1. What It Sells: $100,000 Minimum Investment, Two-Year Lock-In Period
cryptoassetmanagers.com presents itself as a crypto hedge fund "investing in digital assets on behalf of clients," claiming to use "research-driven strategies and professional management," and emphasizing "nationwide" service. Its "Investors" page clearly states: Minimum investment of $100,000, lock-in period of two years, quarterly profit distribution, with a fee structure of "2% management fee + 20% performance fee".[1][4]
The FAQ page further confirms: a minimum of $100,000, a two-year lock-in period, and quarterly profit distribution—adding a detail: "Fund managers receive profits monthly." This means investors wait while management gets paid earlier. When transparency is weak and recourse is difficult, this asymmetric cash flow structure poses high risks.[6]
2. Core Conflict: Claims "Unregistered" Yet Raises Funds as a "Fund"
The site's "Legal Disclosures" page clearly states: "Crypto Asset Managers LLC is not a registered investment advisor, broker-dealer, or financial planner." The FAQ repeats this, framing its business as a "private crypto hedge fund for qualified investors."[5][6]
Some legitimate private funds do have registration exemptions, but exemption does not mean "no rules," nor does it automatically prove legality. Even in exempt offerings, investors typically expect clear, verifiable entity information, stable operating companies, professional third-party custody, or audited controls. Yet cryptoassetmanagers.com requires investors to accept long lock-in periods while clearly stating it is unregulated—this combination itself is a major risk signal.[4][5][6]
3. Florida LLC Marked as "Inactive" by State Government
The site frequently uses Florida identity markers, listing the company address in its terms and conditions as "1321 NE 23rd Terrace, Cape Coral, FL 33909."[9]
However, the Florida company registry shows: CRYPTO ASSET MANAGERS LLC filed on December 26, 2024, status as "INACTIVE", with the last event being "ADMIN DISSOLUTION FOR ANNUAL REPORT" (administratively dissolved for not filing an annual report) on September 26, 2025. Records also show "no annual reports filed."[11]
This is not a minor detail. When a company is administratively dissolved or marked inactive, investors face a fundamental question: Who is legally operating today? Under which entity? What enforceable obligations exist? If a financial dispute arises, whom do investors pursue?
Yet cryptoassetmanagers.com continues to present itself as an active "LLC" in its 2026 website footer and materials.[2][20] The contrast between ongoing fundraising and the "inactive" status in the state registry creates a significant credibility gap.
4. BBB File: F Rating, "Lacks Required Competency Licenses"
The Better Business Bureau (BBB) file for "Crypto Asset Managers LLC" shows an "F" rating, citing "failure to hold necessary competency licenses." The file also shows license information as "unlicensed."[12]
While the BBB does not verify all third-party information, its overall description aligns with the platform's own disclosures: cryptoassetmanagers.com operates without the registration status many investors assume when they hear "hedge fund" and "professional management."[5][6][12]
5. Domain Timeline Does Not Support "Years of Experience" Narrative
Domain registration information cannot prove legality, but it is a reality-check tool. WHOIS records show cryptoassetmanagers.com was registered on November 23, 2024.[10] This aligns with a new public operation, not an "industry leader."
However, the site's leadership and marketing language frequently use phrases like "years of experience." A press release published via PRLog in March 2025 also claims the team brings "years of experience," framing the business as a "premier firm."[13] PR distribution sites are not independent verifiers; they are essentially self-publishing channels that support brand promotion but do not verify substance.
6. Recruitment Commission Structure: More Like a Pyramid Scheme Than a Professional Fund
The site publicly posts a detailed "Crypto Affiliate Program" guide, encouraging affiliates to "earn commissions by referring investors," repeatedly emphasizing the $100,000 minimum investment, and describing the program as "high affiliate commissions." It also claims "recurring earnings and continuous revenue sharing as long as the referred person remains an active investor."[7]
This structure shifts the platform's incentive direction. It is not based on fiduciary discipline and verifiable performance but rather an ecosystem where a third party can profit by recruiting new investors into high-threshold, long-lock-in products.[4][7] In scams and high-risk fundraising schemes, commission-driven recruitment often becomes the engine replacing genuine performance records.
7. Case Studies and Testimonials Cannot Be Independently Verified
The site's "Case Studies" page describes seemingly large institutional clients and strong returns, including a "global pension fund" scenario claiming "30% return in the first year," and a hedge fund example with a "20% return" performance narrative. The names used (like "GlobalTech Partners" and "Alpha Hedge Partners") read like placeholders rather than verifiable counterparties. The site provides no external documents, audited reports, or identifiable third-party confirmations.[8]
Its testimonials page uses dozens of five-star reviews, only marked with initials, while emphasizing "quarterly profit distribution" and "two-year lock-in period," as if these features alone prove credibility.[24]
When a company requires a $100,000 minimum investment and a two-year lock-in period, its credibility cannot be built on anonymous testimonials and unverifiable case studies.[4][8][24]
8. Inconsistent Contact Information, Confusing Operational Signals
The site lists multiple phone numbers on different pages and third-party listings: the contact page shows 239-373-0386, terms and conditions list 239-375-5246, and BBB lists (239) 379-3405.[9][12][23] Viewed individually, phone number changes might result from personnel or routing changes. But combined with the inactive state company record and high-threshold investment promotion, this resembles a loosely managed promotional operation rather than a mature financial company.[9][11][12][23]
9. Most Likely Scam Model: A Fund-Freezing Mechanism Under the Guise of a "Private Fund"
Based on the site's structure, the most reasonable risk model is that the "private fund" narrative is used as a fund-freezing mechanism:
- Exclusive Packaging: Limited to qualified investors, "secure," institutional feel, reducing scrutiny, making investors feel they are accessing sophisticated products.[4][5]
- High Threshold + High Commission: A $100,000 minimum investment limits casual complaints, concentrating losses among a few victims, while creating space for high affiliate commissions and aggressive "consulting" sales strategies.[4][7]
- Two-Year Lock-In Period: Provides a built-in excuse for not withdrawing funds—this is precisely the mechanism that can cover liquidity issues, fund misappropriation, or simply refusal to pay.[4][6]
- Affiliate Recruitment Driven: Recruitment-based fund inflow is one of the clearest structural similarities between modern crypto scams and old-fashioned fraud.[7]
None of the above alone proves cryptoassetmanagers.com is running a Ponzi scheme, but its architecture aligns with the scam model of "easy entry of funds, exit only at operator's discretion."
