Threat Profile
Operating from an unverified domain, Sino Intermediaries, Taiwan Sino Intermediaries advertises high-return crypto and CFD trading to the public. Our analysts opened a case file after the platform surfaced in fraud-pattern monitoring.
Regulatory Posture
On the regulatory side, Sino Intermediaries, Taiwan Sino Intermediaries does not hold a verifiable financial-services licence. Its only apparent footprint is a corporate registration in Singapore – a jurisdiction whose company registry confers International Business Company status, not authorisation to handle client funds or operate a brokerage. An IBC filing is a corporate formality, not financial oversight.
Indicators We Flagged
- Withdrawal friction reported – delays, surprise ‘fees’, or frozen balances
- Account managers steering clients toward larger top-ups
- Returns or bonuses advertised that are inconsistent with legitimate markets
- Offshore or shell-company structure used to obscure ownership
- Crypto-only deposits that bypass chargeback protections
On-Chain & Operational Notes
Where we have visibility, funds sent to comparable operators move rapidly off-platform into obfuscation infrastructure. The window for effective blockchain tracing is widest immediately after the transfer, which is why prompt documentation matters.
CryptoCISO Risk Verdict
Weighing the absence of regulation against the observed indicators, CryptoCISO rates Sino Intermediaries, Taiwan Sino Intermediaries a severe risk. We would not recommend depositing funds with this operator, and existing clients should treat access to their balance as time-sensitive.
If Your Funds Are Exposed
Should you be exposed, halt further payments and ignore demands for upfront fees to ‘free’ your balance. Gather your evidence – TXIDs, wallet addresses, screenshots, and correspondence – while it is still accessible. Early, organised evidence is what makes downstream tracing and reporting viable.