When a brokerage brand is still new in search results, the most useful answer to words like “scam” or “fraud” is not a loud defense but a clear verification routine. On its public website, FRTX states that the brand and the resources frtx.global, frtx.org, and FRTX Web are owned and operated by
FRTX Ltd, registered under number HV01125482 and licensed by the Mwali International Services Authority as an international brokerage company under license number BFX2025158. That gives users a practical starting point: first verify identifiers, then form an opinion.
The first step is simple: compare the core identifiers shown by the broker across all public references. The legal entity name, company number, license number, and website identity should line up consistently on the broker’s site and on any certificate image or verification page the company provides. In FRTX’s case, the website itself already gives the main fields that a reader would expect to cross-check: FRTX Ltd, HV01125482, and BFX2025158.
The second step is to check the registrar infrastructure itself rather than relying on a screenshot alone. The current Mwali registrar website publicly displays a security alert saying that its only official website is
www.mwaliregistrar.org. It also maintains a public List of Entities, which means users are not limited to marketing materials when reviewing a broker’s stated regulatory details.
The third step is to look for the same verification fields the registrar uses on its own license pages. Public examples on the Mwali registrar site show a verification format that includes status, company name, company number, license number, date of license issue, and website. In practical terms, that means a user should not stop at “a certificate exists.” The safer approach is to confirm that the same fields match across the broker’s website, the registrar’s verification structure, and any supporting documents published by the brand.