How to Spot a Fake Mandate Holder in 60 Seconds

Red flags that expose fraudulent commodity brokers and mandate holders before you waste time and money.

Elena Kowalski September 1, 2025 · 3 min read

The Mandate Scam

When it comes to fake mandate holder, many traders make costly mistakes that can be avoided. “I have the exclusive mandate to sell 50,000 MT of Brazilian sugar per month.”

Sounds great. But before you spend three months pursuing this deal, ask yourself: Is this mandate real?

The 60-Second Checklist: Fake Mandate Holder Essentials

1. Email Domain Test (10 seconds)

Real mandate holders have:
– Professional email domains (company.com)
– Consistent naming patterns
– Corporate email signatures Getting this right is fundamental to any successful fake mandate holder strategy.

Red flags:
– Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail addresses
– Generic names ([email protected])
– No company information

2. LinkedIn Verification (20 seconds)

Search their name + company.

Green flags:
– Complete profile with photo
– Connections in commodity industry
– Recommendations from past deals
– Consistent employment history

Red flags:
– No LinkedIn profile
– Recently created account
– No industry connections
– Profile doesn’t match claimed role

3. Company Existence Check (20 seconds)

– Google the company name
– Check corporate registry (varies by country)
– Look for website and contact info
– Verify registration numbers

Red flags:
– No website or social presence
– Recently registered company
– Mismatched addresses
– No physical office

4. Mandate Letter Review (10 seconds)

Ask for the mandate letter.

Real mandate letters include:
– Seller’s letterhead
– Specific product details
– Volume commitments
– Duration terms
– Signatures and dates

Fake mandate letters:
– Generic templates
– No specific details
– Copy-paste signatures
– No seller contact info

How To Spot Fake Mandate Holder

Advanced Verification Techniques

Direct Seller Contact

Ask: “Can I speak directly with the seller to confirm your mandate?”

Real mandate holders:
– Arrange introduction calls
– Provide seller contact info
– Facilitate direct communication

Fake mandate holders:
– Make excuses
– Claim seller is “too busy”
– Refuse direct contact
– Get defensive

Documentation Requests

Ask for:
– Past B/Ls (bills of lading)
– Previous SGS reports
– Export license copies
– Bank references

Real mandate holders have these readily available.

Fake mandate holders make excuses or provide forged documents.

Common Mandate Scam Tropes

“The Royal Family Connection”

“I have a direct connection to the Sultan’s sugar refinery.”

Reality check: Royal families don’t need brokers to sell commodities.

“The Unlimited Supply”

“I can supply 500,000 MT per month.”

Reality check: Even major producers have capacity limits.

“The Too-Good Pricing”

“ICUMSA 45 at $50 below market.”

Reality check: If it looks too good to be true, it is.

“The Urgent Timeline”

“The seller needs an answer in 24 hours.”

Reality check: Real sellers don’t pressure for rushed decisions.

How To Spot Fake Mandate Holder

The Trados Verification Process

On our platform, mandate holders must provide:

1. Notarized mandate letter from the seller
2. Direct seller contact for verification
3. Trade history with documentation
4. Bank references confirming financial standing
5. Identity verification (Silver tier minimum)

Result: Only legitimate mandate holders can access deal flows.

What to Do If You Suspect a Fake

1. Document everything: Save all communications
2. Cease engagement: Don’t waste more time
3. Report to platform: If on Trados, flag the user
4. Warn your network: Share information with trusted contacts
5. Never pay upfront: Real mandate holders don’t require advance fees

The Bottom Line

Every minute spent on a fake mandate holder is a minute not spent on real deals.

60 seconds of verification can save you 6 months of wasted effort.

[Trade Only with Verified Mandate Holders →](/contact)

Fake mandate holder - commodity trading platform dashboard

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Elena Kowalski
Written by

Elena Kowalski

Risk Management & Compliance Director London, UK (from Warsaw, Poland)

Elena Kowalski is a risk management expert and regulatory compliance strategist with 13 years in European financial markets. Born in Warsaw, Poland, and based in London, she holds a Master's in Financial Risk Management from the London School of Economics (LSE) and is a certified FRM. Elena spent a decade at major investment banks advising institutional clients on portfolio risk, market exposure, and regulatory compliance under MiFID II and Basel III frameworks. She is an expert in stress testing, Value-at-Risk modeling, and building robust risk frameworks.

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Last updated: September 1, 2025

6 Comments

  1. Yuki Murphy

    I switched to verified platforms about 8 months ago after a bad experience with an unverified broker. The difference in deal quality is night and day.

  2. Rebecca Peterson

    Can you elaborate on the digital signature verification part? We’ve been using a manual process and I’m not sure how to transition.

  3. Yara Jones

    Incredibly useful, thanks!

  4. Jean Miller

    I’ve been in commodity trading for 15 years and this is one of the most practical guides I’ve come across. Really appreciate the level of detail here.

  5. Mohammed Robinson

    Our legal team reviewed this and they were impressed with the accuracy. Not something you see often in online trading content.

  6. Laura Hernandez

    Bookmarked this for future reference.

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