Honest Review of RMK Capital AG

1/5
💬 1

What do a two-month-old domain, a non-working email address, and 1:2000 leverage have in common? All of them belong to a brokerage company that advertises itself as a respectable Swiss broker. What we have in front of us is a fresh project actively gathering deposits from traders, promising the moon and a premium service. In this RMK Capital AG review, we’ll take this outfit apart piece by piece and show why its “Swiss legend” falls apart at the very first serious check.

Key Features

  • Company Name: RMK Capital AG
  • Website: https://rmkcapitalag.com
  • Available Contacts: [email protected], +48222471484
  • Foundation: 2026
  • Services: Trading
  • License: –
  • Initial Deposit: $100

From Sign-Up to Payout

The process of opening an account at RMK Capital AG looks as simple as it gets. The registration form asks for a basic set of data: first name, last name, email, phone, country of residence, account currency (USD or EUR), and a password with confirmation. At the bottom is a checkbox for agreeing to the user agreement and a submit button. That’s it, registration takes literally a minute.

And here’s where the questions begin. With any regulated broker, registration is a serious procedure with KYC and AML checks. The client is required to be asked about their source of income, level of trading experience, amount of available capital, investment goals, and tax residency (FATCA/CRS forms). Without this, the broker doesn’t have the right to open an account for you according to the requirements of ESMA, FINMA, FCA, or any other proper regulator. With IC Markets, Saxo Bank, or Swissquote, the questionnaire takes 15–20 minutes and requires the upload of at least two documents: a passport plus proof of address (a utility bill or a bank statement from the last 3 months).

RMK Capital AG - website

If you evaluate the RMK Capital AG website purely on visuals, it’s been done pretty well. A dark theme with blue accents, smooth animations on scroll, large fonts, gradient buttons, and mockups of iPhones with charts. A modern 2026 style that catches the eye.

However, every image is a stock picture that can be found on dozens of other websites: a hand over a hologram of charts, wind turbines, and solar panels in the section on the environment, a mountain reservoir dam, and abstract neural networks in the background. There isn’t a single live photograph of the office, the staff, or the actual trading platform. The iPhone with the app is a drawn-up mockup, because RMK Capital AG has no mobile app of its own, neither on the App Store nor on Google Play.

The homepage is jam-packed with bold but empty phrases: “A broker for everyone”, “Meeting the needs of our traders”, “One platform for every trading goal”, and “Your progress drives everything we do”. All of these headlines sound nice, but not one of them carries any specific information. No numbers, no facts, no names, no documents — just marketing noise to create a general impression of solidity.

Our Trading Experience With RMK Capital AG

The first thing that jumped out is that it’s no MT4 at all, the way the broker promises on the homepage of the site in the “#1 MT4 Terminal” section. In reality, the client is given a custom-coded browser-based web trader with basic candlestick charts, a list of pairs on the left, and Buy/Sell buttons on the right. There’s no real MetaTrader 4 here.

RMK Capital AG - platform

The terminal itself looks like the simplest of templates, bought for a couple of thousand dollars from the developers of “white label” solutions for scam brokers — you’ll find the same interface with dozens of other exposed outfits. The charts update with a noticeable delay, and the order panel is primitive: just Buy/Sell, Stop Loss, and Take Profit, no pending orders of any complex type, no trailing stops, and no OCO order structures.

The Reality Check

RMK Capital AG presents itself as a Swiss AG with an office in Zurich and a Polish representative office in Warsaw, which means there should be traces in the trade registries of both countries. Plus, there should be a license from a financial regulator, because without one, providing brokerage services in Europe is physically illegal.

Any company with the word “AG” in its name has to be registered in the Swiss Handelsregister. This is a public registry, accessible through the zefix.ch website — the search takes 10 seconds. We open it up, type in “RMK Capital AG” — and the company actually comes up. However, it’s an entirely different organization.

The subject of our review is engaged in brokerage services, which means it’s required to obtain authorization from Switzerland’s regulator, FINMA. If you check the FINMA registry, there’s no broker there.

RMK Capital AG - FINMA

In fact, there’s no point in verifying the Polish legend. Nevertheless, we still visited the Polish company registry and confirmed that no legal entity named RMK Capital AG exists in the country. Therefore, there can be no question of it conducting legitimate business in Poland.

How Long Has RMK Capital AG Been in the Game?

The data on the rmkcapitalag.com domain spills the entire truth in a single block: it was registered on March 13, 2026, with the registration period running only one year, until March 13, 2027. At the time of the check, the domain is about three months old — and this kills the whole legend about being a “trusted partner” offering “long-term financial guidance” that’s plastered all over the website.

Domain

A broker that promises “long-term financial guidance” to clients with deposits of up to $100,000 has, in actual fact, been around for less time than a probationary period at a regular job.

Registering for one year in advance is a separate, glaring marker on its own: serious brokers take out their domain for 5–10 years right off the bat, because it’s both cheaper and a signal of long-term intentions. One year is exactly the length of time scammers count on for their scheme: collect the deposits, squeeze the clients dry, then shut down the domain and open up a new one under a different name.

Extra Fraud Indicators

RMK Capital AG operates on a 100% B-book model without routing trades to the market — the broker itself becomes the counterparty to each of the trader’s trades, and the client’s loss is its direct profit. The signs are all in place: 1:2000 leverage, 20–100% bonuses, the promise of “zero-pip spreads” with an actual spread of 10 pips on USDJPY, a custom-coded browser-based terminal, and zero mentions of liquidity providers.

Another sign of a scam is a fake email address. The email listed in the “contacts” section doesn’t actually exist. There’s no point writing to it — the messages won’t get through anyway.

Fake email

Is RMK Capital AG the Right Fit?

Unequivocally not. A broker with no license, a two-month-old domain, a fake email address, and a made-up Zurich address isn’t a place for traders’ deposits under any scenario. Opening an account here means handing your money over to scammers without a chance of getting it back.

Got Questions? We Have Answers

What should I do if a manager from RMK Capital AG is already calling and actively trying to get me to open an account?
Why does this broker's 100% B-book model mean a guaranteed loss of your deposit?
What is a “personal financial expert” in the plan lineup, and why is it actually needed?

Weighing the Benefits and Drawbacks

Low minimum deposit.
The financial platform is not regulated.
The domain is new; there isn't much experience.
RMK Capital AG gives fake contact information.
The broker stands to profit from client losses.
About the author
Maya Collins
Maya Collins
Maya’s our go-to guru for spotting shady schemes. She’s like a detective for your wallet, making sure you’re in the know about the latest scams.

1 client review for RMK Capital AG

    This is a guaranteed scam. Why? Because the scammers took the name of an organization RMK Capital AG that really exists in Switzerland to hide behind it. Their job is to coax money out of you, that’s all there is to it. There’s no real broker here. There’s no license, no legal information of their own, and even the email address is a fake. Please don’t do it. Don’t invest any money here, you’ll lose it.

    Reply

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