How fake exchange and FX apps show ever-growing profits on screen, then demand 'tax prepayments' and 'deposits' the moment you try to withdraw, with the full structure and the rules that protect you.
"Every time I open the app, the balance is higher." "The ¥300,000 I deposited last week is already ¥450,000."
If an exchange or FX broker approached you and your account behaves like this, it is almost certainly fake.
This kind of scam runs astonishingly smoothly right up to the point of deposit.
The problem appears the instant you try to take your profit out.
"A tax prepayment is required before withdrawal."
"Please deposit a security bond to verify your account."
"Pay the identity-verification fee first."
The labels keep changing, but there is only one structure underneath.
The numbers on screen can be inflated at will. Your money, meanwhile, was never invested at all.
This article lays out the structure of fake exchanges and withdrawal refusal, the common variations, why it works and why it ultimately collapses, and the concrete steps that prevent or limit the damage.
If you were caught by this, it does not mean you were foolish. Engineered traps are built so that intelligent people fall in too.
I. The Basic Structure of Fake Exchange Fraud
What it looks like on the surface
You are steered to an exchange or FX app promising high yields or "AI auto-trading"
You open an account and deposit a small amount first
The balance on screen climbs rapidly
You deposit more, told that more in means more out
You decide to take the profit and submit a withdrawal request
The actual structure
The "exchange" is just a display screen the operators built (it is not a real exchange)
The balance and unrealized gains shown are numbers the operators can rewrite freely
Your deposit was never invested (in most cases it is moved to another account immediately)
The moment a withdrawal request arrives, a barrier called "additional deposit required" appears
Even if you pay it, the next pretext appears (withdrawal was never part of the design)
In short, the "profit" you are looking at is bait, a number whose only job is to lead you to the next deposit.
How to Read
A two-layer contrast diagram. Top layer: the app screen the victim sees, with a steadily rising chart and figures (deposit ¥300k to balance ¥450k to ¥620k). Bottom layer: the operator's reality. Deposited funds are merely recorded as display data in a server database, while the actual cash is immediately wired out to a separate cash-out wallet or account. Arrows connect the on-screen balance to the real cash flow below, making clear that the screen figure is a variable the operators can type in by hand and has nothing to do with real assets.View live on TradingView →
II. The Five Stages Every Fake Exchange Passes Through
Withdrawal-refusal scams almost always unfold in this exact order.
Stage 1: Contact and trust-building
It starts in a social-media DM, a dating app, an investment community, or a message disguised as a wrong number.
Over days or weeks the contact warms you up with small talk, then naturally drops in that they earn well on this particular exchange.
Stage 2: Small deposit and a first successful withdrawal
You are encouraged to "just try ¥30,000 first."
The balance grows in a few days, and when you test a ¥10,000 withdrawal, the money really arrives.
That single experience of "I withdrew once" becomes the strongest bait that dissolves every later doubt.
Stage 3: The push to deposit more
It is designed so that you think, "I should have gone all in sooner."
A "limited-time bonus tier" or a "large-deposit-only AI plan" pushes your deposit amount sharply upward.
Stage 4: Withdrawal request and the wall
The wall appears only when you try to pull out a meaningful profit.
"Please deposit 20% income tax on your profit first."
"Withdrawal requires a security bond of 10% of your account value."
"Pay the anti-money-laundering review fee."
Stage 5: The infinite loop of top-ups, then disappearance
Pay the tax and now there is a "system verification fee," pay that and there is an "unfreeze fee." The pretexts never run out.
They extract everything you can pay, and the instant they judge there is nothing left to squeeze, the account is frozen and contact goes dark.
How to Read
A wide horizontal timeline diagram. From the left: 1 contact and trust-building (days to weeks, small-talk icon), 2 small deposit ¥30k then ¥10k withdrawal success (green check mark), 3 push to deposit more (an arrow jumping the deposit from ¥300k toward ¥3M), 4 withdrawal request to wall (a red wall icon and a 'tax prepayment' speech bubble), 5 infinite top-up loop to account freeze and silence (an X mark). Below each stage, draw a red arrow for the victim's money flowing out, thin through stage 2 and growing abruptly thicker in stages 3, 4, and 5. Emphasize that the first successful withdrawal in stage 2 is the bait that builds trust.View live on TradingView →
III. Common Variations
Variation A: Fake crypto exchange app
Characteristics:
Installed directly from a URL or QR code, not from the official app store
Deposits accepted only in crypto such as USDT (hard to trace or claw back)
The screen mimics a real exchange, with charts and prices that move as if live
A withdrawal button exists, but pressing it always yields an error or a top-up demand
Crypto deposits, unlike bank transfers, are extremely hard to reverse or freeze. That is exactly why the operators push crypto deposits so hard.
