Forex markets

MAM Account Fraud: How Multi-Account Managers Cheat Clients

MAM Account Fraud: How Multi-Account Managers Cheat Clients

MAM Account Fraud: How Multi-Account Managers Cheat Clients

MAM account fraud is one of the least discussed yet most financially damaging risks in retail forex and CFD investing — a category where the manager holds full trading authority over pooled client capital, and abuse is often invisible until the damage is done. Real cases from regulators in the US, EU, UK, and Australia reveal a consistent pattern: technically compliant structures used to extract value from clients through fee manipulation, artificial volume generation, and coordinated pump-and-dump execution across managed sub-accounts.

What Is a MAM System and Why It Creates Structural Risk

A MAM — Multi-Account Manager — system allows a single trading manager to execute orders simultaneously across dozens or hundreds of client sub-accounts, with each client's allocation proportional to their equity or lot share. The design is legitimate and widely used by professional fund managers, introducing brokers, and signal providers. Platforms like MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, and cTrader all offer MAM/PAMM modules as standard infrastructure.
The structural risk is inherent in the design itself. The manager controls execution. The client sees results only after the fact. Unlike a regulated fund where a compliance officer sits between the portfolio manager and the market, a MAM arrangement — particularly when operated through an offshore broker — may have no meaningful oversight layer at all. The client has granted discretionary authority, and the manager can act on it in real time, across all sub-accounts simultaneously, without pre-trade approval.
This asymmetry between manager authority and client visibility is the opening through which abuse enters. It doesn't require sophisticated fraud. In many documented cases, it required nothing more than a manager willing to exploit the information gap — and a client who didn't know what normal looked like.

The Pump-and-Dump Mechanism Inside MAM Structures

Pump-and-dump in traditional securities markets involves artificially inflating an asset price before selling into the manufactured demand. Inside a MAM structure, the mechanism is adapted — and in some ways more insidious — because the manager doesn't need to move the market. They need only to move client accounts in a coordinated sequence that benefits the manager's personal positions at clients' expense.
A documented pattern, referenced in enforcement actions by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC, USA) between 2020 and 2024, works as follows. The manager opens a personal or proprietary position in a thinly traded currency pair or exotic instrument. They then use MAM authority to execute large client-side trades in the same direction, creating genuine directional pressure on the asset. When price moves favorably — typically within minutes — the manager closes the personal position into the client-driven momentum, then allows the MAM accounts to hold the now-deteriorating position. Losses accumulate in client accounts. The manager's personal book is already flat.
MAM Account Fraud: How Multi-Account Managers Cheat Clients

MAM Account Fraud: How Multi-Account Managers Cheat Clients

Regulatory Forecast: What Changes Are Coming for MAM Oversight

The regulatory trajectory across major jurisdictions is moving consistently toward greater managed account transparency. ESMA (EU) has proposed amendments to MiFID II that would require explicit disclosure of all third-party arrangements — including rebate and volume incentive structures — in managed account agreements, with implementation targeted for late 2025. The FCA (UK) has indicated that its Consumer Duty framework, effective since July 2023, applies to managed account operators and creates an affirmative obligation to demonstrate client value — a standard that overtrading and fee manipulation cannot survive.
In the US, the CFTC's 2024 strategic plan includes expanded surveillance of retail commodity pool operators and CPOs using MAM structures, with particular focus on social media promotion of managed account performance.
By Miles Harrington
April 02, 2026

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