Apex Trade has been flagged on the SARFund registry as a reported high-yield crypto investment platform. Victim submissions describe a familiar pattern: an initial small deposit that “performs”, followed by escalating top-ups and a final wall when withdrawal is requested.
The reports cluster around three operational signatures: the platform promised guaranteed returns, demanded “tax” or “verification” fees before withdrawal, and used unregulated celebrity endorsements. SARFund treats this combination as sufficient grounds to maintain an active case file pending recovery action.
Public chatter on Quora question threads, TrustPilot complaints and Telegram channel testimonials shows the same recurring complaint structure: deposits go in, dashboard “earnings” appear, withdrawal requests trigger fee demands, and contact eventually goes silent.
What evidence helps most
Transaction hashes (the on-chain proof of your deposit), screenshots of the broker dashboard, KYC documents you submitted, and full conversation history with any account manager. These four pieces let the partner build a defensible chain of custody.
Why the recovery partner is masked
Listing the partner publicly creates two problems: it tips off perpetrators, who then accelerate fund-laundering, and it invites recovery-scam impersonators to clone the partner brand. Both happen often enough that masking is the only defensible default.
Suspect you were affected by Apex Trade? Submit your claim evidence and SARFund will route it to the partner working this case. No upfront fees, no obligation, no recovery guarantee — just verification and coordination.
SARFund does not guarantee recovery. All recovery actions are conducted by independent partners. Submission is free. SARFund is an intermediary case registry, not a recovery firm.