Magnumator reached our desk through victim intake and open warning lists. Read the signals together and it reads as a fake trading platform, not a regulated firm.
SIGNAL SHEET
- Operator: Magnumator
- Flagged by: IOSCO I-SCAN (Spain – Comisión Nacional del Mercado de Valores)
- Status: Reported / on watchlist
- Risk level: High
How losses unfold
It usually starts small. A modest deposit shows a tidy profit on a slick dashboard, someone friendly checks in, and the account ‘grows’. The numbers on screen are not backed by anything real, and the good feeling is the bait.
Red flags on file
- A dashboard shows large, steady profits that no real market produces on demand.
- Registration, address and ownership details are vague, borrowed or unverifiable.
- The company name appears on a regulator or fraud-warning list (IOSCO I-SCAN (Spain – Comisión Nacional del Mercado de Valores)).
- You are pushed to deposit more before you can take anything out.
If you have already engaged
If you have already sent funds, stop sending more and preserve everything: transaction hashes, receipts, chat logs, names and links. Those records are what a recovery review actually works from.
Were you in this case?
Were you caught by Magnumator? A short case review is the fastest way to understand whether any of the funds can be traced.