“$1 million customer protection?” – Lloyd’s broker distances himself from TagMarkets advertising
TagMarkets publicly advertises that client funds are supposedly insured through Lloyd’s of up to USD 1 million per investor. We inquired about the published insurance policy directly with the British insurance broker CBC UK Limited, and the answer ultimately wasn’t very surprising.
CBC confirmed the existence of a real insurance policy arranged through Lloyd’s. However, the broker explicitly clarified that this policy exists solely between the insurer and TM Financials Ltd (TMF) – not between the insurer and individual investors or clients. Moreover, an insurance sum of only €1 million is considered extremely low, but would likely be relatively substantial for the individual user.
This puts the public statements about an alleged “$1 million customer protection” into perspective considerably.
No direct protection of individual investors confirmed
The crucial point lies in the legal structure of the policy. The existence of a Lloyd’s-related insurance policy does not automatically mean that individual investors are actually protected.
So far, there is no evidence to suggest that
- that users of TagMarkets are direct beneficiaries of the policy,
- that customers can assert their own claims against the insurer,
- or that guaranteed payments would be made in the event of insolvency.
CBC also did not confirm that customer deposits or trading losses would actually be reimbursed.
For investors, this difference is crucial: corporate insurance is not automatically deposit protection.
CBC expressly distances itself from the advertising.
The broker’s clear distancing from the public marketing of the insurance company is particularly explosive.
According to CBC (email to editorial staff):
- The presentation of the insurance policy to investors is solely the responsibility of TM Financials Ltd.
- and CBC accepts no liability whatsoever for how the information is communicated to customers.
While CBC confirms the existence of some policy, it explicitly denies the publicly advertised claims of an alleged comprehensive “$1 million customer protection”.
This limitation in particular is likely to be crucial for many investors.
“Shared aggregate” instead of individual protection?
In addition, there is another critical point: According to the documents available so far, the policy appears to be structured as a so-called “shared aggregate” coverage.
That means:
- The insurance sum could apply group-wide,
- Several claims would have to share the same coverage,
- and the sum might not be individually allocated to individual customers.
Even a total sum of USD 1 million would be comparatively small in the brokerage and investment sector – especially if numerous investors or large client funds were affected.
The actual protective effect could therefore be significantly less in a real-life situation than the advertising claims suggest.

The real value: Marketing through the Lloyd’s name?
Investigative research increasingly suggests that the real value of the policy may lie less in actual customer protection than in the marketing effect of mentioning Lloyd’s.
Because terms like:
- “Lloyd’s insured”
- “$1 million protection”
- or “statutory guarantee”
This automatically creates the impression of institutional security and protected deposits for investors – even if the actual legal and economic structure may not support this impression.
Especially in the financial sector, such a public image can have a significant impact on the trust of potential investors.
CFD Risk Warning vs. Advertised “Client Protection”
The simultaneous advertising of alleged “client protection” alongside the risk warning for highly speculative CFDs appears particularly problematic. While TagMarkets itself declares that CFDs are “complex instruments” involving “high risk,” statements such as “insurance up to USD 1 million” simultaneously convey an impression of extensive security. Whether the actual Lloyd’s policy legally substantiates this impression remains, to date, an open question.
These are the questions TM Financials now needs to answer.
Following the statement from CBC UK Limited, we addressed the crucial questions directly to TM Financials Ltd.
Because what remains unclear so far is:
- Are individual customers even direct beneficiaries of the policy?
- Can investors themselves assert claims against the insurer?
- Are customer deposits actually protected in the event of insolvency?
- What exactly does the publicly advertised “USD 1,000,000 Protection” mean?
- Is this protection per customer or merely a collective cover?
- Which risks are actually insured – and which are explicitly excluded?
These questions are likely to be crucial for investors, as public advertising so far gives the impression of comprehensive customer protection, without the information available to date clearly confirming this impression.
Conclusion
The response from CBC UK Limited significantly alters the public perception of the advertised TagMarkets insurance. While a policy arranged through Lloyd’s apparently does exist, there is currently no confirmation that individual investors can derive any concrete, enforceable rights from it.
On the contrary: The real estate agent expressly distances himself from public marketing to investors.
This leaves open the question of whether the advertised “1 million USD customer protection” actually represents real protection for customers – or primarily creates a security backdrop effective for marketing purposes.
A notice:
This article presents a journalistic analysis based on publicly available information and insolvency records. To the best of its knowledge, the article distinguishes between documented facts, quotes from insolvency reports, and journalistic interpretation.
Sources:
Email communication May 20, 2026 CBC UK
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