information about registration, licenses, and similar details for security reasons, allegedly to prevent fraudsters from misusing the company’s official data. Instead, they suggest sending OFFICIAL requests to customer support, which, supposedly, will promptly provide all the necessary information in response. In practice, this means that a potential client will never receive this information.
With this very limited set of data, we can at least attempt to verify the company’s registration details in the United Kingdom, where its headquarters are claimed to be located.
A check of the address listed on the website showed that there are no company offices at this location at all, and the buildings in this area actually belong to The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). It is highly unlikely that this institution would lease space to third-rate pseudo-companies.
One might assume that the broker uses a trading name rather than the company’s official name. However, the footer clearly states that the trading name and company name are identical.
We were left with no choice but to try to find firms named Rockwell Invest in other jurisdictions, for which we used the global aggregator OpenCorporates.
Among the 223+ million legal entities in its database, we found only a single Spanish company whose name matched the search query. However, this was a small investment firm with no connection to Forex/CFD trading.
Thus, official sources fully confirmed our assumptions: we are dealing with a virtual broker that exists only online and, of course, cannot claim any licenses from reputable regulators (UK, European, or Canadian). In fact, no formal check was even necessary to understand this: all the listed regulatory bodies require information about registration and licenses to be publicly available, not provided only upon request. A regulated provider of brokerage/dealer services cannot ignore these requirements. Accordingly, any lawful activity on the part of Rockwell Invest is out of the question.
Other signs of a scam remain on the fake broker’s website. For example, its owners have not bothered to update the list of industry awards, which we previously highlighted as a major red flag. To recap:
In short, the pseudo-company we are discussing could not have received any of these awards. Its operational domain, according to Whois data, was registered only on October 20, 2025.
So, from the launch of the site to the writing of our rockwellinvest.com analysis, only two months have passed. Naturally, both the awards claimed for 2020–2024 and the supposed 232,000 registered users are purely fictional, intended by the scammers to deceive inexperienced traders. We, of course, will make every effort to prevent this.
In just a couple of months online, the scam platform has not even accumulated many reviews; for example, there are only two on Trustpilot at this time. However, it has already attracted the attention of experts on thematic portals and received a significant amount of negative feedback.
Rockwell Invest also offers Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA) with a guaranteed 8% annual return. Investors can deposit any amount, top-ups are always possible, and partial withdrawals are allowed. However, there are a few issues:
As with previous projects, the creators of the broker’s official site wanted to make it look solid. However, their basic laziness betrayed them: they didn’t change the design and left pages that copy well-known scammer web resources, an obviously poor decision. Issues with page loading speed and scaling were also left unaddressed. As a result, we see a site we have already encountered multiple times, with familiar problems. Most importantly, we are confident that both the initial versions and the latest one we are analyzing today belong to the same group of scammers.
The issues with the site’s content haven’t gone away either:
Rockwell Invest has carried over the trading conditions unchanged from its predecessors. As mentioned, there are no contract specifications, and the trader only has the information available on the Pricing & Services pages.
The broker offers a lineup of nine account types. In each description, users only see the minimum deposit amounts, which are:
Clients of Rockwell Invest will find slightly more useful information in the account group descriptions. There are three groups in total:
Once you start exploring these details, you’ll get a clear impression of the broker’s greed. For example, for the first group, the spread on the EUR/USD pair starts at 3.0 points, for the second group at 2.7 points, and for the third group, the minimum spread is 1.6 points. Nothing unusual at first glance, but these values are 4–5 times higher than what regulated companies offer.
That’s not all! The platform also charges trading commissions, and they’re far from small. Check the Pricing page, and you’ll see that the minimum level is $2 per lot. It may seem minor, but don’t rush — look closely: trading under these conditions is only possible for those whose monthly turnover reaches 10,000 standard lots. To achieve this, you’d need to make around 450–500 trades per day. Don’t have the funds? Then be prepared to pay even more!
And yes, don’t forget that the broker also charges withdrawal fees. Of course, if you have a Tier 3 account, this doesn’t apply. For Tier 2 accounts, three free withdrawals are available per month. If you only manage a Tier 1 account, you get just one free withdrawal per month. A very “advantageous” arrangement, especially considering that most regulated brokers do not charge for withdrawals, regardless of account balance.
Do you think the broker’s contact page is reliable? You’re mistaken. Sure, there is some information:
As we’ve already noted, there is no actual Rockwell Invest office at the London address. The phone numbers are most likely part of VoIP pools. This confirms once again that the broker exists exclusively online, there are no physical offices or landline phones.
The platform also has no social media profiles. Even the single YouTube icon only links to a clearly pre-produced video review. The scammers do not have their own channel, likely have no one to manage it, and certainly have no plans to attract active social media users.