In one of the biggest crackdowns on cyber-financial crime, the Directorate of Enforcement (ED), Mumbai Zonal Office, has issued a provisional attachment order under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002, attaching cryptocurrencies worth approximately ₹2,385 crore in connection with the OctaFX unauthorized forex trading platform scam.

The agency has also confirmed the arrest of mastermind Pavel Prozorov in Spain, through Spanish Police authorities, marking a crucial development in an international cybercrime case that has defrauded Indian investors of thousands of crores.


🧠 How the Scam Worked

  • OctaFX presented itself as an online forex trading platform for currency, commodities, and crypto trading — but operated without RBI permission.
  • Investors were lured with promises of high returns, receiving small initial profits to build trust — a pattern typical of Ponzi schemes.
  • Between July 2022 and April 2023, Indian investors were duped of approximately ₹1,875 crore, with profits of ₹800 crore generated by the platform in India.
  • Over the 2019–2024 period, OctaFX is estimated to have made over ₹5,000 crore in total profits from India, most of which were illegally transferred abroad.
  • Trading manipulation: OctaFX allegedly used fake candlestick charts and deliberate slippage to ensure investor losses.
  • Global layering: Operations were distributed across multiple jurisdictions to evade scrutiny — with entities in BVI, Spain, Estonia, Georgia, Cyprus, Dubai, and Singapore playing different roles from hosting servers to moving funds abroad.

💸 Property & Asset Trail

While a major portion of the laundered funds were parked in cryptocurrency wallets, ED’s investigation has also led to the attachment of properties and assets worth over ₹2,681 crore, which include:

  • 19 immovable properties
  • A luxury yacht in Spain, owned by Pavel Prozorov
  • Multiple shell entities and assets spread across India, Spain, Estonia, Russia, Hong Kong, Singapore, UAE, and the UK

A part of the siphoned money was reintroduced into India as FDI, further complicating the money trail. Funds were routed through dummy entities and mule accounts, masked as e-commerce transactions, and later transferred overseas as fake imports of software and R&D services.


🏠 Why This Matters for Real Estate

For the real estate sector, this case is a reminder of how illicit foreign funds are often parked in physical assets like property and luxury goods to evade detection. Such assets are increasingly being targeted by enforcement agencies as they tighten their grip on money laundering channels.

ED’s action has implications for property due diligence and the need for stringent KYC and compliance checks, especially as large-value real estate transactions can be a conduit for laundering illicit proceeds.


⚖️ Legal Action Underway

  • ED has already filed a Prosecution Complaint (PC) and one supplementary PC against OctaFX and 54 accused individuals/entities.
  • The Special PMLA Court has taken cognizance of the case.
  • Further investigation is ongoing, including efforts to trace additional assets and funds abroad.

🚨 A Cautionary Note for Investors

The OctaFX case underscores the dangers of investing in unregulated forex or crypto platforms. Such schemes often use aggressive marketing, fake returns, and complex offshore structures to deceive retail investors.

Regulators have repeatedly warned against forex trading through unauthorized platforms, and investors are advised to verify the regulatory status of any financial platform before investing.

Also Read: ED Attaches Assets Worth ₹307 Crore Linked to Illegal Betting App ‘Fairplay’

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