Atlastradingpro.com: the ASIC‑flagged Malta clone that cost a Melbourne mother $275,000
James Royal8 min read·Just now--
The clone that flew a Maltese flag to hide an Australian crime
Rebecca, a 46‑year‑old single mother of two from Melbourne’s eastern suburbs, had spent eighteen years as a dental receptionist. She was practical, careful with money, and had saved a modest nest egg to help her son and daughter through university. But after a messy divorce that drained most of her savings, she found herself struggling to keep up with the mortgage and the rising cost of living.
In early 2026, an online ad for Atlas Trading Pro promised “institutional‑grade crypto returns with low minimum deposits.” The website, atlastradingpro.com, was sleek and professional. It listed an address in Malta — Pheonix Business Center, The Penthouse, Old Railway Track, Santa Venera — and a phone number with a Maltese country code (+356 9958 3906). The site offered forex, crypto, and CFD trading, and claimed to be “regulated under EU financial law.” The victim believed that a company based in Malta, a respected financial jurisdiction, must have passed strict European oversight.
What Rebecca did not know was that the website was a clone. On 1 May 2026, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) added atlastradingpro.com to its Moneysmart impersonation list, confirming that the website was an Imposter impersonating Mex Australia Pty Ltd, a legitimate Australian financial services firm. The real company had no connection to the Malta address.
A “senior trading advisor” named “Elena” contacted Rebecca via WhatsApp within hours. Elena was warm, patient, and never pushy. She explained that Atlas Trading Pro was part of a European network that had been quietly onboarding Australian clients before a full public launch. She asked about Rebecca’s teenage son, remembered his name, and offered motherly advice about university applications.
Rebecca made a test deposit of $2,500. Her dashboard showed small, believable gains over several days. A withdrawal of $5,000 landed in her bank account without fees — the bait, paid from other victims’ deposits. That single successful payout was the only evidence she needed.
Over the following weeks, she transferred her savings, her son’s university fund, and a home‑equity draw, totalling $275,000 into her Atlas Trading Pro account. The dashboard displayed a balance climbing past $500,000.
When she tried to withdraw $60,000 for her son’s tuition, her account froze. Elena demanded a $16,000 “liquidity activation fee.” She paid. Then a $24,000 “compliance verification fee.” She paid again. Finally, a $32,000 “tax clearance prepayment” was demanded. When she refused, Elena stopped answering. The WhatsApp group she had been added to was deleted overnight. The dashboard remained online, but the withdrawal button was dead.
Domain: atlastradingpro.com
ASIC warning: Moneysmart Impersonation List (added 1 May 2026)
Real entity impersonated: Mex Australia Pty Ltd
Fake address: Phoenix Business Center, The Penthouse, Old Railway Track, Santa Venera SVR 9022, Malta
Fake email: [email protected]
Fake phone: +356 9958 3906
Fraud pattern: clone website with overseas address, advance‑fee extraction after bait withdrawal
Total lost: $275,000
Why Rebecca fell for the trap
Rebecca was not a reckless investor. She had balanced household budgets for two decades. The scammers used four tactics that no dental‑receptionist training could have anticipated.
The Malta address as a credibility shield. The website listed a professional address in Santa Venera, Malta — a jurisdiction known for financial services and EU membership. Rebecca believed that a company based in Malta must be regulated under European law. She did not know that anyone can rent a mail‑drop address in Malta for a few hundred euros. The phone number (+356 9958 3906) was a Maltese mobile, but scammers routinely purchase virtual numbers. ASIC’s warning confirmed that the address and contact details belonged to an imposter.
The clone of a real Australian company. The scammers impersonated Mex Australia Pty Ltd, a legitimate AFSL‑holder. Rebecca did not search for Mex Australia’s official website. She saw “Atlas Trading Pro” and assumed it was a different brand under the same corporate umbrella. Clone scammers regularly steal the names of real Australian firms to appear credible.
A small withdrawal that worked. The $5,000 payout was bait — paid from other victims’ deposits. The first successful withdrawal is always bait. The only test that matters — withdrawing a large sum after a large deposit — never works.
Emotional grooming. Elena learned Rebecca’s son’s name, his school, and his preferred university. She offered sympathetic messages about the stress of single parenting. That manufactured empathy was the scam’s most effective weapon.
Artificial urgency. Elena insisted that the “European launch window” would close at the end of the month. Rebecca deposited larger and larger sums before she could verify the platform’s legitimacy.
The sunk‑cost fallacy. After she had wired $275,000, fear of losing everything drove her to pay the first two fees. Only when the third demand reached $32,000 did she finally stop.
How the fraud worked
Phase 1 — Malta‑based clone with stolen Australian identity. The scammers built atlastradingpro.com, copying the name and branding of Mex Australia Pty Ltd, a legitimate Australian financial firm. The website listed a Malta address — a common tactic to evade Australian jurisdiction while appearing internationally credible.
Phase 2 — ASIC Moneysmart impersonation listing. On 1 May 2026, ASIC added the website to its impersonation list. The warning was public, but Rebecca never thought to check.
Phase 3 — WhatsApp grooming and “European launch” narrative. Elena built trust over weeks before ever mentioning a deposit. She used the Malta address to imply EU regulation.
Phase 4 — Small‑withdrawal bait. A $5,000 test withdrawal was honoured, paid from later victims’ deposits.
Phase 5 — Large deposit freeze. After Rebecca transferred $275,000, the dashboard stopped processing withdrawals.
