Abstract:With 23 complaints in three months and a blacklisting by the Securities Commission Malaysia, ONE ROYAL is a masterclass in how to leverage legitimate ASIC and CySEC licenses while allegedly operating a predatory trap for retail traders. From 'AI' scams to blatant price manipulation, the data suggests this 'royal' treatment is nothing more than a slow-motion heist.

If you believe a flashy website and an Australian address make a broker safe, ONE ROYAL has an expensive lesson waiting for you. This broker might hold prestigious paperwork, but the trail of scorched accounts and missing funds tells a far more sinister story. While they boast a “Great” trading environment scoring an AA on internal benchmarks, their real-world performance is closer to a digital dumpster fire.
In the last 90 days alone, the WikiFX score of 6.26 has been under siege by 23 separate complaints involving fund freezes, AI scams, and price manipulation. This isn't just a few disgruntled losers; this is a systemic failure of a broker that seems to treat its clients' deposits as its own petty cash drawer.
On paper, the ONE ROYAL regulation looks like a fortress. They have the “Big Three”: ASIC (Australia), CySEC (Cyprus), and a VFSC (Vanuatu) offshore shield for when things get messy. But here is the sharp edge of the blade: being regulated doesn't stop a broker from behaving badly; it just gives them a better mask.
| Regulator | License Type | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Australian Securities & Investment Commission (ASIC) | Institutional/Retail | Regulated (420268) |
| Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) | Retail | Regulated (312/16) |
| Vanuatu Financial Services Commission (VFSC) | Offshore | Regulated (700284) |
| Securities Commission Malaysia (SCM) | Unlicensed | ALERT/BLACKLISTED |
The smoking gun? The Securities Commission Malaysia (SCM) has officially blacklisted them for “carrying on unlicensed capital market activities.”

The investigation into One Royal's operations reveals an aggressive push for an “AI Intelligent Trading System.” One victim in Malaysia was lured in by claims of a “92% historical win rate” and “20% monthly returns.” After dropping RM8,000