MyForexFunds Legal Action CFTC
MyForexFunds Legal Action CFTC
MyForexFunds Is Hinting at a Return. But This Is More Than a Comeback Tease
This was not a relaunch announcement. It was something more calculated. On October 6, 2025, MyForexFunds posted on X and LinkedIn, “It’s been a long time. A lot has happened. We will tell our story soon. Be patient, we missed you.” After more than two years of legal chaos, that was enough to send the prop trading world into immediate speculation mode.
And the timing was not random. Just months earlier, a U.S. federal judge threw out the CFTC’s case against Traders Global Group, the company behind MyForexFunds, after finding the agency had acted in bad faith and made false statements to the court. That was not a technical win on a filing error. It was a humiliating collapse of one of the most high profile enforcement cases ever brought against a prop firm.
The damage to the regulator did not stop with the dismissal. In July 2025, the same court ordered the CFTC to pay more than $3.1 million in attorney fees after finding the agency had engaged in litigation misconduct. That fee award turned an already embarrassing courtroom defeat into something worse: a public example of a regulator being punished for the way it pursued the case.
That is why the October teaser matters. MyForexFunds was not posting into a vacuum. It was posting after the government’s case had imploded, after the court had sanctioned the CFTC, and after years of silence during which the firm’s name had become one of the defining symbols of the prop trading crackdown era. A message like that was always going to land like a flare in the dark.
But traders should not confuse a flare with a full return. The company’s LinkedIn page also said that while the U.S. case had been dismissed, the unwinding process of the receivership in Canada was still ongoing. That is a critical detail. It means MyForexFunds was clearly signaling life, but it was not yet presenting a clean, unrestricted return to business. The legal and operational shadow had not fully disappeared.
That is what makes the whole episode so interesting. The post was emotional enough to wake the community up, but vague enough to preserve strategic room. It gave supporters hope, pulled attention back to the brand, and reminded the market that MyForexFunds had not been permanently erased. At the same time, it stopped well short of promising a launch date, a product, or a roadmap. That kind of ambiguity is rarely accidental. It is how companies test the temperature before making a bigger move. This last point is an inference based on the wording and timing rather than an officially stated strategy.
The sharper reading is this. MyForexFunds was not just hinting at a comeback. It was trying to reclaim the narrative. For a long time, the firm was framed almost entirely through the lens of the CFTC’s accusations. After the case collapsed, the balance of power changed. The October message looked like the first public step in rewriting the brand’s identity from accused firm to wronged firm preparing to speak for itself. That interpretation is supported by the company’s public language saying it was “wrongfully shut down” and that it would “tell our story soon.”
Whether that ultimately leads to a real relaunch is another question. As of that October signal, the public evidence showed a comeback tease, not a confirmed operational restart. But even without a launch button being pressed, the message still mattered. In prop trading, perception is part of the product. And after winning in court, MyForexFunds had finally started acting like it wanted its name back.
Editorial source note: This article was independently written for editorial purposes based on publicly available company posts, court reporting, and media coverage. It does not reproduce source wording.