VirPoint Investigation: The Facade of London, Self-Declared as Unregulated
Summary
VirPoint (virpoint.com) markets itself as a "precision trading" platform offering a wide range of CFD products like forex, stocks, and cryptocurrencies. The website boasts a sleek design and confident language, repeatedly emphasizing "safety," "transparency," and "control."[5] However, its legal documents clearly state: VirPoint is not regulated by any authority.[2] This is not a small print disclaimer but a hallmark of a high-risk offshore trap.
Who's Running It? Offshore Entity + London Address
VirPoint’s “Terms” specify that the operating entity is Finstar Technologies LTD, registered in Majuro, Marshall Islands, with a London operating address (100 Bishopsgate).[1] This implies:
- Registered in the Marshall Islands—known for its lenient company registration as an offshore jurisdiction;
- The London address is merely a facade, not indicative of UK regulation or UK client protection.
More crucially, VirPoint’s KYC policy explicitly states: "VirPoint is not a regulated entity."[2] This statement draws a fundamental line between it and licensed brokers—no regulatory oversight, no external complaint channels, and any withdrawal disputes must be taken to a court in the Marshall Islands.[2][3]
Terms Designed to Give Platform Full Control
VirPoint’s “Withdrawal Policy” lists withdrawal methods such as bank transfer, credit cards, and crypto wallets but retains broad discretion: withdrawals may require additional documents, need manual approval, and only be processed when "all compliance requirements are met."[3] In an unregulated environment, “compliance” can become a reason for indefinite delays.
The KYC policy is even clearer: non-compliance might lead to restrictions, withdrawal delays, suspensions, or account closures.[2] Coupled with crypto withdrawals—which are nearly irreversible once confirmed—this further complicates fund recovery.
The "Established Since 2020" Narrative vs. Domain Timeline
VirPoint’s “About Us” page claims the platform has been growing “since 2020,” featuring a leadership team and timeline.[6] Paid promotional content also repeats "established in 2020," even labeling it a "UK platform."[9][10]
But public data points to a more recent timeline:
- ScamAdviser WHOIS shows the virpoint.com domain was registered on March 10, 2025.[7]
- The VirPoint app on Google Play was published on March 6, 2026.[8]
The timelines do not align. A genuinely operating platform since 2020 would have an earlier domain, independent news coverage, or regulatory records. VirPoint’s “history” feels more like a marketing narrative.
"Leadership Team" and PR Packaging
VirPoint’s “About Us” page introduces a CEO and several executives.[6] These names appear in the platform’s channels and paid news release ecosystem, including short videos and promotional articles.[9][10] In a self-acknowledged unregulated platform, these so-called “executives” often serve as tools to maintain victim trust, explain delays, and encourage deposits.
Most Likely Challenges for Victims
If VirPoint operates as a typical offshore CFD trap, the path to losses usually involves:
- Smooth Deposits, Blocked Withdrawals—demand for additional documents, “taxes,” account upgrades;
- Account Freeze, Customer Service Silence—platform blocks login under “compliance review”;
- Identity Breach—uploaded passports, bills may be used for further scams;
- “Recovery” Scam—contacts promising paid services to recover funds.[12]
Once funds are withdrawn via cryptocurrency, reversal is nearly impossible. Therefore, the most important action is: immediately halt any further transfers, and contact your bank/card provider to initiate a dispute.
Warnings from Similar Cases
In law enforcement records, OneCoin used professional presentations, authoritative figures, and global marketing, resulting in billions in losses. The U.S. Department of Justice just launched a compensation process for victims in 2026.[15] JuicyFields employed community referrals and promised returns to attract investors, freezing refunds after its collapse, leading to nine arrests by Europol, with losses estimated in the hundreds of millions of euros.[16]
VirPoint shares the same logic as these cases: replacing real regulation with a facade of credibility and using marketing narratives to mask the reality of being unlicensed, ultimately testing at the moment of withdrawal.
Conclusion: VirPoint Should Be Seen as High-Risk Unregulated Platform
VirPoint is transparent about its offshore structure—it explicitly states its operations are based in the Marshall Islands and it's unregulated.[1][2] However, by using a London address, employing European market language, and narrating a "since 2020" story, it can easily mislead investors. Its withdrawal policy allows for complete discretion, supports crypto withdrawals, and points dispute resolution to the courts in the Marshall Islands.[3][2]
There's no need for exaggerated accusations to define risk. VirPoint's own documents suffice to classify it as a “high-risk offshore trap.” Anyone considering using virpoint.com should be aware: your funds do not enjoy any protection under the framework of a licensed broker.
References
[1] https://virpoint.com/doc/terms
[2] https://virpoint.com/doc/kyc
[3] https://virpoint.com/doc/withdrawal
[4] https://virpoint.com/doc/referral
[5] https://virpoint.com/
[6] https://virpoint.com/about-us
[7] https://www.scamadviser.com/check-website/virpoint.com
[8] https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.virpoint.app
[9] https://finance.yahoo.com/news/virpoint-com-launches-ai-enhanced-074700532.html
[10] https://www.fxempire.com/news/article/virpoint-review-2025-is-it-the-right-exchange-for-you-1553297
[11] https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/11084047/registers/persons-with-significant-control
[12] https://www.finra.org/investors/insights/recovery-scams
[13] https://consumer.ftc.gov/node/76851
[14] https://www.fbi.gov/news/press-releases/cryptocurrency-and-ai-scams-bilk-americans-of-billions
[15] https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/justice-department-announces-compensation-process-onecoin-fraud-victims-funds-recovered
[16] https://www.europol.europa.eu/media-press/newsroom/news/9-arrests-in-eur-645-million-juicyfields-investment-scam-case




