Assett Broker Review and Website Analysis

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Asett Broker - logo

Have you stumbled upon Assett Broker and are now wondering whether to invest money there? Don’t be in a hurry — first read our review through to the end. We ran a check on the company against the registries, verified their domain, and looked over their contacts, and we’ll honestly show you why this is a scam.

Brief Overview

  • 🖥Official Website: assettbroker.com
  • ✈️Contact Address: Suite 207, Griffith Corporate Centre, P.O. Box 1511, Beachmont, Kingstown, St. Vincent and the Grenadines
  • 📞Customer Support: support@assettbroker.com
  • 🔐Licensing and Accreditation: –
  • ⏳Track Record: 2026
  • 🧰Specialization: binary option trading
  • 🤝Terms of Cooperation: $1
  • 💰Additional Services: analytics, demo account

Assettbroker.com Examination

The entire website of Assett Broker is done in a single dark, almost black color. There’s no light version. There’s no toggle either. It’s hard on the eyes. Small gray text on a black background is tough to read. This especially applies to the disclaimer at the very bottom. There, it almost blends into the background. The result is that the important legal portion seems to have been deliberately hidden in the darkness, so you don’t notice it.

Asett Broker - website

Assett Broker decided not to spend any effort or resources on creating a quality, full-fledged website, so what we have in front of us is one single page. The menu has just three items: Markets, Platform, and FAQ. And those aren’t even separate pages. They’re just links that scroll you down the same page. There’s no “About the Company” section. There’s no documents page. There’s no description of the account types. There’s no registry of licenses. Remember the simple rule. With a real broker, the website is dozens of pages. There, you’ll find the history of the firm, the team, detailed conditions for every instrument, and a full packet of legal papers.

Plenty of important information is missing. There’s no registration number for the firm. There’s no license number. There isn’t a single link to a registry where any of this could be verified.

The text on the website itself is empty advertising. Solid stretches of meaningless phrases like “trade with intelligence and security” or “features that change everything”. Zero specifics. Where are the tables with spreads and commissions for each asset? Nowhere. Instead of honest conditions, you’ve just got cards with up-down bets and a payout percentage.

Company Contacts

Here, things are even sadder. There aren’t any ways to get in touch with Assett Broker. The only thing listed on their website is an email address, and that’s it. That’s the only channel of communication. Nothing else: no phone, no live chat, no contact form, no messaging apps.

At the bottom of the website hang the familiar logos, as if the outfit has pages on social media. But it’s a deception for the eyes. Click on any such icon, and nothing happens. They’re just images. There are no links underneath them. No profiles, groups, or accounts exist in reality. The logos were put up purely for show.

And the cherry on top is the email. That very same and only email, support@assettbroker.com, through which you could even get in touch with Assett Broker, doesn’t work. We checked it directly through the mail server — no such email exists, it’s a fake.

Fake email

Key Conditions

Let’s start with what’s right on the surface. The minimum deposit at Assett Broker is just $10. You can fund your account with crypto, a card, or a bank transfer. The money, as promised, shows up on your balance instantly.

The other trading conditions aren’t disclosed: spreads, commissions, leverage, margin requirements, and so on? Meanwhile, the text on the official website makes it clear that this isn’t a forex broker but a binary option.

The website displays cards for the assets — BTC, ETH, DOGE, and so on. Each one has CALL or PUT written on it along with a percentage: 81%, 84%, 92%. That’s the percentage rate in the event of a win. You just guess whether the price will go up (CALL) or down (PUT). Guess right — you get a “payout” of up to 92% on top. Guess wrong — you lose the entire bet. You don’t have any actual assets in your hands. Essentially, it’s “red or black” roulette, only with crypto instead of a ball.

What’s most interesting is that Assett Broker also doesn’t disclose the conditions for trading binary options. What types of options, the exact payout percentage for each instrument, the expiration levels, and so on. Essentially, it’s a guessing game, and it shouldn’t be that way.

Exposing Assett Broker

And now we move on to the most important part. Any broker lives or dies on one question: who controls it? Who makes sure it doesn’t steal client money? With honest outfits, the answer is simple and verifiable.

In the footer of the Assett Broker website, it’s stated: “International Crypto/Financial License — AOFA”. It seems to sound reliable and serious, but it isn’t. This piece of paper is worth nothing.

