Trubluefx Review

Updated: May 21, 2026
Trubluefx
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Fast Facts

Contact Info and Support

Traffic information

CategoryMetricsMeaning
RatingsGlobal Rank-
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Engagement metricsVisits0
Bounce Rate0
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Estimated monthly visitsFebruary 20260
March 20260
April 20260
Traffic sourcesSocial-
Paid Referrals-
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Referrals-
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Direct-

About Trubluefx

Trubluefx operates under the name Trubluefx (trubluefx.com, my.trubluefx.com) as a trading brand of Ares Global Ltd./Ares Global LLC, registered in Saint Lucia and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and claims to offer trading in forex, indices, commodities, and cryptocurrencies via the MetaTrader 5 platform. It supports deposits in fiat (EUR, USD, GBP) and cryptocurrencies (BTC, ETH, USDT), provides both trading and managed accounts, and accepts wire transfers and crypto deposits (with no deposit fees charged by the platform, though intermediary or blockchain fees may apply) ().

No licences from recognized financial regulators (such as the FCA, ASIC, CySEC, CFTC, SEC, AMF) are held by Trubluefx; the FSRA in Saint Lucia does not regulate forex activities, and regulators in Ontario and Quebec have issued warnings or blacklisted the entity, noting it is not registered or authorized to offer financial services in those jurisdictions ().

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) filed a lawsuit against Ares Global Ltd. d/b/a Trubluefx (and associated entity Traders Domain), resulting in a court-ordered liquidation; client funds held by these entities were to be transferred to a court-appointed receiver, and claims could be submitted by July 28, 2025 ().

Who it’s for

  • There is insufficient evidence to responsibly characterize a suitable target audience.

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Offers trading across multiple asset classes—forex, indices, commodities, cryptocurrencies—on the MetaTrader 5 platform via fiat and crypto funding methods ().

Cons

  • No licensing or regulation; not authorized by any reputable financial authority, and explicitly warned or blacklisted by regulators in Ontario and Quebec ().
  • Subject of a legal action by the CFTC with court-ordered liquidation; clients must submit claims by a set deadline ().
  • Located in jurisdictions not overseeing forex, and lacks transparency on trading costs, spreads, leverage, and corporate leadership ().

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