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Assett Broker Review – Truth About the Broker

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Today, we’re taking a closer look at Assett Broker, another “all-in-one” brokerage that claims to offer binary options (BO), copy trading, and even plans to operate as a proprietary trading firm. The platform’s main selling point is the promise of making substantial profits in a very short time. After all, few traders would ignore the opportunity to earn returns of up to 83% in just 30 seconds through binary options. Tempted by these promises, many users open and fund accounts hoping for quick success. In reality, however, the likelihood of losing your capital on this platform is extremely high. If you’d like to understand why this project raises so many concerns, keep reading our analysis.

Quick Overview

Domain: https://assettbroker.com/

Company Name: Max Trading Group Limited (Assett Broker)

Year Founded: 2026

Jurisdiction: Saint Vincent and the Grenadines; Anjouan, Comoros Union

Legal Status: Unlicensed

Minimum Deposit: 50 USD

Leverage: Unspecified

Available Assets: Forex, Crypto

Trading Platforms: Webplatform

Account Types: Unspecified

Deposit/Withdrawal Methods: Crypto

How to Register on the Website

In our opinion, it is difficult to describe the design choices made for the official Assett Broker website as successful. Some traders may appreciate the dark theme with heavily dimmed images and barely readable text, but we believe visitors come to a broker’s website to obtain information about the company and its services—not to strain their eyes trying to read the content. More importantly, we cannot consider the information presented on the site to be reliable. In fact, calling this single-page creation a great broker website is a stretch even by the company’s own standards.

It also came as no surprise that the client registration process is extremely simplified. Creating an account requires filling out only a few fields:

  • Full name.
  • Email address and phone number.
  • Password.

In addition, users must check a single box confirming that they have read and accepted the Terms and Conditions, are at least 18 years old, and are not residents of restricted jurisdictions. Once the form is submitted, they immediately gain access to both the trading platform and the client area.

It quickly becomes obvious that the platform has little interest in operating within any legitimate regulatory framework.

  • No additional personal information is requested, even after registration.
  • There is no identity verification whatsoever; confirming an email address is sufficient to unlock the platform’s full functionality.

As you can imagine, there is no meaningful compliance with KYC or AML standards, nor are there adequate safeguards for either trading or financial transactions. Another indication of the platform’s poor security is that the trading terminal does not require a separate login from the client area. Taken together, these shortcomings make Assett Broker look less like a professional brokerage and more like a low-quality scam operation. Opening an account here means exposing your funds to an exceptionally high level of risk.

Assett Broker Instruments and Platforms

The next questions we wanted answered concerned the tradable assets and the trading platform itself. Surprisingly, the website provides virtually no information about either.

Here’s everything we managed to find:

  • A headline claiming access to 120+ trading instruments, with the supposedly available asset classes listed as Forex, cryptocurrencies, stocks, and commodities, displayed above a market price widget.
  • A Markets link in the main menu that simply redirects visitors to a section titled “Features that make the difference.” Even a first-time visitor can see that this section contains no actual market descriptions.
  • A Platform link that leads to a block called “Start trading in 3 simple steps.” Somehow, the instructions “Create your account – Make your deposit – Start trading” are presented instead of an actual description of the trading terminal.

As a result, traders can learn anything meaningful only after registering and accessing the client area. We took the time to examine what the broker actually offers and discovered the following:

  • Only 7 cryptocurrency pairs and 11 Forex currency pairs are available for binary options trading. So where are the advertised 120+ assets? Apparently, they exist only in the imagination of the platform’s owners.
  • The only binary option available is the most basic Up/Down contract with a fixed payout percentage and no option to extend or modify the position.
  • A list of 14 traders whose positions can supposedly be copied through the copy trading feature.
  • A notice stating that Funded Accounts—apparently an attempt to imitate proprietary trading firms—”will be available soon.”

Quite an impressive selection, isn’t it? This is exactly the kind of broker every beginner and experienced trader dreams of finding—or so the marketing would have you believe. Fortunately, Assett Broker remains relatively unknown, although we suspect that will change as more traders take a closer look at what the platform actually offers.

The only trading platform available to clients is the broker’s proprietary binary options terminal. And, as it turns out, there is plenty here to raise eyebrows as well.

A look inside Assett Broker's proprietary binary options platform, its features, and the concerns raised by its design and functionality.

