Inetmarkets Review

Updated: March 22, 2026
Inetmarkets
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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 Inetmarkets

Inet Markets, operating via the domain inetmarkets.com, holds no licences from any recognized financial regulatory authority. The UK Financial Conduct Authority issued an unauthorised firm warning on January 3, 2023, affirming that Inet Markets offers financial services in the UK without authorisation; investors are not protected under UK schemes such as the Financial Services Compensation Scheme or the Financial Ombudsman Service.

The Belgian Financial Services and Markets Authority (FSMA) identified Inet Markets as a fraudulent trading platform on September 14, 2022, stating it operates without any EU investment service licence. Warnings from regulators in France (AMF), Italy (CONSOB), and the UK further confirm that Inet Markets is unregulated and suspected of illegal cross-border solicitations of retail clients.

Review and exposure sources indicate several fraudulent operations: false claims of regulation, inducements of deposits via promises of high returns, backend manipulation of account balances, frozen accounts, and blocked withdrawals prompting additional “unlocking” or “tax” fees. Across multiple jurisdictions, victims report losses and permanent loss of contact. No confirmed account types, trading platforms, minimum deposit, leverage, spreads, base currencies, or Islamic/swap‑free options are verifiable from primary sources.

Who it’s for

  • An audience cannot be responsibly identified based on verifiable information.

Pros and cons

Pros

  • No credible, independently confirmed positive attributes found from primary sources.

Cons

  • Operates without regulatory authorisation in multiple jurisdictions (UK, Belgium, France, Italy)
  • Regulators classify it as fraudulent or high‑risk
  • No credible information on licences, trading conditions, platforms, account types, deposit requirements, or leverage
  • Reports of blocked withdrawals, account manipulation, and induced additional fees

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