Fast Facts
Contact Info and Support
Website: https://cambridgecapitalfx.com/
Traffic information
| Category | Metrics | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Ratings | Global Rank | - |
| Country Code | - | |
| Country Rank | - | |
| Category Rank | - | |
| Engagement metrics | Visits | 0 |
| Bounce Rate | 0 | |
| Pageviews per Visit | 0 | |
| Avg. Visit Duration | 0 | |
| Estimated monthly visits | December 2025 | 0 |
| January 2026 | 0 | |
| February 2026 | 0 | |
| Traffic sources | Social | - |
| Paid Referrals | - | |
| - | ||
| Referrals | - | |
| Search | - | |
| Direct | - |
About Cambridge Capital
Cambridge Capital (operating via cambridgecapitalfx.com) offers trading in forex—including major, minor, and exotic pairs—as well as CFDs on metals, energies, indices and cryptocurrencies; it supports the MetaTrader 4 platform and accepts deposit methods such as credit/debit cards, bank transfers, cryptocurrencies, and mobile payment solutions ().
No regulatory oversight has been found: the broker is not registered with the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), or any recognized financial regulator (). Because it lacks licensing, it does not offer standard investor protections such as segregated client funds, compensation schemes, or negative balance protection ().
Pros and cons
Pros
- Offers access to a variety of asset classes including forex pairs, CFDs on metals, energies, indices, and cryptocurrencies ().
- Utilizes the widely used MetaTrader 4 trading platform ().
Cons
- No valid regulatory licenses or oversight from recognized authorities, presenting substantial risks to client funds ().
- Lacks investor protections such as segregation of funds, compensation schemes, or negative balance protection ().
- Details on trading conditions, account types, minimum deposit, spreads, leverage, and customer support are not transparently provided ().
- Website performance is reportedly poor, potentially affecting user experience ().
- Per regulatory assessments, the broker may be operated offshore (e.g., via entities in St. Vincent and the Grenadines) and possibly used in fraudulent schemes ().













