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In-Depth Findings: What is Behind of TenX Prime?
Abstract:TenX Prime currently has been accused by dozens of trader complaints, claiming its PAMM system went offline in early October 2025, leaving investors unable to access funds or withdraw. Multiple complaints point out two PAMM managers — “Chris Anderson” and “Paul Gold Hunter” who promoted investment pools and directed followers into TenX Prime.

TenX Prime currently has been accused by dozens of trader complaints, claiming its PAMM system went offline in early October 2025, leaving investors unable to access funds or withdraw. Multiple complaints point out two PAMM managers — “Chris Anderson” and “Paul Gold Hunter” who promoted investment pools and directed followers into TenX Prime.
Executive Summary
Registered in Saint Vincent & the Grenadines, TenX Prime currently has been accused by dozens of trader complaints, claiming its PAMM system went offline in early October 2025, leaving investors unable to access funds or withdraw. Multiple complaints point out two PAMM managers — “Chris Anderson” and “Paul Gold Hunter” who promoted investment pools and directed followers into TenX Prime. Public reporting and trader reports suggest over 1,200 affected investors and alleged losses in the millions. Due to the lack of transparency, the identities and credentials of the brokers management and the named PAMM managers are not verifiable via regulator records or independent professional profiles.
Background of TenX Prime
- Corporate registration: TenX Prime Ltd is shown in corporate directories and broker-watch sites as registered in Saint Vincent & the Grenadines (SVG), with an address listed at Suite 305, Griffith Corporate Centre, Kingstown. SVGFSA records quoted by broker-watchers list registration details (company number 26449, registration date 2021). These offshore registrations are common for high-risk brokers because SVG provides minimal forex oversight.
- Website and operations: TenX Prime operates and publicly advertised a low minimum deposit (USD 25), high leverage (up to 1:500) and a PAMM investment product aimed at retail investors. The site is active but, per trader reports, investor portal access has been down since October. For more information about this issue, check the story here.
- Claims of other licences: Some third-party pages quote alleged Australian/South African links or authorizations, but investigations and regulator checks reported on those pages suggest those claims are misstated or terminated (e.g., ASIC/FSCA claims either not shown on official registers or indicated as “exceeded/terminated”). Treat these licensing claims as unverified unless confirmed directly by the named regulator.
How the PAMM product was marketed
- Social channels & influencers: Multiple reports show TenX Primes PAMM pools were promoted via Telegram channels and social accounts tied to trading influencers. The most frequently named promoter is “Chris the Gold Father” (channels/handles such as @Chris_TheeTrader / “Chris the Gold Father”), which reportedly had large followings. Victims reported being funneled from these channels to TenX Prime via direct links and private onboarding messages.
- Direct investor outreach: Complaints indicate private chats, invitation codes, and exclusive “manager pools” were used to recruit investors into specific PAMM accounts managed by named individuals. That is a common pattern for affinity fraud: build trust via social proof, then route deposits to a single platform/account.
Key people named by victims
a) Chris Anderson — aka “Chris the Gold Father” / @Chris_TheeTrader (common aliases)
- What victims say: Multiple independent complaints identify Chris Anderson as the lead promoter/fund manager who ran Telegram channels and personally encouraged deposits into TenX Prime PAMM accounts. Victims say he provided trade screenshots, occasional withdrawals early on (to build trust), then promoted larger deposits. When the PAMM portal went down in October, victims reported him disappearing / channels being deleted or muted.
- Channel evidence: Reporting cites a Telegram/Signal/Telegram-style channel named “CHRIS THE GOLD FATHER” that at one point reportedly had tens of thousands of subscribers and smaller “investor groups” with hundreds or thousands of members that were instructed to join specific TenX Prime pools. WikiFXs Chinese coverage describes two large channels — one for signals and one for education — funneling traffic to TenX Prime.
Chris Anderson is a named actor in multiple complaints and appears to have been instrumental in client recruitment, but his real identity and credentials remain unverified by public records.
b) Paul Gold Hunter
- What victims say: Named by several complainants as a co-manager or another PAMM manager within TenX Prime. Victim reports state funds were placed under his management as well and that he stopped responding when issues began.
- Verification status: Similar to Chris Anderson — presence mainly in victim complaints, WikiFX exposure posts and forum threads; no independent professional or regulatory record located in our searches.
What's More
- High risk of fraud: The combination of an offshore registration, multiple social-media funnels, lack of verifiable management credentials, corroborated victim reports, and a sudden platform blackout is consistent with patterns seen in broker scams that use PAMM/copy-trading products to aggregate funds then restrict withdrawals.
- Evidence quality: The strongest evidence is victim testimony, forum threads, and WikiFX investigations. We did not find court filings, bank subpoenas, or regulator enforcement actions (yet) publicly available at the time of this search, which means criminal or civil enforcement may still be in progress or not publicly filed.

Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
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