TAGMarkets: Nik Freihofer’s Potential Links to XPRO (formerly Safir/ZENIQ)
TAGMarkets – old networks, new platform? Our latest investigation suggests potential personnel overlaps between TAGMarkets and the CONNECT/XPRO (formerly Safir/ZENIQ) ecosystem. The focus: Nik Freihofer – and a system that appears to be driven more by distribution than by regulation.
TAGMarkets: Offshore Broker Under Regulatory Pressure
TAGMarkets presents itself publicly as a modern online broker for forex, CFDs, and cryptocurrencies. The platform promotes technological infrastructure, automated trading solutions, and international growth ambitions. At the same time, the company has already come under scrutiny from regulators: the Austrian Financial Market Authority (FMA) has explicitly warned against entering into transactions with TAGMarkets and its affiliated entities, citing the absence of the required authorization to operate in the European market – as previously reported.
This places TAGMarkets in a regulatory gray zone: formally registered offshore, yet lacking the investor protection mechanisms typically expected within the EU.
Irregularities are also evident in external communications. In an official Spanish-language statement, TAGMarkets’ “LATAM” team announced that the platform’s “main account” (presumably on Instagram, editor’s note) had been suspended “for reasons beyond our control.” At the same time, the community was instructed to migrate to a newly created replacement channel for the Latin American region.
While such short-term channel changes are not uncommon in digital marketing, they raise questions in the context of a financial service provider. Especially when dealing with investments and client funds, stable and verifiable communication channels are a key trust factor. When official channels disappear and are replaced by new accounts, the risk of opacity, identity confusion, or even deliberate misinformation increases.
Looking Back at Dubai 2025: A Meeting That Raises Questions
The true structure of such systems rarely becomes visible through official disclosures—but rather through the individuals behind them. A key piece of evidence is visual material obtained by our editorial team, showing an event in Dubai in March 2025 attended by Niklas Freihofer, Werner Kaiser, Erwin Dokter, Gorka Buces, and Jose Gordo.
Several of these names are known from the XPRO ecosystem and its predecessor structures around Safir/ZENIQ. The fact that these individuals now appear together in the context of TAGMarkets is notable from an investigative standpoint. It represents a clear indication of personnel overlaps within a network that has already operated jointly in previous ventures.
Nik Freihofer: FinTech Executive or Network Node?
At the center of the current structure is Niklas Freihofer, who appears in various presentations as a leading figure behind TAGMarkets—sometimes described as CEO, sometimes as co-founder or operational head.

What stands out is the discrepancy between public portrayal and actual context. In PR-driven media articles, Freihofer is presented as a modern fintech sales expert, advancing data-driven distribution strategies and innovative trading solutions. However, these publications are largely sponsored content and cannot be considered independent reporting.
At the same time, a different picture emerges: Freihofer operates within a network that shows significant overlap with previous MLM and crypto distribution structures. His role appears less that of a traditional financial executive and more that of a link between technological narrative and distribution-driven reality.
Typical Crypto-MLM Pattern: The Question of Verifiable Funds
This raises a fundamental question: can the claimed structures actually be independently verified?
Genuine DeFi pools are, by nature, visible on-chain. They are associated with specific smart contract addresses, verifiable liquidity, and publicly accessible transaction histories.
Without this information, it is impossible to assess whether the described mechanisms truly exist or are being used as presented. Based on our current knowledge, projects such as Connect and Recovery Republic do not provide this level of transparency. No wallet addresses are disclosed, nor are specific protocols named that would allow independent verification of activity.
Werner Kaiser as the Link Between TAGMarkets and XPRO
Another key figure in this environment is Werner Kaiser, a well-known network marketer in German-speaking markets for years. His track record includes Lyoness/Lyconet, Safir/ZENIQ, and various crypto and investment projects.
Particularly noteworthy: as previously reported, Kaiser—together with Marina Graf—allegedly began promoting TAGMarkets as early as late 2025 within former Lyconet/XPRO/Safir/ZENIQ networks. This suggests that existing communities from earlier business models were actively transitioned into the new system.
Such an approach is characteristic of scalable distribution models: rather than building new audiences, existing networks are reactivated and redirected toward new offerings.
XPRO, Safir/ZENIQ and Ongoing Personnel Continuity
The connections between TAGMarkets and XPRO (formerly Safir/ZENIQ) are less based on formal partnerships and more on shared individuals.
Names such as Erwin Dokter, Gorka Buces, and Jose Gordo have appeared across multiple contexts within these ecosystems. Their presence around TAGMarkets reinforces the impression that these are not isolated projects, but rather part of a broader network extending across different platforms.
Even currently, familiar figures from the XPRO environment remain active within TAGMarkets. In associated Telegram groups, for example, Danijel Botic and Tom Barendregt—both previously active in XPRO—appear as webinar hosts and presenters. They regularly deliver content on trading strategies, system access, and onboarding.
This development aligns with an already recognizable pattern: experienced distribution actors from earlier ventures re-emerge to drive communication and community mobilization around a new system.
The underlying structure remains consistent: new platform – familiar actors – recurring narratives.
Classic Crypto-MLM Structure: Distribution Over Regulation
A recurring theme is the clear prioritization: growth and distribution take precedence, while regulatory integration and transparency appear secondary.
Roadmaps and presentations focus heavily on aggressive community expansion, rapid international scaling, and multiple—often insufficiently documented—income streams.
By contrast, there is little to no concrete information regarding EU regulatory approval, investor protection mechanisms, or liability structures. In combination with an offshore setup, this imbalance becomes a critical factor for potential investors.
Conclusion: Old Networks, New Structure
The analysis of TAGMarkets reveals less a standalone company and more a network of platform, distribution, and recurring actors.
The documented presence of key figures from the XPRO/Safir environment, the role of Nik Freihofer as a connecting element, and the targeted activation of existing networks all point to a consistent picture:
This is a system that builds upon pre-existing structures—and repurposes them within new platforms.
Note:
This article presents a journalistic analysis.
It is based on publicly available sources as well as original research and distinguishes between facts, assessments, and opinions . The evaluations of external sources reflect their respective assessments. No final legal or criminal assessment is made. Publication is in accordance with the freedom of the press guaranteed by Article 5 of the German Basic Law and Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
Sources:
- Publicly available profiles of the referenced projects (including Youtube, Facebook, Telegram channels/ groups); research status: April 2026
- Independent editorial analysis of webinars, marketing materials, and investor reports





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