How to Read
A smartphone screen mockup. On a screen imitating a real exchange, a candlestick chart moves as if live, with 'Portfolio value JPY 6,200,000' and 'Unrealized gain +JPY 3,200,000' displayed. The moment the victim taps the large green 'Withdraw' button, a red pop-up rises in the center: 'To complete your withdrawal, a 20% tax (JPY 640,000) on your profit must be prepaid.' Show that the withdrawal button exists as a feature but is wired so that pressing it always leads to a top-up demand.View live on TradingView →
Variation B: Fake offshore FX broker
Characteristics:
Lures with extreme terms such as "1000x leverage" or "100% bonus"
An unregistered broker with no FSA registration (often using a non-existent offshore company name)
The feel is like a demo account, where almost only winning trades fill
At withdrawal it is refused with "you have not met the bonus trading volume condition"
The bonus comes with a "no withdrawal until you complete the required number of trades" clause, and once you complete it, the next reason is already waiting.
Variation C: Romance-investment type (pig butchering)
Characteristics:
A romantic or friendly relationship is built on a dating app or social media before any investment pitch
The other person stands beside you with "let us build wealth together," leaving you no guilt
When trust is at its peak, you are moved to a large deposit
Even after the refusal begins, you are made to think "maybe they are a victim too" and keep paying
This pattern is known as pig butchering, and its hallmark is using an emotional relationship to disarm your judgment. The FBI and Interpol have issued global warnings about it.
How to Read
A three-column comparison table. Column headers: A fake crypto exchange app / B fake offshore FX broker / C romance-investment type (pig butchering). Rows: 'entry path', 'deposit method', 'pretext to refuse withdrawal', and 'psychology exploited'. Row A: app installed via QR or direct link / crypto USDT / tax prepayment, unfreeze fee / get-rich-quick greed. Row B: social-media ads, 1000x leverage / overseas transfer, card / unmet bonus trading volume / appetite for high leverage. Row C: a romance from a dating app / transfer to a partner-designated account / pretending the partner is also a victim / attachment and guilt. Make it possible to see at a glance that the same two-layer structure has different entry points and psychological bait.View live on TradingView →
IV. Why It Works, and Why It Finally Collapses
Reason it works 1: the "proof" of a first successful withdrawal
People take the experience of "I actually withdrew" as proof of safety.
But a small successful withdrawal is a tiny bait cost to the operators.
"I could withdraw, therefore it is real" is the core of their design, not a basis for trust.
Reason it works 2: the on-screen number feels like "my asset"
Once an unrealized gain is displayed, people feel it as wealth they already hold.
Desperate not to lose that number, they mistake the top-up needed to withdraw for "an investment to protect my own profit."
Reason it works 3: the sunk-cost trap
The more someone has already deposited, the more they feel "if I stop now I lose everything," and cannot turn back.
The operators keep hope alive with "one more payment and you can withdraw," stealing away the moment to quit.
How to Read
A combined line-and-bar diagram. The horizontal axis is time (number of withdrawal attempts), the vertical axis is amount. The green line 'amount actually withdrawn' stays flat at zero after the first ¥10,000. The red stacked bars 'amount forced to top up for withdrawal' keep climbing in steps as the labels change: tax prepayment to security bond to system verification fee to unfreeze fee. Show at a glance the inverted structure where, the more you act to withdraw, the more money only flows out. Place an account-freeze icon at the end.View live on TradingView →
Why it collapses: withdrawal was never in the design
This scam has no intention of ever letting you withdraw.
The deposited cash is moved to another account immediately, so recovery becomes a race against time.
That is why they keep extracting top-ups under new labels and then vanish once you are wrung dry.
"Just a little more and you can withdraw" is a lie to the very end.
V. Victim Psychology: Why It Is Hard to Get Out
How to Read
A four-quadrant psychology map. A victim figure in the center, with four mechanisms placed around it. 1 Confirmation bias: the first successful withdrawal sets a 'trustworthy' anchor, and the mind seeks explanations that fit the good impression over later doubts. 2 Endowment effect: the on-screen unrealized gain feels 'already mine' and worth protecting. 3 Sunk cost: as deposits stack up, 'quitting now wastes everything' blocks the exit. 4 Attachment and guilt (romance type): doubting the partner itself feels shameful. Add to each a note 'this is a normal human response,' showing neutrally that the harm comes from the sophistication of the trap, not from weakness of mind. Keep a tone that does not blame the victim.View live on TradingView →
VI. How to Spot It
Whether you can withdraw cannot be judged by "did a small test work," because a small successful withdrawal is the bait.
Anchor your judgment on the real question: is this a registered, legitimate operator at all.
At a legitimate exchange, tax is something you yourself pay later through your tax return after withdrawal. There is no mechanism that requires prepaying it to the operator as a condition of withdrawal.
The very demand to "pay money first in order to withdraw" is the decisive fingerprint of a scam.
