1. What Levante Markets is Selling
Levante Markets operates under levantemarkets.com, claiming to be a "premium multi-asset trading platform" focusing on Forex and CFDs, MetaTrader 5, and leverage "up to 1:1000".[1] Its "About Us" page further claims to operate "under a recognized regulatory framework," with "5+ licensed entities," "250,000+ active traders," and "serving 180+ countries."[2]
However, the same page does not provide any license numbers, names of regulatory bodies, or a list of licensed entities. It merely states that "detailed regulatory information is available upon request or in relevant legal documents."[2] For a platform claiming to serve 180 countries, this is a red flag—legitimate licensed brokers typically disclose license information for client verification.
2. Offshore Structure: Saint Lucia Registration + Cyprus Office
The footer of Levante Markets shows the operating entity as Levante Markets Ltd, registration number 2026-00081, with a legal address in Saint Lucia and an office in Limassol, Cyprus.[1]
- Saint Lucia Address: The Sotheby Building, Rodney Village, Rodney Bay, Gros-Islet (shared with several offshore registration agents)[6]
- Cyprus Address: Griva Digeni, 80, Swepco Court 6 (the same address used by another trading brand, Dama Markets Limited)[7]
Company Registration ≠ Broker Regulation. The Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA) of Saint Lucia clearly states that it does not issue licenses for Forex trading or brokerage activities.[9][10] While the Cyprus address exists, Levante Markets has never disclosed any CySEC license number nor provided an entity name that can be verified in the CySEC register on public pages.[2]
3. Domain Timeline: 2026 Registration vs. "250,000 Active Traders"
WHOIS shows that levantemarkets.com was registered on January 13, 2026.[3]
A domain registered just a few months ago, paired with claims of "250,000 active traders" and "serving 180 countries," is a typical contradictory signal. Legitimate large brokers usually have a long traceable regulatory record, media coverage, and company filings. Such depth is absent in Levante Markets' public footprint.[2][3]
4. 1:1000 Leverage: A Signal of Operating Outside Mainstream Regulatory Frameworks
Levante Markets promotes 1:1000 leverage.[1]
In comparison:
- Australia's ASIC limits leverage for retail clients on major Forex pairs to 30:1[8]
- Leverage limits under the CySEC/ESMA framework range from 30:1 to 2:1[9]
A leverage of 1:1000 indicates that Levante Markets does not operate under these protective rules, regardless of its marketing claims of "regulatory standards." High leverage is not just "higher risk," but a conversion tool: making small deposits appear "powerful," accelerating account blowouts, and pressuring clients to add funds after losses.
5. Disorganized Information Disclosure and Template Traces
Levante Markets' homepage claims "spreads from 0.4 pips, no commission," while its CFD page lists a "$3.50 per lot" commission option.[1][12] Its news and careers pages still display placeholders like "loading news..."[1][18] Such inconsistencies and placeholders are common in quick white-label setups but usually indicate weak disclosure discipline, often accompanied by opaque withdrawals and a lack of complaint channels.
The login page shows "Powered By FXBackOffice"[4]—third-party components are not illegal, but combined with a very new domain and vague regulatory statements, they point to a model of rapid setup followed by aggressive marketing.
6. The High-Risk Model Behind Levante Markets
Levante Markets presents a typical unregulated offshore CFD broker model. In this model, the most common failure point is not "trading performance," but withdrawals. Clients may see "profits" on screen but encounter various frictions when attempting to withdraw: repeated verification requests, sudden "fees," trading volume conditions, or demands for additional deposits under the guise of "compliance reasons" to "unlock" withdrawals.
