Forensic Financial Analysis

  • Forensic financial analysis produces a legally verified, court-standard quantification of fraud losses — establishing the precise financial damage figure that civil proceedings, regulatory complaints, and criminal referrals are built around
  • Financial analysis exposes the mechanics of how fraud proceeds were generated, extracted, and concealed — going beyond loss quantification to establish the financial structure of the scheme
  • Veritas Advisory Group conducts forensic financial analysis for fraud victims pursuing recovery through European courts, regulators, and enforcement agencies
  • Forensic financial analysis is the evidentiary foundation for damages claims, constructive trust arguments, and unjust enrichment claims in EU civil proceedings
  • Without a forensically verified loss figure and financial evidence record, civil claims and regulatory filings lack the quantified factual basis required for European courts and regulators to act

What Does Forensic Financial Analysis Establish in a Fraud Case?

Forensic financial analysis establishes three things that no other investigative service produces: the precise, verifiable quantum of your financial loss; the documented financial mechanism by which that loss was caused; and the financial evidence record connecting the fraud operator’s gains directly to your losses. In European civil proceedings, damages cannot be presumed — they must be proven to a specific figure, with documented methodology. Forensic financial analysis produces that figure, that methodology, and the supporting financial evidence — giving your legal representatives the quantified foundation on which every element of the civil claim is built.

What Is Forensic Financial Analysis — and Why It Matters

Knowing approximately how much you lost is not the same as being able to prove it in a European court. Courts require a damages figure that is calculated to a defined methodology, supported by verified financial records, and expressed in a format that satisfies the evidentiary requirements of the jurisdiction where the claim is filed. Beyond the loss figure itself, forensic financial analysis examines the financial architecture of the fraud — how the scheme generated revenue, how it extracted funds from victims, how it concealed those funds through accounting manipulation or fabricated records, and what the operator’s financial position was at every stage of the fraud. This financial picture is essential for damages quantification, for constructive trust claims over identified assets, and for establishing the unjust enrichment argument that forms the basis of equitable relief in European jurisdictions. Without forensic financial analysis, a fraud case has a victim’s account of what happened and a loss figure based on personal records. With it, the case has a verified, court-standard financial evidence record — the difference between a claim that settles and one that wins.

What Forensic Financial Analysis Examines

Our forensic team analyses the complete financial record of the fraud across every relevant dimension:
  • Loss quantification — Precise calculation of total financial loss — including principal invested or transferred, fees and charges extracted, interest or returns withheld, and opportunity cost where legally applicable
  • Account statement analysis — Forensic review of all account statements — from the fraudulent platform, from the victim’s own banking and investment accounts — identifying discrepancies, fabrications, and the true financial position at each point in time
  • Revenue extraction analysis — Documenting how the fraud operator generated revenue from the victim — fee structures, spread manipulation, unauthorized charges, manufactured losses, and forced liquidations
  • Fabricated record identification — Identifying falsified account statements, manufactured trading records, fake regulatory documents, and other financial fabrications used to misrepresent the victim’s position
  • Operator financial position analysis — Where operator financial records are available, assessing the financial position of the fraud entity — including solvency at the time of solicitation, commingling of victim funds with operating funds, and the financial relationship between connected entities
  • Unjust enrichment quantification — Calculating the precise financial benefit received by the fraud operator at the victim’s expense — the figure on which equitable recovery claims and disgorgement arguments are based

Scope of Services Within Forensic Financial Analysis:

  • Verified loss quantification to court-standard methodology
  • Forensic account statement review and discrepancy analysis
  • Revenue extraction and fee structure documentation
  • Fabricated financial record identification and authentication
  • Operator financial position and solvency analysis
  • Fund commingling and misappropriation documentation
  • Unjust enrichment and disgorgement quantification
  • Damages report formatted for EU civil proceedings and regulatory filings

Fraud Cases Where Forensic Financial Analysis Is Applied

Veritas Advisory Group conducts forensic financial analysis across the full range of cross-border financial fraud cases involving European operators and victims across Asia-Pacific.

