Kapitalaufbau-mit-system is an impersonation website of EToro.
A recent alert by MoneySmart of Australia sheds light on this fake trading clone website.
The website kapitalaufbau-mit-system.com promotes investment opportunities, primarily linked to a platform or entity called Gelogas, which claims to offer automated/KI-based trading (often crypto or high-yield investments). It presents itself as a “systematic capital building” service with promises of attractive returns.
However, current evidence from February 2026 strongly indicates that this is a high-risk scam site, likely an outright investment fraud (Anlagebetrug).
Key red flags and findings
Very low trust scores — ScamAdviser rates the site as potentially fraudulent with a low trust score. Reasons include its extremely young domain age (recently registered) and other typical scam indicators.
Official warnings and impersonation alerts — The domain appears in international regulatory alerts:
Listed in the IOSCO I-SCAN network (International Securities & Commodities Alerts) for impersonating a legitimate entity (specifically flagged as impersonating eToro AUS Capital Limited in connection with Gelogas).
Included in Australian investor alert lists (e.g., via ASIC/Moneysmart.gov.au warnings about unlicensed operations and scam risks).
Numerous scam reports and lawyer warnings — German-language sources (anwalt.de, anwalt24.de) explicitly warn against Gelogas via this website:
Claims of “no payouts” (keine Auszahlung), “pure rip-off” (Abzocke pur), and urgent advice not to transfer money.
Described as fake KI-Trading / automated trading scam with fabricated profits to lure larger deposits, followed by withdrawal blocks.
Investor complaints — Reports highlight classic patterns: initial small deposits seem to “grow” (often via fake dashboards), pressure to invest more, then impossibility to withdraw funds. No verifiable regulation or licensing exists.
Trustpilot — Only 1 review exists (as of early February 2026), which is insufficient for credibility — new scam sites often start with minimal or fake feedback.
Typical scam playbook matching this site:
Promises of high, low-risk returns via “AI trading” or “systematic” methods.
Fake account dashboards showing gains to build trust.
Aggressive upselling by “personal advisors”.
Eventual excuses/blocking when requesting withdrawals.
Legitimate capital-building services (e.g., ETF-Sparpläne from Zurich or MLP) use the phrase “Kapitalaufbau mit System” in a generic sense, but they are unrelated to this domain and come from well-regulated providers.




