Threat Profile
Basiq Reserve (https://basiqreserve.com) positions itself as a digital-asset brokerage targeting everyday investors. CryptoCISO flagged the operator during routine counterparty-risk screening.
Regulatory Posture
On the regulatory side, Basiq Reserve does not hold a verifiable financial-services licence. Its only apparent footprint is a corporate registration in Australia – 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.
On-Chain & Operational Notes
From a forensic standpoint, deposits routed to operators like Basiq Reserve are typically swept quickly through intermediary wallets and into mixing services or high-risk exchanges. Acting early – before funds are layered – materially affects what can be traced.
Indicators We Flagged
- Cloned or template website design shared with other flagged operators
- No verifiable licence from a top-tier financial regulator
- Opaque corporate identity and unverifiable team or address
- Crypto-only deposits that bypass chargeback protections
- Account managers steering clients toward larger top-ups
- Withdrawal friction reported – delays, surprise ‘fees’, or frozen balances
CryptoCISO Risk Verdict
Our assessment places Basiq Reserve in the elevated risk band. The combination of unverifiable licensing and recurring fraud signatures is, in our experience, characteristic of platforms that do not return client funds on demand.
If Your Funds Are Exposed
If you have funds with this platform, stop sending additional deposits immediately and do not pay any ‘release’, ‘tax’, or ‘verification’ fee requested to unlock a withdrawal – these are themselves part of the fraud. Preserve everything: transaction hashes, wallet addresses, deposit receipts, chat logs, and the account dashboard. The sooner the on-chain trail is documented, the more options remain.