They are NOT real stock brokers — They will steal your money
Regent Harbor Management at
regentharbormanagement.com
is a criminal operation. They never buy stock — your wired funds go straight into their pockets.
The "International Financial Regulatory Commission" (IFRC) at
theifrc.org
is ALSO FAKE — created by the same criminals to appear legitimate.
"I wired $17,000 USD to these criminals believing I was investing in stocks. They never purchased a single share. The money vanished. My family faces Christmas destitute. Do not let them do this to you."
— Verified Victim, November 2025
Names and contact details used by the criminals at Regent Harbor Management
PRIMARY SCAMMER
🐷 The Sweaty Pig
Smells like: Piss & desperation
Teeth: Yellow, rotting
Complexion: Permanent sweat
tylerwalsh@regentharbormanagement.com"38 years" of eating and lying to strangers
ACCOUNTS
💀 The Corpse
Smells like: Formaldehyde
Complexion: Cadaverous
Ears: Comically large
accounts@regentharbormanagement.comCrawled out of a grave to steal your money
INITIAL CALLER
🤪 The Unhinged
Smells like: Energy drinks & failure
Teeth: Nightmare fuel
Mental state: Unhinged
The deranged circus act that starts the scam
The scammers maintain social media accounts to appear legitimate — note that X/Twitter has already suspended them
92 followers • Posts generic business news to appear legitimate
RegentHarborManagementTokyoJapan
@RegentHarbormgt — Account suspended for violating rules
Their X/Twitter account has been suspended, likely due to reports of fraudulent activity. Consider reporting their LinkedIn and Facebook pages as well.
AKASAKA CENTER BLDG 12F
1-3-13 MOTOAKASAKA MINATO-KU
TOKYO, 107-0051
JAPAN
+81 3 6863 5407
Warning: This appears to be a virtual office or shared business address. Multiple scam operations claim the same building. There is likely no actual office here.
All "registered" brokers on their fake IFRC site list Tokyo addresses with similar phone numbers — a clear sign of a coordinated scam network.
These are ALL the "brokers" listed on the fake IFRC site — all part of the same criminal operation
regentharbormanagement.com
grandview-equity.com
metapartnersco.com
stricklandcapitalgroup.com
Notice the pattern? All "regulated" by the same fake IFRC. All in Tokyo, Japan. Similar phone numbers (+81 3 6863 xxxx). This is organized crime.
The Dubai front company that receives your wire transfer
THE DUBAI FRONT COMPANY
Tokyo broker, Dubai bank account? A legitimate Japanese broker would have a Japanese bank account, not a free zone company in Dubai.
"F.Z.E." = Free Zone Establishment. Dubai free zones are popular with scammers because of loose regulations and easy company formation.
No connection to actual stock purchases. This company claims to "facilitate trade settlements" but is simply where stolen money lands.
Wire transfers to UAE are nearly untraceable. Once money leaves your country, recovery becomes almost impossible.
If you receive wire instructions to Strategy First Trading F.Z.E., STOP IMMEDIATELY. This is where stolen funds from multiple victims are collected.
If you express doubts, they will send you this official-looking document
The purpose of this document is to reassure victims who are getting suspicious. It's designed to look professional and answer the question "why am I wiring money to Dubai?" Don't let paperwork fool you — legitimate brokers don't operate this way.
These are the real documents provided by the scammers — see the evidence for yourself
The actual banking details sent to victims
This document shows the Mashreq Bank account details for Strategy First Trading F.Z.E. in Dubai — where victims are instructed to wire their "investment" funds.
The meaningless document used to reassure victims
When victims question why they're wiring money to Dubai, the scammers send this official-looking but legally worthless "agreement" between Regent Harbor Management and Strategy First Trading.
Understanding their tactics can save you from becoming a victim
Someone like "Hugo Walker" calls you out of the blue. They say they don't have any opportunities right now, but if something good comes up, they'll call you back. This plants a seed and makes the follow-up call feel natural.
Weeks later, "Tyler Walsh" (claiming 38 years as a stock broker) calls with an "exclusive opportunity." The stock they recommend — like RR (Richtech Robotics) — is actually a legitimate, rising stock. This is how they build credibility: they genuinely know the market. These are likely ex-brokers turned criminals.
When you ask about regulation, they direct you to
theifrc.org —
the "International Financial Regulatory Commission" website.
It lists Regent Harbor Management as "Fully Regulated and Certified."
The entire website is fake — created by the same scammers.
"Mika Ozawa" sends you wire instructions — but not to Japan. Your money goes to Strategy First Trading F.Z.E. in Dubai, UAE via Mashreq Bank. They never buy any stocks. If you question it, they'll send a fake "Transfer Agency Agreement" to explain why. $17,000 vanished before Christmas.
They call saying 'nothing yet' then call back weeks later with a 'hot tip'
They recommend real stocks that genuinely rise — to build false trust
They insist on international wire transfers — irreversible once sent
Claim regulation by 'International Financial Regulatory Commission' — doesn't exist
Every broker in their network has Tokyo address with +81 3 6863 xxxx phone
They know broker terminology perfectly — likely ex-professionals turned criminals
Protect yourself by checking these REAL regulatory bodies
The "IFRC" Does Not Exist: The "International Financial Regulatory Commission" at theifrc.org is a complete fabrication. There is no such regulatory body. The scammers created an entire fake regulatory website with fake "broker search," fake "complaints" page, and fake "trading standards" — all to make their scam look legitimate. Any broker claiming IFRC regulation is a SCAM.
WARNING — "Recovery" Scams: Scammers often target victims again with "recovery" services. They may pose as law enforcement, lawyers, or specialists who can "get your money back" — for an upfront fee. This is another scam. No legitimate service requires payment upfront to recover stolen funds. The same criminals may even call you pretending to be from a "fraud recovery" department.
Regent Harbor Management operating at regentharbormanagement.com is a fraudulent investment scam. They falsely claim to be regulated by the "International Financial Regulatory Commission" (IFRC) and direct victims to their fake regulatory website at theifrc.org.
The scam network includes multiple fake brokerages: Grandview Equity Group (grandview-equity.com), Meta Partners (metapartnersco.com), and Strickland Capital Group (stricklandcapitalgroup.com) — all "regulated" by the same fake IFRC, all claiming Tokyo offices.
Key operatives include "Tyler Walsh" (tylerwalsh@regentharbormanagement.com), "Mika Ozawa" (accounts@regentharbormanagement.com), and "Hugo Walker" who makes initial cold calls. These are likely aliases used by what appear to be former financial professionals who have turned to fraud.
This is NOT a legitimate brokerage. They do not purchase stocks or make any real investments with your money. They may recommend real stocks that genuinely perform well to build credibility, but when you wire funds, that money goes to Strategy First Trading F.Z.E. in Dubai, UAE via Mashreq Bank (IBAN: AE480330000019100401308). $17,000 USD was stolen from one victim before Christmas 2024.
If you are considering investing with Regent Harbor Management or any "IFRC-regulated" broker — STOP IMMEDIATELY. If you have already sent money — report it to authorities and do not send more.
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