10. What Usually Happens When Investors Try to Exit
In many high-risk crypto investment disputes, the most painful moment is the first attempt to withdraw funds. When capital is contractually locked, or the "process" relies on internal approval, operators can indefinitely delay, require new documents, or redirect investors to new terms. cryptoassetmanagers.com's lock-in period structure places investors in this situation from the start.[4][6]
Regulators repeatedly warn that fraudulent digital asset "consulting and trading" sites often use professional language and high-return or low-risk claims to lure victims.[15][16] The CFTC and SEC specifically caution that fraudsters may claim to have proprietary systems or "robots" to justify profits.[15][21]
If funds have been transferred into such structures, the direct risk is not only market volatility but also enforceability. Crypto transfers are often irreversible, and the wording of "investment agreements" can delay access until funds disappear.
The second wave of risk is "fraud recovery": imposters claiming to represent regulators or investigators charge victims additional fees. The SEC's Investor.gov has warned about false SEC/CFTC statements involving digital assets.[18]
11. Risk Conclusion: A High-Risk Fundraising Structure, Strongly Advised to Avoid
cryptoassetmanagers.com packages high-risk investment fundraising in institutional language, but key public facts do not support the level of trust it asks investors to give:
- Promotes a $100,000 minimum investment and two-year lock-in period, while claiming unregistered status as an investment advisor, broker-dealer, or financial planner.[4][5][6]
- Florida company registry shows CRYPTO ASSET MANAGERS LLC as "inactive" (administratively dissolved for not filing an annual report).[11]
- BBB file reflects licensing issues, rated "F".[12]
- Domain registered in late 2024, inconsistent with "years of experience" claims.[10][13]
- Publicly promotes affiliate program, incentivizing recruitment of investors into high-threshold products with commissions.[7]
Until cryptoassetmanagers.com can be independently verified through stable company existence, transparent legal structure, credible third-party oversight, and regulatory-consistent disclosures, it should be considered a high-risk platform unsafe for investor funds.
References
- [1] https://cryptoassetmanagers.com/ (2026-06-08)
- [2] https://cryptoassetmanagers.com/about/ (2026-06-08)
- [4] https://cryptoassetmanagers.com/investors/ (2026-06-08)
- [5] https://cryptoassetmanagers.com/legal-disclosures/ (2026-06-08)
- [6] https://cryptoassetmanagers.com/faq/ (2026-06-08)
- [7] https://cryptoassetmanagers.com/crypto-affiliate-program/ (2026-06-08)
- [8] https://cryptoassetmanagers.com/case-studies/ (2026-06-08)
- [9] https://cryptoassetmanagers.com/terms-conditions/ (2026-06-08)
- [10] https://www.whois.com/whois/cryptoassetmanagers.com (2026-06-08)
- [11] https://search.sunbiz.org/ (search CRYPTO ASSET MANAGERS LLC) (2026-06-08)
- [12] https://www.bbb.org/us/fl/cape-coral/profile/investment-management/crypto-asset-managers-llc-0653-90452581 (2026-06-08)
- [13] https://www.prlog.org/13066968-crypto-asset-managers-launches-cutting-edge-cryptocurrency-asset-management-services.html (2026-06-08)
- [15] https://www.cftc.gov/LearnAndProtect/AdvisoriesAndArticles/watch_out_for_digital_fraud.html (2026-06-08)
- [16] https://www.sec.gov/resources-for-investors/investor-alerts-bulletins/private-placements-under-regulation-d-investor-bulletin (2026-06-08)
- [18] https://www.investor.gov/introduction-investing/general-resources/news-alerts/alerts-bulletins/investor-alerts/investor-10 (2026-06-08)
- [19] https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/co-founder-multibillion-dollar-cryptocurrency-scheme-onecoin-sentenced-20-years-prison (2026-06-08)
- [20] https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/bitconnect-founder-indicted-global-24-billion-cryptocurrency-scheme (2026-06-08)
- [21] https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdca/pr/founder-fraudulent-cryptocurrency-charged-2-billion-bitconnect-ponzi-scheme (2026-06-08)
- [23] https://cryptoassetmanagers.com/contact/ (2026-06-08)
- [24] https://cryptoassetmanagers.com/crypto-investment-testimonials/ (2026-06-08)