Phase 6 — Fee‑escalation ladder. The scammers demanded three fabricated fees: “liquidity activation fee,” “compliance verification fee,” and “tax clearance prepayment.” None of these exist in any regulated market. The Australian Taxation Office never collects taxes before a withdrawal is processed.
Phase 7 — Ghost‑withdrawal attempts. Consumer complaints on independent platforms reported that, months after closure, the same operators continued trying to take payments from saved banking credentials.
What the ASIC Moneysmart warning revealed
On 1 May 2026, ASIC’s Moneysmart service added atlastradingpro.com to its impersonation list. The entry explicitly stated that the website was an Imposter impersonating Mex Australia Pty Ltd. The warning listed the fake Malta address, email ([email protected]), and phone number (+356 9958 3906).
ASIC does not issue such warnings for legitimate firms. The listing was public, free, and easily searchable. Rebecca discovered it only after her final wire, when a friend mentioned “ASIC impersonation warning” and she searched the domain name. The result appeared instantly. Her funds were already gone.
Consumer complaints on independent platforms reinforced ASIC’s warning. A Trustindex reviewer reported that a related platform “falsified signatures” and “completely failed to deliver any of the promised services.” Another victim noted that the operators continued trying to withdraw money from old accounts “randomly after all this time” — proof that victim banking details are stored and exploited for years.
The Atlas Trading Pro clone is part of a larger network. The email address [email protected] connects to other scam domains, indicating an organised syndicate that rotates brand names and offshore addresses to evade detection.
Red flags Rebecca missed (and you shouldn’t)
- An ASIC Moneysmart impersonation warning. The alert was public on 1 May 2026. A single search for “Atlas Trading Pro scam” before depositing would have ended the conversation.
- A Malta address with no verifiable AFSL. European regulation does not apply to Australian retail investors. A company based in Malta cannot hold an Australian Financial Services Licence (AFSL) unless it is also registered with ASIC. Atlas Trading Pro had no AFSL.
- An email address (@aarescapitalltd.net) that does not match the domain. The scam used a different domain for email — a sign that the operation is part of a multi‑brand fraud network.
- A Maltese mobile number (+356 9958 3906). Legitimate financial firms use landlines with verifiable office locations, not mobile numbers that can be discarded instantly.
- A small withdrawal that worked. The $5,000 that arrived was bait. It proved nothing.
- Fees that keep moving the finish line. “Liquidity activation fee,” “compliance verification fee,” “tax clearance prepayment” — none of these exist in any regulated market. The ATO never collects taxes before a withdrawal is processed.
- A WhatsApp “investment advisor” who knew her son’s name. Legitimate financial advisors do not cold‑recruit clients via messaging apps and do not ask about family members to build emotional bonds.
- Customer support that disappeared when she stopped paying. Elena was responsive only while money was being wired. When Rebecca refused the third fee, she and the WhatsApp group vanished permanently.
- The trust that a “Malta address” meant “EU regulation.” Malta is a legitimate financial centre, but scammers rent mail‑drops there precisely because of that reputation. A mail‑drop address is not an office.
- Ghost‑withdrawal attempts. The same criminals continued trying to take payments from her saved banking details months after she stopped using the site.
How AYRLP helped recover 60% of the loss
After weeks of sleepless nights — after cancelling her son’s university application and borrowing money from her sister — Rebecca contacted AYRLP, a UK‑based blockchain forensic firm certified by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).
AYRLP’s investigators:
- traced the $275,000 across the blockchain through the network of wallet addresses linked to the atlastradingpro.com scheme,
- identified exchange touchpoints where the scammers had moved the funds toward cash‑out,
- and worked with international authorities, including the AFP and ASIC, to freeze a portion of the assets before they could be fully laundered.
Through AYRLP, Rebecca recovered 60% of her loss — approximately $165,000.
“I had already started drafting the email to my son telling him that we couldn’t afford his first semester. I thought I would lose his future and my home in the same year. AYRLP got back more than half of it — enough to keep him in school and still have something left for the future.”
Final warning: An overseas address is not a licence — and ASIC’s impersonation list is free
The atlastradingpro.com scam did not need a fake company. The scammers simply built a Malta‑based clone website, stole the name of a legitimate Australian firm, and weaponised a WhatsApp grooming script to extract $275,000 from a Melbourne mother who only wanted to send her son to university.
Before you trust any online trading platform:
- Check the ASIC Moneysmart impersonation list before you invest. The list is free, public, and updated daily. A single search for the domain name would have revealed the warning.
- Verify a company’s AFSL directly through ASIC Connect. If a platform claims to be regulated in Australia, search for its licence number on the official ASIC register. Atlas Trading Pro had no AFSL.
- Be sceptical of any platform that lists an overseas address but targets Australian investors. A company that is genuinely regulated in Malta cannot offer trading services to Australian retail clients without also being licensed by ASIC.
- Call the phone number on the website before you deposit. If the number is a mobile or a VoIP line that routes to an overseas call centre, do not send money.
- Never trust a test withdrawal. A successful small withdrawal is bait, paid from other victims’ deposits. The only reliable test is whether the platform honours a large withdrawal without demanding additional fees.
- Be sceptical of any platform that demands upfront fees — especially “liquidity activation,” “compliance verification,” or “tax clearance prepayment.” These fees do not exist in any regulated market. The ATO does not collect taxes before a withdrawal is processed.
- Check for ghost‑withdrawal complaints before you deposit. Consumer platforms had already warned that this clone network continued trying to take payments from saved accounts years after closure.
If you or someone you know has been victimised by atlastradingpro.com or any similar Malta‑based clone scheme, contact the Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC) , your state police, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) , and a reputable blockchain forensic firm like AYRLP immediately.