Investment Platform and Broker Fraud

Fraudulent brokers produce account statements, trade confirmations, and portfolio reports that bear no relationship to the actual handling of client funds. Forensic analysis compares the platform’s reported financial position with the actual transaction record — identifying the specific point at which fabrication began, quantifying the losses attributable to misrepresentation versus market movement, and establishing the revenue extracted by the operator through spread manipulation, unauthorized fees, and manufactured losses.

Ponzi and High-Yield Investment Scheme Fraud

Ponzi schemes maintain elaborate false financial records — fabricated returns, manufactured account statements, and fictitious portfolio valuations — designed to sustain victim confidence and delay detection. Forensic analysis deconstructs these records against the actual capital flow of the scheme — establishing when the scheme was insolvent, what percentage of claimed returns were fabricated, and the total quantum of loss attributable to each category of victim.

Unlicensed Fund Manager and Discretionary Account Fraud

Individuals managing client funds without authorization frequently commingle victim capital with personal funds — making it impossible for victims to identify their specific loss without forensic analysis of the operator’s complete financial position. Forensic analysis traces each client’s capital contribution through the operator’s commingled accounts, identifies the specific misappropriation events, and quantifies each client’s individual loss within the aggregate.

Cryptocurrency and Digital Asset Fraud

Fraudulent crypto platforms display fabricated portfolio balances, manufactured trading histories, and false profit records. Forensic analysis compares the on-chain transaction record — produced through blockchain analysis — against the platform’s reported financial data, establishing the discrepancy between what was shown and what actually occurred, and quantifying the total loss across all deposit and fee events.

Real Estate and Off-Plan Investment Fraud

Fraudulent property investment schemes frequently provide financial projections, yield forecasts, and development cost representations that are fabricated or materially misleading. Forensic analysis assesses the financial representations made against independently verifiable market data — establishing the misrepresentation, quantifying the loss attributable to it, and documenting the financial benefit received by the operator.

Recovery Fraud Financial Analysis

Payments made to fake recovery operators are individually documented and quantified. Where the recovery fraud is financially connected to the original scheme — through shared accounts, coordinated fee structures, or referral payments — forensic analysis documents that financial connection, establishing the aggregate loss across both the original fraud and the recovery scam as a single continuous financial harm.

Why Forensic Financial Analysis Is Distinct From Loss Estimation

Most fraud victims arrive with a figure in mind — the amount they transferred, minus any withdrawals they managed to make. This figure is a starting point, not a legal damages quantum. The difference matters significantly in European civil proceedings.

Legally Recognized Loss Categories

European civil law recognizes multiple categories of financial loss in fraud cases — not all of which are captured by a simple transfer total. Direct losses include principal transferred and fees extracted. Consequential losses may include opportunity cost and interest on withheld funds. In some jurisdictions, enhanced damages are available for fraudulent conduct. Forensic financial analysis calculates each recognized loss category separately and aggregates them into a total damages figure that legal representatives can present to a court or arbitral tribunal with full methodological support.

The Fabricated Records Problem

Many fraud victims hold financial statements produced by the fraudulent platform — showing trading histories, portfolio valuations, and account balances that are entirely fabricated. These documents appear official and detailed, but they bear no relationship to what actually happened to the victim’s funds. Presenting fabricated platform records as evidence in legal proceedings without first subjecting them to forensic analysis is a significant risk — opposing parties will challenge their authenticity, and the challenge will succeed if the fabrication has not been identified and documented in advance. Forensic analysis converts this risk into an asset: identified fabrications become evidence of fraud, not vulnerabilities in the victim’s case.

Commingling and the Tracing of Specific Funds

In cases where the fraud operator commingled victim funds with other capital — making it impossible to identify specific victim funds within a general account — forensic financial analysis applies established legal accounting methodologies to attribute specific losses to specific victims. This is the foundation of constructive trust claims in English law and equivalent proprietary tracing claims in other EU jurisdictions — legal remedies that allow victims to claim ownership of specific assets, not merely a contractual debt from an insolvent operator.

How Veritas Advisory Group Conducts Forensic Financial Analysis

Our forensic financial analysis methodology follows a structured process designed to produce a legally verified, court-standard financial evidence record — built on authenticated source documents and expressed in a format that satisfies the evidentiary requirements of the relevant European jurisdiction.

