We often receive requests from novice investors to tell us about various platforms. In response to their requests, we have created the Highstocktrade review — a story about a company that cannot be trusted with even a cent. Why are we so confident about this? Read on to understand everything.
Brief Overview
- 🖥Official Website: https://highstocktrade.net/
- ✈️Contact Addresses: 92 Netherpark Crescent, STAUNTON ON ARROW HR6 7SD
- 📞Customer Support: [email protected], +1(302)595-5852.
- 🔐Licensing and Accreditation: none
- ⏳Track Record: 2023
- 🧰Specialization: investments in cryptocurrencies
- 🤝Terms of Cooperation: from $300 for Basic Plan up to $1,000,000 for Delox VIP Plan, ROI 2-5% daily
- 💰Additional Services: cards for investors
Highstocktrade.net Examination
The official website of Highstocktrade looks like the first attempt of a beginner web developer. Here, visitors will find a poor layout of pages with attempts to liven it up with block animations. However, an unappealing design is not its main problem. Much worse is that the content of the pages is just as poor and poorly developed. How else to evaluate, for example, lengthy discussions on the Insurance page instead of listing specific measures for insuring client funds? Or statements on the Home Page that the service is designed for crypto investors, followed by a list of CFDs the company trades a bit further down.
There are many such inconsistencies on highstocktrade.net. We will certainly talk about the most notable ones further.
Company Contacts
The contact details of Highstocktrade look quite interesting, especially when viewed together with the content of the About Us page. But first, let’s discuss the contacts themselves. You can contact the company representatives by:
- Filling out and submitting a feedback form.
- Sending a letter to the postal address.
- Sending an email.
- Calling by phone.
- Chatting in Live chat.
It looks quite solid, but it raises many questions:
- Why is the email address hosted on a free Gmail server and not on their own mail server?
- Why does the phone number belong to the state of Delaware (USA), although the About Us page does not even mention offices in this country?
- How did it happen that the postal address belongs to the English village of Staunton on Arrow, when the main office (according to the same About Us page) is located in Australia, and there isn’t even a representative office in the UK?
- Why are there no links to social media pages on the site? Since 2007 (as the company claims about its duration of existence), was there no time or resources available to organize groups and channels?
It seems the contact details were gathered, so to speak, “wherever they could be found, and preferably cheaply.” This approach is clearly not suitable for an investment company with over 16 years of experience, offering astronomical percentage returns. It appears that Highstocktrade is deceiving its clients somewhere.
Key Conditions
The set of tariff plans offered by Highstocktrade is far from solid. The company offers only four plans designed for ultra-short-term 7-day investments. The payouts depend on the amount invested in each plan:
- Basic. Requires an investment of $300 to $1,999 with a daily return of 2%.
- Silver. Requires an investment of $2,000 to $9,999 with a daily return of 3%.
- Platinum. Requires an investment of $10,000 to $49,999 with a daily return of 4%.
- Delox VIP. The final plan, aimed at wealthy investors, requires an investment of $50,000 to $1,000,000 with a daily return of 5%.
As we can see, all Highstocktrade tariff plans are extremely aggressive, offering returns from 14% to 35% over the investment period. Considering that some strategies achieve these results over a year, collaboration with the company may seem very profitable. However, it should be remembered that high returns are always associated with high risks.
Calculating the annual return of the Delox VIP plan, for example, we get an annual return of 1820% without compounding. What is the risk level for the investor? Highstocktrade prefers not to discuss it and generally avoids mentioning the “scary” word “risks.” Honest investment companies do not operate this way. Moreover, this is a violation of the laws of almost all countries and contradicts the requirements of financial regulators. Do you still think you can deal with this project and not get scammed?
We also have another question for the company owners. We will not yet talk about where they invest clients’ money — in cryptocurrency or Forex/CFD trading. We just want to ask if the platform’s representatives can document (e.g., with trading statements or account statements) such a level of DAILY income. We are confident they cannot. Otherwise, these documents would be posted on the website instead of vague mumblings about the possibility of earning so much with a market turnover of over $5 trillion.
In short, we are confident that we are not talking about a legitimate investment company. In our opinion, Highstocktrade is a trivial HYIP that exists only online. It funds payouts from the contributions of new clients (if it pays out at all). In fact, we are looking at a potential (or maybe already real) scam using a Ponzi scheme. Sooner or later, all its participants will lose their funds. Don’t risk becoming another victim.
Exposing Highstocktrade
There is no shortage of evidence of the company’s dishonest practices. We will discuss the most important ones right now.
First, let’s talk about the company’s registration. On the About Us page, the company representatives claim that it was founded in 2007 in New South Wales, Australia. The headquarters are said to be there, with representative offices in Canada, France, Brazil, Singapore, and Germany.
Meanwhile, the Legal Information section contains a copy of a registration certificate issued by the UK Companies House. According to it, Highstocktrade Limited was registered on February 18, 2016, under No. 1378898.
First, the registration dates do not match — 2016 is not 2007. Second, New South Wales in Australia is quite far from the UK. Which information should we believe?
It turns out, not a single one. The copy of registration certificate provided was created by the company itself using very rudimentary Photoshop skills and there is no such registration number in the registry. Since there are no other legal documents about the company, the conclusion is that the platform operates without official registration. Naturally, it is not an investment firm and offers to invest money illegally. Moreover, Highstocktrade tries to deceive users by providing deliberately false information and fake document copies.
Another confirmation of the company’s dishonesty is the information about its registration date. We have already mentioned 2007 and 2016. However, this was disproved by the data from the whois service.
The domain highstocktrade.net was registered only on December 10, 2023. This is also confirmed by web archive snapshots, showing that activity on the Highstocktrade website appeared only in January 2024. We can forget about registration 17 or 8 years ago — the project really started working only in 2024.
By the way, for such an obvious scam, a term of almost six months is quite a long time. The platform can cease operations at any moment, naturally, taking all clients’ money. Investing becomes increasingly risky.
What Reviews Do Users Leave?
There are few Highstocktrade reviews on the web so far. Most thematic sites show that the project is a scam and cannot be trusted. However, on sites like Sitejabber, the picture is somewhat different. For instance, Sitejabber has 8 comments, 7 of which are positive. Their paid nature is immediately evident — besides “I like it” or “great company,” the authors could not come up with anything. The negative review with a rating of 1 out of 5 is much more informative, but it gets lost in the wave of paid positivity.
Conclusions
Thus, in this Highstocktrade review, we have shown that this project is a scam, and investing in it is dangerous. Unverified sources of payouts, enormous returns, withholding information about risks — investment companies do not behave this way. And if you check the registration data and the platform’s existence time, it becomes clear that they are trying to deceive clients. So, is it worth the risk? We are confident that it is not.
Pros/Cons
- Low minimum threshold.
- High returns (up to 1800+%).
- The platform operates without official registration.
- Documents are fake.
- Data on the existence period is unreliable.
- Investors are not informed about risks.
- Generous payouts are likely the result of a Ponzi scheme.
Haha, I also got 1820% returns yesterday… in my dreams.