  1. Even the most basic interface customization options are missing. For example, traders cannot resize or rearrange windows. The only workaround is to adjust the browser’s zoom level just to make all interface elements visible.
  2. We have never encountered a price chart like this in any other binary options platform. The software was either developed in-house by the broker (which we seriously doubt) or purchased from an obscure third-party developer. This is not necessarily a flaw in itself, but it immediately raises concerns about the source of the price feed. It is safe to assume that no reputable market data provider is involved. That naturally leads to several questions: How accurate are the quotes displayed to traders? Can the data feed be manipulated by the platform’s administrators? We certainly do not expect the company to provide clear answers.
  3. This homemade trading platform falls well behind even many second-tier competitors. Technical analysis—the primary decision-making tool for binary options traders—is limited to just 20 indicators, a handful of drawing tools for trend lines and channels, and basic Fibonacci tools. That is a rather modest toolkit and far from sufficient for experienced traders.
  4. The client area allows users to generate API keys, yet no documentation is provided. It is impossible to determine whether trading functionality is supported at all. If it is not, then the platform remains little more than an unfinished product that cannot even be used with automated trading systems.

Overall, we do not believe Assett Broker deserves even a neutral assessment when it comes to its trading platform and available markets. Established binary options brokers with a long track record outperform it by a considerable margin. Everything suggests that this is another low-budget scam project whose creators were primarily interested in launching as quickly and as cheaply as possible.

Account Types Offered

It appears that Assett Broker never intended to offer traders any meaningful choice of account types or trading conditions. After reviewing both the website and the client area, we found no indication of multiple account tiers. The platform seems to provide just a single trading account designed for both binary options trading and copy trading.

The binary options conditions are extremely straightforward:

  • The minimum contract size is $1, while no effective upper limit appears to exist. The interface allows traders to select up to $5,000, but larger amounts can be entered manually.
  • A winning (“in-the-money”) option pays a fixed return of 83% of the invested amount.
  • Expiration times range from 30 seconds to 15 minutes.
  • Contracts cannot be extended, nor is early closure with a partial refund available.

In other words, the broker offers only the most basic form of binary option trading. At first glance, the conditions may seem attractive—after all, earning an 83% return in just a few minutes sounds appealing. However, anyone tempted by the promise of quick profits should remember one important fact: according to statistics published by ESMA in 2020, approximately 95–98% of binary options traders lose their deposits. That is precisely why binary options trading has been banned for retail clients in the European Union, the United Kingdom, Canada, and several other jurisdictions.

For those who believe they can still make consistent profits trading binary options, here are a few important facts worth remembering:

  1. Binary options have a negative mathematical expectancy. At Assett Broker, where the maximum payout is 83%, the expected value of each trade is approximately -0.085. In practical terms, this means that a trader loses an average of 8.5% of the amount risked on every trade over the long run. Given enough trades, the entire deposit is statistically expected to end up in the company’s hands.
  2. And yes, it is the company that profits. There are no true brokers in the binary options industry—only dealers acting as the sole counterparty to every client transaction. Every dollar a trader loses becomes revenue for the platform. This creates an obvious conflict of interest. Assett Broker does not even attempt to address this issue, as it provides no conflict-of-interest policy whatsoever.
  3. Even the mathematical expectation above assumes a perfectly random and unbiased market. Under those conditions, a trader would need to win roughly 55% of all trades just to break even. In reality, on timeframes up to M15, building a trading strategy capable of consistently achieving such accuracy is virtually impossible due to the overwhelming influence of market noise. Moreover, platforms operating their own dealing systems often have both the technical ability and the financial incentive to manipulate price feeds in ways that favor client losses.
  4. Developing a robust trading strategy for basic binary options is extremely difficult. Traders cannot reduce risk with Stop Loss orders, cannot close positions early, cannot hedge trades, and cannot manage drawdowns. In effect, this is far closer to gambling than to genuine financial trading—and, like gambling, it comes with a built-in statistical advantage for the house. As the old saying goes, the casino always wins. The same principle applies here.

In short, Assett Broker is simply waiting for traders willing to hand over their money. The only real question is whether you are prepared to make such a generous donation.

The broker’s copy trading system is no more convincing. Users receive virtually no information that would allow them to evaluate the traders they are supposed to follow. The platform displays only a nickname and a claimed return. There are no descriptions of trading strategies, no trading history, no equity curves, no risk statistics, and no performance metrics such as the Sharpe Ratio. Clients are simply expected to trust whatever profitability figures the company publishes—even though we have already seen plenty of reasons to question the credibility of the information provided throughout the website.

