Livaxxen Review

Updated: March 20, 2026
Livaxxen

Fast Facts

About Livaxxen

Livaxxen claims to operate under the name Investim Capital LTD with a purported license from the Mwali International Services Authority (MISA), registration number BFX2024039; however, this regulatory claim lacks verifiable consistency with domain records and credible regulatory registries, and the website has been flagged as unregulated.

French regulator Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF) placed www.livaxxen.com and trading.livaxxen.com on its forex blacklist on 7 October 2024 due to unauthorized offering of investment services, with ongoing reports of investor losses averaging €25 000 and demands for withdrawal fees amounting to thousands of euros.

New Zealand’s Financial Markets Authority (FMA) issued a warning on 20 January 2025 noting that Livaxxen is not licensed nor registered on the Financial Service Providers Register (FSPR), and reported cases where investors were unable to withdraw funds. The company lists alleged addresses in Wellington, including 171 Featherston Street and the AON Building, but these details are unverified.

Who it’s for

  • Investors seeking high leverage trading (up to 1:400 as advertised), aware of extremely high risk.
  • Those evaluating claims from brokers licensed in offshore jurisdictions like MISA, accepting minimal investor protection.

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Claims of offering access to global assets such as currencies, indices, commodities.
  • MISA license (albeit of doubtful credibility).

Cons

  • No authorization from recognized regulators (e.g., FCA, ASIC, CySEC).
  • Blacklisted by AMF (unauthorized provider, average reported loss €25 000, withdrawal fees demanded).
  • Not registered with New Zealand FMA; investor withdrawal issues reported.
  • Domain anonymity, young registration, and suspicious infrastructure consistent with scam behavior.
  • Aggressive marketing, misleading promises, and complaints of account freezes and withheld funds.

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