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    Home » FSCA Slams R2bn Penalty
    ECONOMY

    FSCA Slams R2bn Penalty

    December 10, 2025By Staff Writer
    FSCA Commissioner Unathi Kamlana.

    South Africa’s Financial Sector Conduct Authority has delivered its most punitive sanction to date, imposing a R2 billion administrative penalty on the collapsed online trading platform Banxso and its former directors for operating what the regulator has branded a vast Ponzi-style scheme involving systematic misappropriation of client money. The fine, announced on Tuesday, dwarfs the previous high-water mark of R475 million levied against Markus Jooste in 2024 and signals an escalating intolerance for misconduct in the country’s burgeoning retail trading sector, where unregulated or lightly supervised platforms have mushroomed amid a 400 per cent surge in CFD and forex accounts since 2020.

    Investigators found that Banxso routinely diverted client deposits away from segregated trading accounts into operational and personal coffers, using inflows from newer investors to pay fabricated profits or withdrawal requests from earlier ones in textbook Ponzi fashion. Clients were further deceived through falsified performance statements and misleading marketing that promised guaranteed returns of up to 8 per cent monthly, claims the FSCA described as deliberately deceptive. As reported by Moneyweb, the probe uncovered internal communications in which senior executives openly discussed “keeping the music playing” by delaying withdrawals while aggressively recruiting fresh capital, behaviour that ultimately left thousands of investors nursing combined losses estimated north of R3 billion.

    Read – The FSCA’s Crackdown on Unregulated ‘Finfluencers’: A Wake-Up Call for Social Media Users

    In addition to the corporate penalty, former directors Harel Sekler and Warwick Sneider have each been banned from any involvement in South Africa’s financial services industry for 30 years, while key lieutenants Manuel de Andrade and Mohammed Bux received identical lifetime exclusions alongside personal fines of R20 million and R10 million respectively. Another senior figure, Henry Simpson, was barred for a decade and fined R5 million. The FSCA emphasised that penalty quantum reflected not only the scale of client harm but also the substantial illicit profits extracted, with forensic accounting tracing at least R780 million in unexplained outflows to offshore entities linked to the directors.

    The regulator’s action follows a protracted investigation that began with a provisional licence withdrawal in late 2024 and culminated in permanent revocation this July after Banxso failed to demonstrate compliance with basic fit-and-proper requirements. Throughout the process, the platform continued soliciting deposits despite repeated warnings, behaviour the FSCA labelled as demonstrating “flagrant disregard” for regulatory orders. According to the authority’s enforcement notice, client funds were routinely commingled with company money, used to settle lavish personal expenses—including luxury vehicles and overseas travel—and diverted to prop up an illusion of profitability that sustained the scheme for over three years.

    Among the victims is a 68-year-old Gauteng pensioner who lost R500,000—virtually her entire retirement nest egg—after being lured by social-media advertisements promising risk-free gains on Contracts for Difference. Thousands of similar stories have since emerged, with the FSCA’s complaints database logging more than 4,200 formal grievances against Banxso, the highest single-entity tally on record. Many investors were drawn from middle-income salaried workers and retirees attracted by the apparent legitimacy conferred by the platform’s FSCA registration, a reminder of the persistent gap between authorisation and active supervision in South Africa’s over-the-counter derivatives market.

    The authority has now referred the entire evidentiary dossier to the South African Police Service for criminal prosecution under the Financial Sector Regulation Act and the Prevention of Organised Crime Act, moves that could see the architects facing charges carrying potential jail terms of up to 30 years. As noted by BusinessLive, the Banxso collapse has intensified calls for stricter licensing thresholds and real-time transaction monitoring in the CFD space, where an estimated 180 licensed entities currently operate alongside hundreds of unauthorised offshore brokers targeting South African retail investors via social media.

    This landmark enforcement action arrives at a pivotal moment for the FSCA, which is finalising amendments to conduct-of-business rules that will mandate full client-fund segregation, daily reconciliation reporting, and mandatory insurance cover from 2026. With public trust in online trading platforms already battered—retail investor participation has fallen 22 per cent since the 2023 mirror-trading scandals—the R2 billion penalty and lifetime bans send an unequivocal message that the era of regulatory leniency toward high-risk investment schemes is over, even as authorities brace for a likely wave of similar cases still working through the investigation pipeline.

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