Abstract:The company breached licensing obligations. The regulator also banned two executives of the OTC derivatives operator.
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) announced on Thursday that over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives provider Sirius Financial Markets Pty Ltd, which operates under the brand Trade360, has surrendered its Australian Financial Services license.
The company is now winding down its retail and wholesale operations from Australia and is aiming to cease offering financial services from 29 July 2022.
It came after a regulatory investigation against the OTC derivatives provider, surfacing several license violations.
“ASIC‘s investigation uncovered concerning consumer losses from trading in CFDs, including a Sirius Financial investor, who had limited knowledge of the market, losing over $400,000 after being told CFDs were a safe investment,” said ASIC’s Commissioner, Danielle Press.
According to the regulatory investigation, the company engaged an offshore call center, Toyga Media Ltd, to source clients, who would be trading high-risk instruments like contracts for differences (CFDs) and margin forex contracts.
The call center used pressure selling tactics to persuade the clients to trade on the Sirius platform. They even provided clients with financial advice, but Sirius was not licensed for offering such services.
Additionally, ASIC stated that “Sirius Financial was also found to have engaged in unconscionable conduct and conduct that was likely to mislead or deceive.”
Moreover, the Aussie regulator banned two of Sirius Financials former executives, Jonathan Schneider and Oskar Pecyna, for eight years from controlling any financial services business or holding any executive or management role in such companies.
Both Schneider and Pecyna were involved in the license obligation breaches by Sirius. They were not adequately trained and not competent in controlling a financial services business, the regulator stated.
“In reaching these findings, ASIC found that both men failed to adequately perform their duties as responsible managers and lacked the necessary professionalism, integrity, judgement and diligence to play a role in the management or control of a financial services provider,” ASIC added.
Understand what indices in forex are, how DXY works, key differences vs pairs, pros/cons, and where to trade CFDs—beginner-friendly, expert-backed guide.
A new regulatory measure by the Securities Commission Malaysia (SC) is set to change the country’s online trading and financial influencer landscape. Starting 1 November 2025, any trader or influencer caught promoting an unlicensed broker could face a fine of up to RM10 million, a prison sentence of up to 10 years, or both.
When selecting a broker, understanding its regulatory standing is an important part of assessing overall reliability. For traders seeking to protect their capital, ensuring that a platform operates under recognised and stringent oversight can make all the difference. Keep reading to learn more about Juno Markets and its licenses.
Opening a trading account and watching your capital grow can feel exciting and full of promise until the moment you realise you cannot get your money back. That’s when the dream turns into a nightmare. Recent complaints submitted to WikiFX reveal an unsettling pattern seen at Weltrade where deposits vanish, withdrawals stall for days or even months, and support channels lead nowhere.