Matecrypt claims to have been established in 2023 as a "global cryptocurrency exchange," providing access through Web, iOS, and Android platforms, primarily dealing in USDT spot trading. The official website matecrypt.com and the trading page matecrypt.co are used concurrently, and its MSB registration under the name Matecrypt CRYPTO GROUP LIMITED can be verified with FinCEN.
Matecrypt claims "to become the world's most trusted cryptocurrency exchange," with a slogan filled with terms like "security, compliance, user-centered." While these words sound right, any institution truly aligned with compliant markets would present verifiable regulatory and risk control details rather than mere declarations.
New Domains & Domain Switching Strategy
- Main domain matecrypt.com registered on 2025-04-26, valid for only one year;
- Trading page matecrypt.co registered on 2025-05-15, also for one year;
- The main site and trading page use different suffixes and went online not long apart, showing a typical early-stage setup situation. This kind of "short-term registration + multiple domain switching" is not uncommon in crypto illicit operations: once the reputation collapses or it is tracked, they quickly abandon the domain and switch shells.

Using MSB Registration as "Endorsement" is Compliance Ambiguity
Matecrypt's MSB registration can be found in FinCEN (MSB number 31000299626442), but MSB is just a registration, emphasizing the reporting requirements of AML/CFT, and is not a financial market regulatory license, nor does it mean the platform's business and technical security have been approved.
More critically: using "FinCEN certification" and "US license" as market rhetoric is highly misleading. Strictly speaking, Matecrypt does not have the qualifications of the "regulated exchange" it claims to be.


Data Vacuum — Invisible Real Users
- According to third-party monitoring, the monthly visitor count of matecrypt.com and matecrypt.co is less than a hundred.
- A self-proclaimed "global" trading platform with no basic traffic and natural growth has only two explanations: either it is newly built or no one uses it.
- The trading depth is also compromised: the bid-ask spread displayed on the page is significant and shallow, not on par with the liquidity of mainstream exchanges.


UI Likeness Matters Less Than "Lack of Evidence"
The website's navigation, market view, order placement, contracts, C2C, and financial modules are very similar to mainstream ones, but there's a lack of key evidence:
- No verifiable API documentation/status page;
- No transaction announcements, reserve proofs, audit reports;
- No clear disclosures for fees, risk control, and risk disclosure.
An attractive appearance does not equal a reliable infrastructure.
"Partners" Only Display Logos Without Links
Logos such as HyperBC, HyperPay, AICoin, BITKAN, CoinMarketCap, ETHFANS are displayed at the bottom of the page, yet there are no external links or verification. In the industry, this technique is called "labeling to enhance credibility": low cost, highly deceptive.

Unfriendly to Newcomers
There are no systematic tutorials for beginners, operation guides, or investor education modules. For users new to crypto trading, this means they cannot establish a safety boundary and operational norms, making them more susceptible to being "guided" in the process.
Common "Scripts" of Such Platforms
- First, use vision and UI to secure trust: it looks like a legitimate exchange;
- Then blur "regulation" with registration: treat MSB as a pass;
- Poor traffic and depth: no tangible user experience;
- Social media and partnerships prove nothing: only logos and template content.
When you notice every step requires "belief" instead of "verification", the answer becomes clear.
Risk Warnings and Suggestions
- Before verifying real regulatory and entity information, do not submit any sensitive materials (such as ID cards, proof of address, bank cards, etc.).
- Avoid narrative guidance with “guaranteed returns,” “timely unlock,” “advance thawing fees,” etc.
- Every platform should be able to provide an independently verifiable evidence chain: business scope corresponding to regulatory numbers, verifiable external links for partnerships, auditable reserves and transparency data, usable and stable API. Missing any of these requires increased caution.
Why We Classify Matecrypt as High Risk
Perhaps each of the above red flags can be explained individually; however, when all red flags appear simultaneously and are related to "verifiability," Matecrypt faces an issue of structural untrustworthiness, rather than just being an "early-stage project."




