I’m adding Stovex Global (
https://www.stovex[dot]com/) to the same warning list as HJC EXCHANGE and Neoster Global, because the outreach and conversion pattern is essentially identical.
The promotion method is the first giveaway. It’s not coming from transparent public channels with verifiable staff, licensing clarity, and a track record that can be independently checked. Instead, it’s the familiar Telegram / WhatsApp “community” funnel: a trading chat that looks busy, an “analyst/teacher” persona pushing confidence, planted accounts posting screenshots and “withdrawal success” stories, and constant nudges toward a “limited opportunity” with unusually smooth, unusually high returns.
The second giveaway is the platform narrative. The pitch leans on credibility shortcuts and buzzwords to lower skepticism, then pushes deposits onto a site that looks designed for conversion rather than accountability. The dashboard will show profits quickly, creating the psychological trap: once someone sees “growth,” it becomes easier to deposit more and harder to walk away.
From there, the scam usually shifts into the withdrawal phase. That’s where the same script repeats across these operations: withdrawals get delayed, then blocked, then “unlocked” only after extra payments framed as verification, taxes, risk control, account upgrades, liquidity fees, or some “compliance” step. The goal isn’t trading performance; it’s extracting additional funds after the first deposit.
What made me post today is that Stovex Global is already trying to manufacture legitimacy on Bitcointalk. A thread was posted that reads like a prepared positive review / reputation piece, the kind that scammers later forward inside Telegram/WhatsApp chats as proof. This is the exact way these groups exploit Bitcointalk: they create one “clean link” to cite, then pressure victims with “look, the forum says we’re real.”
This is the thread:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5575627.0I’ve already reported that post to the moderators because it fits the pattern of fake endorsements used as recruiting ammunition. If the operation is legitimate, it won’t need to rely on chat-app funnels and staged testimonials. If it’s not legitimate, that Bitcointalk thread becomes part of the trap.
I’m documenting Stovex Global alongside HJC EXCHANGE and Neoster Global for one reason: the structure is the same. Chat-app recruitment, high-yield bait, staged social proof, a platform that’s easy to deposit into, and friction once withdrawals start.
If anyone has direct deposit/withdrawal experiences, transaction hashes, wallet addresses provided by the recruiters, or screenshots of the fee-demands and “unlock” requirements, posting those details publicly will help create a searchable record and reduce the number of new victims these groups can cycle through under the next name.