1. The Most Direct Judgment: Using Australian and South African Licenses as a Front, While Actually Operating in Saint Lucia
Zenora Capital operates under zenorafx.com, claiming to be a "globally compliant" and "globally regulated" CFD trading platform. It offers trading in forex, metals, indices, and crypto assets, uses MT5, and promotes referral rebates.[1]
The bottom of the page discloses three entities:
- Zenora Capital Pty. Ltd.: Registered in Australia, ASIC license number 543879 [2]
- Zenora Capital (Pty) Limited: Registered in South Africa, FSCA license number 36533 [2]
- Zenora Capital (Pty) Limited: Registered in Saint Lucia, is the platform's "operating entity" [2][3]
The issue lies here. If the Saint Lucia company is the actual operator, the key question is: Does the Saint Lucia entity hold a license to provide forex and CFD trading services?
Company registration ≠ Financial license. The Saint Lucia IFC website describes itself as a registry for international business companies, not a forex or CFD regulatory body.[4]
More directly, the Saint Lucia Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA) explicitly stated in a warning notice dated January 8, 2026: "Forex business is not licensed in Saint Lucia", and any documents claiming registration, licensing, or association with the authority are "false and misleading".[5]
Using Australian and South African licenses as a front to make clients believe they are under top-tier regulation, while actual contracts and payments are handled by a Saint Lucia shell company—this is a classic "regulatory arbitrage" tactic.
2. The Australian License Exists, But May Not Cover You
The Australian Business Register shows ZENORA CAPITAL PTY LTD (ABN 38 648 272 502) has been active since March 1, 2021.[6] Regulatory data also shows this entity holds ASIC AFS license 543879, with a status of active, wholesale, providing general advice and trading capabilities.[7]
"Wholesale" is key. A wholesale license does not cover retail clients. If Zenora Capital uses this license to attract retail investors, it is problematic. ASIC clearly requires users to check not only if an individual or organization appears on the professional register but also to verify registration or license status, conditions, address, start date, and website address.[8] For Zenora Capital, the core issue is: Does the Australian license cover the zenorafx.com website, the promoted trading products, the actual client categories, and the account-opening entity? Currently, this cannot be confirmed.
3. The Same Applies to the South African FSCA License
The South African FSCA is a market conduct regulator that provides an FSP search function.[9] However, the license number on the website does not resolve the more important question: Is the licensed South African entity the contracting entity? Does the license scope cover the offered CFD and crypto-related products? Are clients outside South Africa actually protected? This also cannot be confirmed.
4. Domain Registered in 2025, Contradicting the "Global Platform" Image
WHOIS shows zenorafx.com was registered on December 17, 2025, through Hostinger, using Cloudflare domain servers.[10]
A new domain does not automatically equate to fraud, but it directly conflicts with the image of a "mature global platform," and investors have almost no long-term public records to evaluate. Many scam brokers purchase old domains or use newly registered domains with names that sound mature. In this case, the domain is new, with a very thin public footprint.
5. Multi-Domain Login Structure Increases Accountability Difficulty
The platform's registration process directs users to an independent client portal client.iszenora.com (JavaScript CRM page), while management login appears at managerlogin.zenorafx.com.[11]
A multi-domain login structure is not illegal in itself, but it creates additional verification issues—investors may not know which legal entity controls the CRM, where account records are stored, or which company receives the funds.
6. EminiFX and MTI Have Been Jailed, Zenora Capital's Structure is Similar
Zenora Capital has not been proven by a court to be the same as these scams, but the risk structure is worth caution:
- EminiFX: The US Department of Justice stated its operator defrauded over 25,000 investors through a fraudulent crypto and forex trading platform, amounting to over $248 million, with the CEO sentenced to 9 years in prison.[14]
- Mirror Trading International (MTI): The CFTC obtained a court order requiring MTI to pay over $1.7 billion in restitution to defrauded victims, involving Bitcoin and forex-related scams.[15]
Common points in these cases: reliance on trading technology, investment language, regulatory impressions, and investor confidence. When a platform combines offshore operations, unclear contracting entities, new domain history, and aggressive registration processes, the risk threshold rises sharply.
7. If You Have Already Invested, What to Do Now
Immediately stop adding any funds.
Do not pay any "taxes," "risk deposits," "anti-money laundering fees," "unlock fees," or "account unfreeze fees." Legitimate regulated brokers deduct fees through transparent account terms and will not repeatedly request external payments to release existing balances.
Keep: account screenshots, deposit records, wallet addresses, bank receipts, chat logs, emails.
Reporting channels: Contact your bank or payment provider (if the transfer was recent), report to the relevant regulatory authority or law enforcement in your jurisdiction.
Do not trust anyone promising to recover funds for a fee—that is a secondary scam.
8. Final Conclusion: Regulatory Facade, Offshore Operations
Zenora Capital should be viewed as a high-risk platform:
- The footer discloses the Saint Lucia company as the "operating entity", while the Saint Lucia FSRA clearly states "forex business is not licensed in Saint Lucia"[2][5]
- The Australian license exists but is marked "wholesale", possibly not covering retail clients [7]
- The South African FSCA license cannot confirm if it covers the actual contracting entity and products [9]
- The domain was only registered in December 2025 [10]
- Multi-domain login structure, client portal and management login are separate, blurring responsibility [11]
- Promotes referral rebates, potentially amplifying losses through recruitment [1]
Zenora Capital uses Australian and South African licenses as a facade to make clients believe they are under top-tier regulation, while actual contracts and payments are handled by a Saint Lucia shell company. This is not compliance; it is a carefully designed regulatory arbitrage.
References
- [1] https://zenorafx.com/en/ (2026-06-16)
- [2] https://zenorafx.com/en/ (footer disclosure) (2026-06-16)
- [3] https://zenorafx.com/en/legal/ (2026-06-16)
- [4] https://www.saintluciaifc.com/ (2026-06-16)
- [5] https://fsrastlucia.org/images/20260108_Updated_WARNING_NOTICES.pdf (2026-06-16)
- [6] https://abr.business.gov.au/ABN/View?id=38648272502 (2026-06-16)
- [7] https://allbrokerages.com/brokers/zenora-capital-pty-ltd (2026-06-16)
- [8] https://www.asic.gov.au/online-services/search-asic-registers/professional-registers-search/ (2026-06-16)
- [9] https://www.fsca.co.za/ (2026-06-16)
- [10] https://www.whois.com/whois/zenorafx.com (2026-06-16)
- [11] https://client.iszenora.com/ and https://managerlogin.zenorafx.com/ (2026-06-16)
- [14] https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/ceo-cryptocurrency-and-forex-trading-platform-sentenced-nine-years-prison-240-million (2026-06-16)
- [15] https://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/PressReleases/8772-23 (2026-06-16)