Fact one: The Central Bank of the Comoros Islands itself officially stated that island outfits like these have no right to issue financial licenses. In other words, the “AOFA license” isn’t recognized even back home. Fact two: no capital is needed to obtain it. Zero. Real regulators require a broker to hold millions in its accounts — it’s insurance in case it goes broke. Here, there’s nothing. Fact three: a piece of paper like this is issued in a couple of weeks and for not much money. And most importantly, fact four: with a “license” like this, you, as a client, can’t file a complaint or sue. There simply isn’t anywhere to file a complaint. There’s no one to keep the broker in check.

However, what’s worse is that we checked the AOFA registry and found out that such a project (either under the name Max Trading or under the name Assett Broker) had not received a license.

Let’s move on. Assett Broker lists a legal entity — Max Trading Group Limited, the island of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. That’s another red flag. This jurisdiction doesn’t regulate the activities of brokers, including binary options. In other words, the firm has no real and serious regulation, which means trusting your deposit to it is a 100% risk.

Meanwhile, as with the license, this fact is also completely fictitious. There is no legal entity by this name listed in the registry of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. Therefore, the broker has no registration or license anywhere.

The assettbroker.com domain was registered on March 25, 2026. That means at the time of the check, the site is just about three months old. It’s paid up exactly one year ahead — until March 25, 2027.

Domain

The domain is three months old, and on the homepage of the website, the broker claims “50,000+ active traders”. That’s physically impossible. In that kind of timeframe, without a single mention online, without any reviews or analyses, 50 thousand live clients don’t appear out of nowhere. The figure was simply drawn up for show and for the sake of trust.

What Reviews Do Users Leave?

Assett Broker has managed to accumulate a number of reviews online despite its relatively short operating history. However, the overwhelming majority of feedback available on platforms such as Trustpilot appears unusually positive and repetitive, raising legitimate questions about its authenticity. Many comments consist of generic praise without providing specific details about trading experience, withdrawals, or customer support interactions. As a result, these reviews do little to increase confidence in the company. Considering the broker’s absence of registration, lack of any regulatory oversight, and limited track record, potential clients should approach such testimonials with caution.

Conclusions

The facts speak for themselves. Assett Broker operates through a recently registered website, provides no verifiable proof of its legal registration, and fails to demonstrate that it holds a valid financial license. The company’s claims cannot be confirmed through independent sources. In our opinion, these are serious warning signs that should not be ignored. Sending money to a platform with such a lack of transparency is a significant risk, especially when there is no credible evidence that client funds are protected.

Pros/Cons

  • Low minimum deposit of $10.
  • No regulation;
  • No registration;
  • The broker has actually been in operation since 2026;
  • A one-page website with minimal relevant information.

FAQ

I've been offered a deposit bonus. Should I take it?

You shouldn't. A bonus is a trap. The bonus funds always come with rollover conditions attached. This means that in order to withdraw your own money, you have to trade a huge volume. Until you've traded through it, you can't pull the money out of your account. By the way, in the European Union, the ESMA regulator banned bonuses like these outright precisely because they're used to catch beginners. If Assett Broker hands them out, that's one more piece of evidence that there are no proper rules in place here.

How can I check for myself when a broker's website was created?

It can be done in a minute and for free. There are special WHOIS services — that's a database where the registration date of any domain is stored. You just type in the website's address, and it shows you when the domain was created and through what year it's paid up. From there, use your head. If an outfit shouts "we've been on the market since 2015" while the domain is, in actual fact, three months old, you're being lied to. Assett Broker's domain was registered on March 25, 2026, and is only paid up a year ahead.

What does it mean if a broker is registered in an offshore jurisdiction like St. Vincent or Anjouan?

It means that there's no real oversight of it. An offshore is a place where you can open a company for next to nothing and with no vetting. The local "regulators" there either don't keep an eye on brokers at all, or they're selling worthless pieces of paper. In practical terms for you, it works like this: no one is protecting client money, there are no segregated accounts, there's no compensation fund, and it won't be possible to sue the outfit.
Helen Prescott

Helen, a graduate of the University of Kent with a degree in Journalism and Mass Communication, has a keen eye for uncovering financial fraud.

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Reviews: 1
  1. Aura

    I don’t even know what you’d have to be thinking to open an account here. The company looks as much like a scammer as it possibly could. There are plenty of reliable, trusted brokers out there — go and trade with them. Why would you go with a blatant scam like Assett Broker? I don’t know. There’s no license, no proper description of the trading conditions, no test of time, and no guarantees of reliability.

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