In search of a reliable broker, you have likely come across the website Baxov.net. It looks convincing: ratings, reviews, warnings about scammers. It seems that its author, a certain "Dmitry Bakhov," is your guide in the murky world of finance. But this is an illusion. In reality, you have entered a shop where reputation is for sale, and honesty is not the most popular commodity.

Myth #1: "Independent Expert Dmitry Bakhov"

The first thing to understand is that "Dmitry Bakhov" is a fictional character. This is a composite image, a marketing mask created to inspire trust. There is no real expert with a name and reputation behind the site. It is an anonymous project, which gives its owners the main advantage — complete impunity for spreading lies.

Why is this important? A real expert risks his name. An anonymous person risks nothing. He can praise a broker today, and tomorrow, if they stop paying, he can drag their name through the mud.

Myth #2: "Objective Reviews and Ratings"

This is the core of Baxov.net's business model. Their "ratings" are not formed based on real analysis, but on a simple principle: "Whoever pays is at the top."

How Their Fake Factory Works:

  1. Selling Positive Reviews: Any scam project, even one just created, can buy a place in the "top" and a laudatory article. For this, texts are written that are full of fluff and empty promises copied from the scammer's own website.
  2. Information Blackmail (Black PR): Honest, regulated companies that refuse to "cooperate" (i.e., pay) become the target of attacks. "Exposés" are published about them, based on 1-2 anonymous negative reviews (often written by the owners of Baxov.net themselves) and baseless accusations.
  3. Search Engine Manipulation: The site is aggressively promoted on Google for queries like "[Broker Name] reviews." The goal is for a person seeking information about a broker to first land on their paid article, rather than real opinions.
A Practical Example: Fin-Veritas analysts recorded a case where an unlicensed broker X rose from the bottom of the Baxov.net rating to the top in one week. Simultaneously, negative reviews were published about three major regulated brokers. This is not a coincidence, it is business.

Fin-Veritas Verdict: A Toxic Asset

Baxov.net is not just a site with unreliable information. It is a malicious resource that purposefully misleads users for financial gain. Using this site to choose a broker will most likely lead you to scammers who have paid for their place in their "rating."

How to Distinguish a Real Review from a Fake One?

  • Transparency: A real review site has a clear evaluation methodology and information about its editorial team.
  • Balance of Opinions: Even good companies have flaws. If a review is nothing but praise, it is an advertisement.
  • Evidence: A serious exposé is always supported by facts: screenshots, registry excerpts, links to official warnings from regulators. Baxov.net operates only on emotions and rumors.

Do not let anonymous entities shape your financial future. Trust only verified sources, such as the official Fin-Veritas rating, where every company undergoes a thorough check on dozens of parameters.