How to Read
A vertical checklist diagram titled 'Five questions to ask before depositing.' Each item has a square checkbox: 1 Is it listed on the FSA register of licensed operators, 2 Is it absent from the warning list of unregistered operators, 3 Does the operating company exist with verifiable address and registration, 4 Do the withdrawal terms avoid any additional deposit such as tax prepayment, security bond, or verification fee, 5 Are the domain and app not too new and installed via the official store. A red band at the bottom states 'If even one applies, or cannot be verified, do not deposit.' Put a special red warning mark on item 4 to stress that a prepayment demand for withdrawal is a definitive scam sign.View live on TradingView →
How to Read
A side-by-side contrast diagram. Left, 'legitimate exchange': withdrawal button to money arriving in your own bank account to filing and paying tax yourself at the tax office once a year. There is no step of prepaying anything to the operator. Right, 'fake exchange': withdrawal button to 'please first wire 20% tax on your profit to the operator's designated account' to even after you pay, nothing is withdrawn and the next pretext appears. A large note in the center reads 'tax is not prepaid to the operator as a precondition of withdrawal,' showing that the prepayment demand itself is a decisive scam sign.View live on TradingView →
VII. If You Are Already a Victim, or Have Already Deposited
The moment you realize what is happening is the most important fork. Before blaming yourself, act.
1. Do not pay one more yen
"One more payment and you can withdraw" is a lie to the very end.
Stop every top-up, under any label: unfreeze fee, tax, security bond.
A top-up meant to recover money already lost only doubles the damage.
2. Preserve the evidence
Before contact goes dark, keep as much record as possible.
Screenshots of the exchange app or site (balance, trade history, withdrawal screen, error messages)
Chat, call logs, and email exchanges with the other party
Bank transfer records of your deposits, and crypto transfer records (destination address, transaction ID)
The other party's account name, URL, phone number, and account details
3. Move fast to stop the funds
This is a race against time.
For bank transfers: contact the recipient's financial institution and your own bank at once, and ask about account freezing and victim restitution under the Act on Damage Recovery from wire-transfer fraud
For credit cards: contact your card issuer and ask whether a chargeback is possible
For crypto: note the destination address and transaction ID, and share them with the exchange's support and the police. Recovery is hard, but the records become material for investigation
4. Get advice and report it
Do not carry this alone. Public counseling services are free to use.
FSA Financial Services User Counseling: check registration and the unregistered-operator warning list, and seek advice
Consumer Hotline 188: connects you to your nearest consumer affairs center
Police Consultation Line #9110 / 110: report it as fraud
National Consumer Affairs Center: guidance on where to turn and information
How to Read
A vertical action-flow diagram. Starting from the point of realization, top to bottom: 1 do not pay one more yen (red stop icon), 2 preserve evidence (small icons for screenshots, chat logs, transfer records, destination address), 3 move fast to stop the funds (branching into three routes: bank transfer to wire-fraud relief act, card to chargeback, crypto to share address and TxID with police and the exchange), 4 contact public counseling (a list of FSA counseling, Consumer Hotline 188, Police #9110, National Consumer Affairs Center). Attach a clock icon to each step to convey 'a race against time,' showing that acting faster raises the chance of recovery. Place the message 'act before blaming yourself' at the top.View live on TradingView →
5. Beware secondary harm from "recovery" offers
Victim lists circulate, and recovery scams claiming "we can get your money back" often make contact afterward.
A "recovery agent" that demands a retainer or fee in advance is almost certainly a second scam.
The legitimate places to turn are the public services above and licensed professionals such as lawyers and judicial scriveners.
How to Read
A horizontal two-stage harm-flow diagram. On the left, 1 primary harm: withdrawal is refused at the fake exchange and the funds are lost. In the center, an arrow for elapsed time with a note 'victim lists circulate.' On the right, 2 secondary harm: a 'recovery agent' claiming 'we can get your lost money back' makes contact, makes you prepay a retainer and investigation fee again, then disappears. Emphasize that the same advance-fee tactic repeats a second time. A green band at the bottom states 'the legitimate places to turn are public services (FSA, 188, #9110, National Consumer Affairs Center) and lawyers and judicial scriveners. A recovery agent asking for a retainer or fee up front is a second scam,' distinguishing safe channels from dangerous ones by color.View live on TradingView →
Conclusion
The truth about fake exchanges
The scammer's framing
The on-screen balance is a number the operators rewrite
"Your assets are growing"
The deposit was never invested
"The AI is trading automatically"
The first small withdrawal is bait to build trust
"See, you withdrew just fine"
Tax is something you pay yourself after withdrawal
"A tax prepayment is required to withdraw"
Withdrawal was never in the design
"One more payment and you will definitely withdraw"
Whether you can withdraw is judged not by whether a small test worked, but by whether it is a registered, legitimate operator.
The demand to "pay money first in order to withdraw" is, in itself, decisive evidence of a scam.
And even if you have already put money in, it does not mean you were foolish.
Stop topping up now, preserve the evidence, and contact a public counseling service. That is the best single step toward limiting the damage.