When we trace the signals around New York Finance Company, the noise resolves into a familiar pattern of deposit-and-stall fraud. We are documenting it here so people can recognise it before they send more.
SIGNAL SHEET
- Operator: New York Finance Company
- Flagged by: IOSCO I-SCAN (United States of America – Securities and Exchange Commi
- Status: Reported / on watchlist
- Risk level: High
How losses unfold
Victims describe the same slide: a confident pitch, a demo that ‘works’, bigger and bigger deposits, and finally a payout that is always one more fee away. The profits were never leaving the platform.
Red flags on file
- The ‘account manager’ is friendly, always available, and always steering you toward another deposit.
- 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 (United States of America – Securities and Exchange Commi).
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?
Recognise this pattern from New York Finance Company? Start a case review and we will look at the details with you – no guarantees, just a straight assessment.