We also have strong reasons to suspect that many of these so-called signal providers do not exist at all. The platform may simply display attractive performance figures to persuade inexperienced users to begin copying trades. The likely outcome, however, remains the same: the complete loss of the trader’s deposit.

In our view, Assett Broker displays all the characteristics of a classic scam operation. Its primary objective appears to be collecting clients’ money rather than providing a legitimate trading service. We cannot prevent anyone from opening an account, but by exposing how this platform actually operates, we hope fewer traders will become its next victims.

Deposits and Withdrawals

We always consider the lack of transparency regarding non-trading operations to be a major red flag, and Assett Broker does everything possible to earn one.

To begin with, the official website contains virtually no information about deposits or withdrawals. Instead, the broker chose to disclose selected details through two documents: Payment Policy and Withdrawal Policy. Here’s what they reveal:

  • Cryptocurrency is the primary method for both deposits and withdrawals. There is also a mention of PIX, the instant payment system operated by the Central Bank of Brazil, although this option does not actually appear in the client area.
  • The minimum deposit is $50.
  • The minimum withdrawal is $50, or $200 when withdrawing in Bitcoin.
  • The broker charges no deposit fees, while withdrawal fees imposed by payment providers and the payment agent are deducted from the client’s funds.

At first glance, these conditions seem fairly reasonable. However, several important questions immediately arise.

  1. How does the broker intend to comply with AML requirements when processing cryptocurrency transactions?
  2. The Withdrawal Policy states that Tier 1 verification is required for all withdrawals and Tier 2 verification for amounts exceeding $500. Yet these verification levels are never explained anywhere on the website, nor does the client area provide any functionality for completing them. Why?
  3. All cryptocurrency payments are processed through the payment agent ALFACoins (alfacoins.com). The broker claims that ALFACoins holds an International Crypto/Financial License issued by the AOFA (Anjouan Offshore Finance Authority) in Anjouan, Comoros Union. However, no such company appears in the regulator’s public register. Searches by company name, registration number, and license number produce no results whatsoever. Meanwhile, ALFACoins’ own Terms and Conditions state that the service operates under the laws of the Seychelles. Someone is clearly presenting conflicting information.
  4. Why doesn’t the broker process cryptocurrency transactions directly through its own wallets instead of relying on an intermediary?

Taken together, these issues are more than enough to conclude that Assett Broker falls well short of basic standards of transparency and security when it comes to handling clients’ money. In our view, the platform has fully earned the red flag we mentioned at the beginning of this section.

Assett Broker Legal Status: Legitimate or Not?

If anyone still doubts that Assett Broker resembles a typical scam operation, the information published on its own website may help settle the question. Our verification only reinforced our concerns.

According to the broker, Assett Broker operates under Max Trading Group Limited, a company allegedly registered in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) under registration number 23769. The website even provides the well-known registration address Suite 207, Griffith Corporate Centre, Beachmont, Kingstown—an address that has historically been used by hundreds of questionable offshore brokers, alongside a handful of legitimate companies.

The choice of jurisdiction is particularly interesting given that Saint Vincent and the Grenadines has significantly tightened its approach toward offshore companies offering brokerage and dealer services. As a result, the popularity of SVG registrations has declined sharply, with many fraudulent projects moving to other offshore jurisdictions, such as the autonomous islands of the Comoros Union.

It appears, however, that the creators of Assett Broker either failed to notice these regulatory changes or deliberately hoped that potential clients would not. To determine which explanation is more likely, we decided to verify the company’s claims ourselves.

Verification results showing that Assett Broker's claimed registration could not be found in the official SVGFSA database.

We searched the official register of the local financial regulator, the SVG Financial Services Authority (SVGFSA), which is responsible for registering financial entities operating in the country. As expected, a search by the company name returned no relevant results. The same happened when we searched using the registration number published on the broker’s website.

This means that the claimed registration of Max Trading Group Limited in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines is false. In reality, the platform appears to operate without any legally registered corporate entity and exists only in the virtual space. This explains many of the concerns we identified earlier, including the use of a proprietary trading platform of unknown origin, price feeds from an undisclosed source, and cryptocurrency as virtually the only available payment method.

Naturally, a company that does not legally exist cannot obtain a financial license—not even from an offshore jurisdiction. It is also worth pointing out that even if the company had actually been registered in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, this would not have meant it was regulated. The SVGFSA has not licensed or supervised Forex, CFD, or binary options brokers for years.