Third-party risk pages have marked Levante Markets as "SCAM" or problematic, primarily based on the lack of clear licensing and the Saint Lucia registration narrative.[14] We view such pages as secondary signals, but they align closely with the structural weaknesses disclosed by Levante Markets itself.[1][2][3][5]
7. Withdrawal Dilemmas and Common Victim Pathways
In the offshore broker trap, the initial deposit is just the beginning. The typical escalation path includes:
- "Account managers" encouraging larger deposits
- Extreme leverage accelerating losses
- After losses, being asked for "margin top-ups" or to "unlock withdrawals"
- When clients insist on withdrawing, new obstacles like "tax prepayments" or "wallet verification fees" appear
When clients suspect Levante Markets lacks effective regulation, the top priority is to stop putting more money into the risk cycle—refuse any new payments under the guise of "verification funds," "unfreezing fees," or "margin top-ups." Instead, escalate disputes through external channels like payment providers, banks, or card issuers, rather than continuing to negotiate with the platform's internal "customer service."[10][11]
8. The Real Difficulties of Cross-Border Recourse
Offshore broker disputes are difficult because jurisdiction and enforcement become obstacles. Even if a company is "registered," clients' actual recourse is very limited.
Historical cases have repeatedly demonstrated the destructive power of such cross-border structures:
- Banc de Binary: The CFTC obtained a federal court order requiring it to pay restitution and fines[16]
- OneCoin: The U.S. Department of Justice described it as a massive global fraud scheme, defrauding victims of billions of dollars[17]
Levante Markets is not OneCoin or Banc de Binary, but the core risk logic is the same: once funds flow into a weakly regulated cross-border structure, recovery becomes uncertain, slow, and often incomplete.
9. Conclusion: High Risk, Strong Fraud Suspicion
Levante Markets presents multiple high-risk signals, collectively supporting a severe fraud risk assessment:
- Vague Licensing: Claims of "international licenses" and "recognized regulatory framework," but no clear public license identifiers on the main page.[1][2]
- Offshore Structure: Saint Lucia company registration + Cyprus "office," a common but investor protection-lacking structure.[1][5]
- Very New Domain: Registered in January 2026, yet claims 250,000 active traders and service in 180+ countries.[2][3]
- Extreme Leverage: 1:1000, inconsistent with mainstream retail protection frameworks like ASIC, CySEC/ESMA.[1][8][9]
Until Levante Markets provides verifiable regulatory body names, license numbers, and clear legal entity contracting details that match official registers, it should be considered a high-risk offshore trading counterpart with strong fraud suspicion.
References
- [1] https://www.levantemarkets.com/ (2026-06-03)
- [2] https://www.levantemarkets.com/about (2026-06-03)
- [3] https://www.whois.com/whois/levantemarkets.com (2026-06-03)
- [4] https://secure.levantemarkets.com/login (2026-06-03)
- [5] https://www.traderknows.com/zh-Hans/wiki/organizations/ee80eff3d4034f509d0d1403b2ddc7f3 (2026-06-03)
- [6] https://fsrastlucia.org/index.php/registered-agents-trustees/regulated-entities (2026-06-03)
- [7] https://damarketslimited.com/ (2026-06-03)
- [8] https://www.asic.gov.au/about-asic/news-centre/find-a-media-release/2020-releases/20-254mr-asic-product-intervention-order-strengthens-cfd-protections/ (2026-06-03)
- [9] https://www.cysec.gov.cy/CMSPages/GetFile.aspx?guid=2489c262-ffc6-4f64-ab57-90667c953d45 (2026-06-03)
- [10] https://www.fca.org.uk/consumers/warning-list-unauthorised-firms (2026-06-03)
- [11] https://www.fca.org.uk/consumers/clone-firms-individuals (2026-06-03)
- [12] https://www.levantemarkets.com/cfd (2026-06-03)
- [13] https://www.levantemarkets.com/platforms (2026-06-03)
- [14] https://www.fastbull.com/brokersview/brokers/levante-markets (2026-06-03)
- [15] https://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/PressReleases/7336-16 (2026-06-03)
- [16] https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/co-founder-multibillion-dollar-cryptocurrency-scheme-onecoin-sentenced-20-years-prison (2026-06-03)
- [17] https://www.levantemarkets.com/careers (2026-06-03)