FCF Markets Review

Updated: February 15, 2026
FCF Markets
Views21

Fast Facts

Contact Info and Support

Traffic information

CategoryMetricsMeaning
RatingsGlobal Rank-
Country Code-
Country Rank-
Category Rank-
Engagement metricsVisits0
Bounce Rate0
Pageviews per Visit0
Avg. Visit Duration0
Estimated monthly visitsJuly 20250
August 20250
September 20250
Traffic sourcesSocial-
Paid Referrals-
Mail-
Referrals-
Search-
Direct-

About FCF Markets

FCF Markets is not authorised by the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA); it appears on the FCA warning list under the name “FCF MARKETS”, address in Silver Street, Newport Pagnell, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, with a warning published on 14 September 2023 stating the firm may be providing financial services without authorisation and that consumers would not have access to the Financial Ombudsman Service or Financial Services Compensation Scheme (). The Spanish regulator, Comisión Nacional del Mercado de Valores (CNMV), also added FCF Markets to its warning list on 17 July 2023 for providing investment services without authorisation ().

FCF Markets claims registration in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines under ECC CORP LLC but holds no recognised regulatory licences. It offers a proprietary trading platform (desktop, mobile, web), account types (Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum) with minimum deposits ranging from 250 USD to 50 000 USD, variable spreads (from about 2.8 pips down to 0.1 pips depending on account), and maximum leverage up to 1:100 for Platinum, lower tiers capped at 1:30. It claims assets including forex pairs, commodities, indices, cryptocurrencies, shares, futures, with no negative‑balance protection, no verified segregated accounts, and opaque withdrawal policies ().

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Offers multi‑asset trading instruments including forex, commodities, indices, cryptocurrencies, shares, and futures.
  • Provides tiered account options with varying spreads and leverage up to 1:100 on Platinum.

Cons

  • Completely unregulated and flagged by both the FCA (14 September 2023) and CNMV (17 July 2023) for unauthorised operations.
  • No access to investor protections such as compensation schemes or ombudsman services.
  • Proprietary platform (instead of industry‑standard platforms) raises manipulation risk.
  • No verifiable segregation of client funds, no negative balance protection, and reports of withdrawal difficulties.
  • Opaque corporate structure and offshore registration with limited transparency on ownership or compliance.

Page loaded in 404.00 ms