InvestorJustice Advisory: Cayman Islands Jurisdictions
Cayman registration limits investor protections. Entities serving foreign clients often fall outside CIMA’s scope, leaving retail investors without a regulator or accessible complaint process.
Cayman registration limits investor protections. Entities serving foreign clients often fall outside CIMA’s scope, leaving retail investors without a regulator or accessible complaint process.
FINMA claims to provide guard rails for financial innovation. But when innovation creates new ways to harm investors, those guard rails collapse into a smoke screen — and harmed users are dismissed as collateral damage.
Swiss investors face systemic risks, yet regulators remain silent and Swiss media has failed to educate the public. This silence enables harm and shields misconduct.
InvestorJustice.org warns investors to avoid Nexo. Evidence shows misuse of APR, refusal of lawful records requests, jurisdictional evasion, and deletion of key Terms of Service clauses, leaving investors, especially seniors, without accountability.
Nexo markets itself as a seamless global platform, but its web of entities across Switzerland, the Cayman Islands, and the U.S. creates an accountability gap. InvestorJustice.org shows how deleted Terms of Service clauses stripped investors of Swiss remedies amid legal pressure.
In October 2024, I exercised my right under Swiss data law to request my Nexo account records. Instead of complying, Nexo counsel demanded an irregular Power of Attorney and ultimately refused. This story shows how jurisdictional evasion leaves investors without accountability.
Nexo was fined $45 million by the SEC for its illegal Earn Interest Product—but many retirement-age investors remain financially ruined, with no recourse. This article calls for overdue cross-border enforcement.
Nexo AG uses a Cayman shell and Swiss branding to shield itself from investor accountability. But the deeper failure is FINMA’s silence — a regulatory choice that puts Swiss credibility at risk.
A forensic reconstruction of deleted Swiss conciliation rights from Nexo AG’s Terms of Use, showing systematic efforts to obscure procedural access for retirement-age investors.
This evidentiary brief outlines cross-jurisdictional violations by Nexo AG, where APR-marketed loans were actually high-risk margin accounts. It includes legal precedent, investor harm, and forensic evidence calling for regulatory intervention.
Outlines how Nexo’s language misled users by describing a margin-based product as a “fixed APR credit line.” Supports misrepresentation and consumer protection claims under Swiss and U.S. law.
Shows Nexo’s failure to assess investor suitability or risk tolerance before placing them into high-risk leveraged products. Supports legal arguments under FINMA and SEC standards, especially concerning retirement-age investors and vulnerable parties.
Documents forensic screenshot evidence showing Nexo’s misrepresentation of APR-based lending while hiding margin liquidation risks. Demonstrates consumer deception with timestamped, hash-verified evidence, extremely valuable for journalists, regulators, and potential co-claimants.
Explains the definition and limits of “accredited investor” status under SEC Rule 501. Clarifies that accreditation is not immunity from misrepresentation or lack of disclosure. Directly rebuts the argument that being “accredited” nullifies claims of elder or consumer financial abuse.
A U.S. investor harmed by Nexo’s liquidation practices calls on the SEC to act on cross-border abuse. Despite past enforcement against Nexo’s Earn Interest Product, other high-risk offerings remain unaddressed—leaving retirement-age victims exposed and unprotected.
A retirement-age U.S. investor calls on FINMA to uphold its cross-border regulatory duty under the SEC–FINMA Memorandum of Understanding following unlawful financial harm tied to Nexo AG.
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