The Comisión Nacional del Mercado de Valores (CNMV) has announced that it issued warnings about unregistered financial and cryptocurrency entities operating without proper authorization.
According to the CNMV, warnings have been issued for Fernrise (fernrise.com), XM-Signal (xm-signals.com), Prime Xchange (prime-xchange.org), and Mega-Capitals (mega-capitals.org). These entities are not registered in the CNMV's official registry and are therefore not authorized to provide investment services or engage in activities subject to CNMV supervision. The commission advises investors to exercise caution and verify the legitimacy of any firm before engaging in financial transactions.
The CNMV issues these warnings to protect investors from unauthorized entities that provide investment services or engage in financial activities without proper registration or authorization. Such entities often operate outside regulatory oversight, increasing the risk of capital loss for investors. To avoid confusion, some unauthorized firms falsely use the CNMV's name to present themselves as legitimate, leading to a misleading sense of security. The commission also collaborates with foreign regulators to share warnings about such entities, aiming to inform investors and reduce risks. "The CNMV offers a search engine for investors to verify whether an entity is authorized," according to the commission.
All registered Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs), including Binance and Bit2Me, are excluded from the CNMV grey list, which identifies entities operating in Spain without regulatory authorization or registration as part of the regulatory update. According to DataBitlaw, this update applies broadly to entities that have transitioned to regulated status under Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA). The adjustment reflects the alignment of these entities with European Union regulatory requirements during the grandfathering period.
The CNMV oversees Spain's securities markets to ensure transparency, accurate pricing, and investor protection. Created by the 1988 Securities Market Law, it supervises securities issuers, investment service providers, and collective investment schemes, focusing on market stability and system solvency. It manages public records of market participants, advises the government and Ministry of Economy on securities matters, and actively engages with international organizations like IOSCO (International Organization of Securities Commissions), ESMA (European Securities and Markets Authority), and FSB (Financial Stability Board).