Abstract:NEWS (News Securities Co., Ltd.) is a legitimate, FSA-regulated Japanese broker with a high safety score, but recent user reports suggest scammers are actively impersonating the brand. While the core company is safe for domestic Japanese traders, international users face a high risk of encountering 'clone' websites.

Executive Summary: NEWS (News Securities Co., Ltd.) is a long-standing Japanese broker established in 2007, regulated by the rigorous FSA Japan. However, recent complaints expose a wave of imposters targeting international traders. While the actual firm scores a high 7.87 on WikiFX, you must be extremely cautious of fake websites using its name.
Finding a trustworthy financial partner can be stressful, especially when valid companies are impersonated by fraudsters. If you are anxious about the safety of your funds, you are asking the right questions. Before you find a Forexbroker, it is crucial to distinguish between the real entity and the fake ones found on social media. In this review, we analyze the official regulatory data and contrasting user complaints to determine if NEWS is the right choice for you.
When analyzing the safety of “NEWS” (News Securities Co., Ltd.), we look at the WikiFX database, which currently assigns it a respectable score of 7.87/10. This high score is primarily reflected in its regulatory status.
The broker is regulated by the Financial Services Agency (FSA) in Japan (License No. Kanto Finance Bureau Chief (Financial Instruments) No. 138).
The Japanese FSA is considered a Tier-1 regulator, meaning it is one of the strictest financial authorities in the world. Unlike offshore islands where licenses can be bought cheaply, gaining regulation in Japan requires:
While the real News Securities Co., Ltd. is safe and regulated, the regulation does not protect you if you accidentally deposit money with an imposter website. The official domain is `news-sec.co.jp`. If you are trading on any other URL, you are likely outside the safety net of the FSA.
This is the most critical section of our review. While the WikiFX score is high (reflecting the real company), the complaint section is filled with distressing stories. We have analyzed recent cases from Vietnam, Indonesia, and Turkey to explain what is happening.

Traders from Indonesia and Vietnam reported:
One user described meeting a woman named “Kagami Kishimoto” on TikTok who introduced them to a platform with the “NEW-S” logo. Initially, small withdrawals worked to build trust. Later, when the user tried to withdraw a larger amount, the account was frozen, and the broker demanded various taxes and fees.

What is happening here?
This is a textbook definition of a “Romance Scam” or “Pig Butchering” fraud.
1. The Hook: Scammers use social media (TikTok, Grindr, WhatsApp) to build a relationship.
2. The Bait: They impersonate a legitimate brand (like NEWS) to gain credibility.
3. The Sting: They force you to pay “tax” or “verification fees” to withdraw.
> Pro Tip: Legitimate Forex brokers never ask you to pay tax via a separate wire transfer. Taxes are your personal responsibility to declare to your local government, not something you pay the broker to release funds.
A trader from Vietnam reported:
After their account grew to $27,000, they were blocked from withdrawing. The platform demanded a 9% “reciprocal money” fee ($2,430) and threatened a $50 daily fine for late payment.

The Verdict:
Real brokers do not fine you for withdrawing your own money. If you see a platform demanding an external payment to “unlock” your profits, stop immediately. Do not pay. You are dealing with a clone scammer using the NEWS brand name to trick you.
The official News Securities Co., Ltd. website serves the Japanese domestic market. However, the complaints highlight a dangerous trend regarding the software users are accessing.
Victims in the cases mentioned above were sent specific links to download trading apps or access web terminals that featured the “NEW-S” logo.
Security Warning:
Scammers often create fake versions of popular trading platforms like MT4 or MT5, or proprietary web-traders, that look professional but are rigged on the back end. In these fake apps, the numbers you see on the screen are manipulated to make you think you are winning (to get you to deposit more) or losing (to explain why your money is gone).
Your security starts at the door.
The decision depends entirely on where you live and which website you are looking at.
Your 3-Step Safety Checklist:
1. Ignore the “friend”: Real brokers don't find you on TikTok.
2. Check the URL: Is it `news-sec.co.jp`? If not, run.
3. Verify the License: Use the WikiFX App to compare the broker's official contact details with the one contacting you.
Status changes daily. Before depositing, check the WikiFX App for the latest real-time certificate.