Interesting fact! In the footer of its website, Assett Broker claims that it provides services only in jurisdictions where it holds the appropriate license or is otherwise legally authorized to operate. Based on everything we found, that statement appears to describe exactly zero jurisdictions.

In short, we are dealing with a fictitious company that has no legal basis to offer financial services. Anyone considering opening an account should understand that the risk of losing their money is exceptionally high, while there is no regulator or legal framework capable of protecting their interests.

Company History

There is little point in discussing the company’s history because, in practice, no legitimate business history exists. Without a real corporate entity, there are no milestones, achievements, or operational track record to analyze. The only date that deserves attention is when this website first appeared online.

WHOIS data revealing the registration date and background of the Assett Broker domain.

According to WHOIS records, the assettbroker.com domain was registered on March 3, 2026. However, we believe the platform became operational later, most likely around June 14, 2026, which corresponds to the date of the last significant domain update. Interestingly, this timeline aligns almost perfectly with the appearance of the first Assett Broker reviews on Trustpilot, which were published on June 13, 2026. Coincidence? We don’t think so.

Assettbroker.com Online Reputation

The reviews for this platform gave us a good laugh. As we mentioned earlier, the first Trustpilot review appeared on June 13, 2026. Since then, the broker has somehow accumulated 140 reviews.

It’s certainly impressive when a broker becomes popular so quickly. However, only two weeks passed between the first review and the publication of our assettbroker.com review. Apparently, traders are so overwhelmed with excitement that they feel compelled to post around ten glowing reviews every single day. And we almost forgot to mention that 98% of them are five-star ratings.

Take a closer look at what these reviews actually say. We couldn’t find a single one describing a real trading experience or providing any meaningful details. Instead, they consist of phrases like “Top top topp,” “Otima experiencia,” “good plataform hambient and intuitive 5,”* and “Very good site to trade.” To us, this points in only one direction: the broker is attempting to manufacture its online reputation through fake positive feedback.

It also seems that the people behind Assett Broker have little experience in reputation management. Publishing a dozen generic five-star reviews every day doesn’t build credibility—it raises suspicion. For us, it simply becomes another piece of evidence that we’re dealing with a fraudulent operation and yet another major red flag.

Pros & Cons

  • The single-page website loads reasonably quickly.
  • The minimum deposit is only $50, making it accessible to virtually anyone.
  • The company has no verified corporate registration.
  • As a result, it does not hold any financial license.
  • Clients are offered only the simplest binary options and copy trading, both of which involve an extremely high probability of losing money.
  • Deposits and withdrawals are conducted exclusively in cryptocurrencies through a payment agent whose own regulatory status cannot be verified.
  • The internet is flooded with fake positive reviews promoting this virtual platform.

Final Take

In our opinion, Assett Broker is an outright scam. The platform operates without legal registration or licensing, while its binary options and copy trading services appear designed solely to separate clients from their money. Don’t be fooled by the glowing online reviews—they are almost certainly fabricated. Anyone depositing funds here should expect an extremely high risk of losing their entire investment.

Check These Before You Trade

The broker didn't even bother to register an offshore company—or perhaps wasn't willing to spend a few thousand dollars to do so. Unsurprisingly, it has no financial license either. As a result, its activities lack any legal regulatory foundation and cannot be considered properly authorized in any jurisdiction.
Cryptocurrency payments are inherently less transparent than traditional banking, especially when processed through an external payment agent. The situation becomes even more questionable when clients are not even told which wallet actually belongs to the broker.
Assett Broker offers only basic Up/Down binary options with 83% payouts and expiration times ranging from 30 seconds to 15 minutes. Those conditions alone create a highly unfavorable environment for traders. Copy trading is hardly better, as users receive almost no meaningful information about the traders whose positions they are expected to copy.

Author Contributions

Charlotte Reed
Richard Grayson

1 review about Assett Broker

  1. Khalid Simmonds
    1

    To be honest, Assett Broker was a huge disappointment. All those claims about 92% of clients making profits are simply false. I quickly realized that trading on the demo account has almost nothing in common with trading with real money. I developed a strategy that produced small but consistent profits during testing, yet once I switched to a live account, trades that should have finished in the money somehow ended up losing. It honestly felt as if the price feed was being manipulated. To make matters worse, when I tried to withdraw what was left of my balance, nothing happened. Support stopped giving straight answers, and I never saw my money again. Stay away from this platform.

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