New York, April 30, 2026, 06:03 EDT
- MoneyFlare has rolled out a fully automated AI forex trading bot, offering hands-free currency trading to users at no cost.
- This rollout comes amid a wave of sponsored and press-release pages pushing AI bots pitched to beginners in crypto, stocks, and forex.
- Speed isn’t really the sticking point here. The bigger issues are trust, oversight, and whether users actually know who’s behind the trade.
MoneyFlare rolled out a free AI-powered forex trading bot, joining a wave of automated tools targeting retail traders eager for access to volatile currency and crypto markets—minus the constant screen-watching. According to the company, the new bot runs fully on autopilot, blending AI-based trading with support from an “expert team.” GlobeNewswire
Why does this matter now? Retail platforms keep pushing trading automation as easy and accessible for beginners, while regulators and academics flag that AI promises in finance aren’t easy to check—and can hide big problems. Markets Insider ran the MoneyFlare news as a GlobeNewswire release, with a note that its editorial staff wasn’t part of the process.
Forex—foreign exchange—is already among the busiest markets globally. The Bank for International Settlements reported that over-the-counter FX trading hit $9.6 trillion per day in April 2025, a jump of 28% compared to three years before. That sheer magnitude is a big driver behind the industry pitch for automation to keep up with the flow.
MoneyFlare says users can sign up, select a trading plan, and monitor results—no need for tweaking advanced options or handling trades one by one. However, the company’s release left out any third-party performance audits, omitted drawdown stats, and offered no specifics on how the bot determines entry or exit points.
The trend is cropping up in crypto circles too. On April 29, Coinpedia put out a press-release roundup listing AriseAlpha, 3Commas, Cryptohopper, Pionex, Bitsgap, Coinrule, and TradeSanta as AI-driven crypto and stock trading bots pitched to beginners. But Coinpedia noted it doesn’t vet or stand behind the claims in such releases.
VentureBurn’s sponsored guide, published April 29, named BitsStrategy, 3Commas, Pionex, Cryptohopper, and Coinrule among the go-to platforms for automated crypto day trading. The same piece didn’t mince words on what bots can’t do: there’s no profit guarantee, and automation won’t shield you from volatility, liquidity risk, sudden news jolts, or poorly built strategies.
There’s a certain pull to crypto’s round-the-clock trading. On Thursday morning in New York, Bitcoin hovered close to $76,076, fluctuating between $75,014 and $77,837. Ether, on the other hand, was seen near $2,262.
The risk section looms large. According to FINRA, 2025 saw a rise in unregistered outfits touting auto-trading services to retail clients—pitching them with phrases like beginner-friendly, risk-free, consistent monthly returns, or AI-powered decision-making. FINRA also flagged “AI washing,” where firms might exaggerate or falsely advertise AI capabilities to make their offerings seem more sophisticated. FINRA
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission flagged a surge in scammers leveraging AI hype—think bots, trade signals, crypto-asset arbitrage—to reel in investors. Watch out for anyone promising high or guaranteed returns, the CFTC said; those are classic fraud warning signs. The Securities and Exchange Commission’s investor site echoed the alert, pointing to AI buzzwords, flashy quick-profit pitches, and so-called guarantees of minimal risk.
This isn’t just a hypothetical concern. According to a Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance study published April 28, 81% of financial services firms surveyed have started using AI in some form. But just 20% of regulators said they’ve adopted advanced AI technologies. The report also noted that 48% of regulatory authorities are either still in the exploratory phase or haven’t touched AI yet.
“The scale and pace of AI adoption in financial services is genuinely remarkable,” said Bryan Zhang, executive director of the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance. Still, the sector faces a shifting and tangled environment, Zhang noted. Fragmented opinions on accountability and mounting cyber risks are “compounding faster than they can be humanly overseen.” Cambridge Judge Business School
Kieran Garvey, who heads up AI at the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance, pointed out that AI’s making a noticeable dent in areas like operations, software builds, and client-facing roles. Still, he flagged a sharp edge: the same systems are driving up risks—think model mistakes, algorithmic bias, data privacy headaches, less transparency, reliance on outside vendors, and even targeted attacks. For traders leaning on bots, Garvey sums it up this way: automation saves clicks, but you can’t automate due diligence.