Abstract:The Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) in South Africa just released a massive batch of warnings for November 2025. We are talking about an avalanche of red flags. From "copy trading" experts who promise to turn pocket change into a luxury sedan overnight, to brazen criminals impersonating the FSCA itself, the landscape is treacherous right now.

By the WikiFX Global Scam Hunter
Positioning: Senior Chief Editor & Market Analyst (Africa Region)
If you thought the scammers were taking an early holiday break in November, think again. In fact, theyve been working overtime.
The Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) in South Africa just released a massive batch of warnings for November 2025. We are talking about an avalanche of red flags. From “copy trading” experts who promise to turn pocket change into a luxury sedan overnight, to brazen criminals impersonating the FSCA itself, the landscape is treacherous right now.
But here is the good news: The regulator isn't just barking; they are biting. Licenses have been stripped, and heavy fines have been levied.
As your dedicated “Scam Hunter” at WikiFX, I've combed through these dry regulatory texts to decode the psychology behind the traps. We aren't just going to list names; we're going to dissect how they try to steal your hard-earned Rand so you can spot them a mile away.

1. The “Clone Wars”: The Telegram & WhatsApp Identity Crisis
If there is one dominant trend in the November warnings, it is Impersonation.
Scammers have realized that building a reputation is hard work. So, they decided to steal yours—or rather, the reputations of legitimate Financial Services Providers (FSPs).
The Mechanism
The FSCA flagged over 10 different cases this month where scammers set up Telegram or WhatsApp groups pretending to be well-known, authorized entities.
- The Victims: Legitimate firms like Rhynco Wealth, 27Four Investment Managers, Alexander Forbes, Exness ZA, and Avior Capital Markets.
- The Trap: You receive a link to a Telegram group like @LeaderFatima_Vawda or @RHYNIER_BURGERza. It looks official. They use the CEO's photo. They use the company's real FSP number.
- The Sting: Once you join, the “CEO” (who is actually a guy in a basement somewhere) starts posting “exclusive” crypto deals or “high-yield” signals. They ask for deposits into bank accounts that have nothing to do with the real company.
WikiFX Reality Check: Legitimate CEOs of major financial firms do not run Telegram groups where they personally ask you to deposit R1,000 via WhatsApp. If “Alexander Forbes” is messaging you at 10 PM with emojis asking for Bitcoin, block them immediately.

2. The “Math Magicians”: Insulting Your Intelligence
The most amusing (and tragic) part of the November warnings comes from the entities promising returns that defy the laws of economics.
Case Study A: Fast Track Global Trade
The Promise: They claimed to offer “daily returns of up to 98%.”
The Micro-Analysis: Lets do the math. If you invested R100 at a 98% daily compound return, within 30 days, you would own more money than exists on the entire planet.
The Catch: When you try to withdraw your trillions, they hit you with a “15% service usage fee.” This is the classic Advance Fee Fraud. The profits on the screen are fake pixels; the fee you pay to “unlock” them is real money lost.
Case Study B: Joash Naidoo
The Promise: Turn R1,000 into R16,000 in 24 hours.
The Psychology: This targets desperation. Scammers know that an R1,000 entry point is affordable for many. They aren't looking for one millionaire; they are looking for 1,000 people with R1,000.
The Verdict: There is no trading strategy in the history of Wall Street that generates a 1,500% return in one day. This is a Ponzi scheme, pure and simple.
3. The “Double-Dip”: The Fake Recovery Agent
This is perhaps the most malicious scam in the batch. The FSCA warned against an individual named “Rick Steiner.”
The Narrative
Rick claims to be a “Chief Executive Investigator” from the FSCA. He contacts people who have already been scammed.
- The Lie: “We found your stolen money! The FSCA has frozen $67 million. We just need you to pay a fee to release your share.”
- The Cruelty: He is targeting people who are already bleeding financially. He offers false hope to extract the last few cents they have left.
Regulatory Fact:The FSCA does not recover funds for individuals, and they certainly never ask for fees to release frozen assets. If the “police” ask for a processing fee via crypto, they aren't the police.
4. The Heavy Hammer: When Regulators Strike Back
It's not all warnings; sometimes, it's punishment. The FSCA took decisive action in November that serves as a warning to rogue brokers.
The Debarment of Kleynhans & Van der Walt
The FSCA fined Ms. Chantelle Kleynhans R1.55 million and Mr. Pieter van der Walt R550,000, debarring both for 20 years.
- Why? They were soliciting deposits for forex trading without authorization.
- The Lesson: Operating without a license isn't just a “compliance issue”; it's a career-ending offense that leads to financial ruin and police referrals.
The Fall of Medbond
The licenses of Medbond Markets and Medbond Insurance Brokers were withdrawn.
- The Offense: Misappropriation of client funds and investing clients into non-existent products.
- Why this matters: Even entities that once had a license can go bad. This is why you must check WikiFX for current status and user complaints, not just historical registration.
5. The WikiFX Defense Strategy
The scammers are getting better at graphic design, but they are terrible at compliance. Here is how you use WikiFX to protect yourself in 30 seconds.
Step 1: The License Lookup
When someone claims to be “Exness” or “Avior Capital” on Telegram:
- Open the WikiFX App.
- Search for the broker's name.
- Crucial Step: Check the official website listed on WikiFX.
- Does the URL in your Telegram chat match the URL on WikiFX? If the Telegram link is avior-invest-now.com but WikiFX says the real site is avior.co.za, you are being scammed.
Step 2: The “Too Good To Be True” Filter
Use the WikiFX Exposure section to see what other traders are saying.
- If a broker promises guaranteed returns, they are lying. No regulated broker is allowed to promise profits.

Step 3: Verify the Representative
The FSCA warns that you must verify the individual.
- Ask for their FSP number.
- Go to the FSCA website (or use WikiFX links) to check if that FSP number belongs to the person talking to you.
- Pro Tip: If they get angry or pressure you to “act now” when you ask for verification, hang up. Legitimate brokers love educated clients; scammers hate them.
Final Word from the Editor
The volume of warnings this November is unprecedented. The sheer number of “Impersonation” scams tells us that criminals are moving away from creating fake brands and are now focused on hijacking real ones.
Do not trust; always verify.
If you are currently in a WhatsApp group called “VIP Investment” or “Gold Signals” run by a famous CEO, leave it. If you have been approached by “Rick Steiner” from the FSCA, block him.
Stay safe, trade smart, and keep your WikiFX app handy—its the best shield you have in this digital jungle.