Phase 1: Financial Record Collection and Authentication

We collect all available financial records relevant to the fraud — victim bank statements, platform account statements, trade confirmations, fee schedules, investment agreements, and payment records — and authenticate each document for evidentiary use. Suspected fabrications are identified at this stage and flagged for detailed analysis.

Phase 2: Transaction-Level Loss Reconstruction

We reconstruct the victim’s financial relationship with the fraud operator at the transaction level — documenting every deposit, every fee extraction, every claimed return, and every withdrawal, creating a verified transaction-by-transaction financial history of the fraud.

Phase 3: Platform Record Forensic Review

We conduct forensic review of all financial documents produced by the fraudulent platform — comparing reported account data against verified transaction records, identifying fabrications, manipulations, and material discrepancies, and documenting findings with specific reference to the source documents in which they appear.

Phase 4: Revenue Extraction Analysis

We document the specific financial mechanisms used to extract revenue from the victim — fee structures applied, spreads charged, unauthorized deductions made, manufactured losses generated, and returns withheld — calculating the financial value of each extraction category.

Phase 5: Loss Quantification and Damages Calculation

We calculate the total verified loss across all recognized legal categories — principal lost, fees extracted, returns withheld, and applicable consequential losses — producing a damages figure expressed to the methodological standard required for European civil proceedings, with full supporting workings.

Phase 6: Unjust Enrichment and Disgorgement Quantification

We calculate the financial benefit received by the fraud operator at the victim’s expense — the unjust enrichment figure that forms the basis of equitable recovery claims and, where applicable, disgorgement orders in civil proceedings.

Phase 7: Forensic Financial Analysis Report

All findings are compiled into a forensic financial analysis report — including the complete transaction-level loss reconstruction, fabricated record findings, revenue extraction analysis, damages quantification, and unjust enrichment calculation — formatted to the evidentiary and procedural standards of the jurisdiction where proceedings will be filed.

Why Clients Choose Veritas Advisory Group

Civil fraud proceedings in European courts are won or lost at the level of financial evidence quality. A well-investigated fraud case with a poorly quantified damages figure will be challenged on quantum. A strong damages figure unsupported by forensic methodology will be dismissed as speculative. Veritas Advisory Group produces the financial evidence record that resolves both vulnerabilities — verified, methodologically sound, and formatted for immediate use by legal representatives.

We understand the damages frameworks of the key EU jurisdictions where our clients’ cases are litigated — the approaches of English courts to forensic accounting evidence, the requirements of German civil procedure for expert financial reports, and the standards applied by Dutch and French courts to loss quantification in fraud cases. Every forensic financial analysis we produce is built around the specific requirements of the jurisdiction where it will be used.

 

What Sets Our Forensic Financial Analysis Apart

  • Transaction-level precision — Loss quantification is built from a verified transaction-by-transaction reconstruction — not an estimate from summary records
  • Fabrication detection as a standard step — Platform financial records are forensically reviewed for fabrication as a matter of methodology, not as an optional add-on
  • Jurisdiction-matched report format — Analysis reports are formatted to the evidentiary and procedural standards of the specific EU jurisdiction where proceedings will occur
  • Full damages category coverage — All legally recognized loss categories are calculated separately and aggregated — not limited to simple transfer totals
  • Multilingual case handling — Documentation and client communication in English, Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese, and Korean
  • GDPR-compliant confidentiality — All financial records and analysis findings are handled under European data protection standards

 

Submit Your Case for Forensic Financial Analysis

If you suffered financial loss through fraud connected to Europe, the strength of your recovery case depends directly on the quality of the financial evidence record underpinning it. A verified, court-standard damages figure and a forensically reviewed financial evidence file are the foundation on which legal representatives build effective claims.

Veritas Advisory Group produces that foundation — precisely quantified, methodologically sound, and ready for immediate use in European proceedings.

To begin your forensic financial analysis engagement, provide:

  • Your name and country of residence
  • The name of the platform, company, or individual involved
  • The approximate amount lost and the dates and methods of all transfers
  • All account statements, trade confirmations, and financial documents received from the platform
  • Your own bank records and payment confirmations related to the fraud

Our team will review your submission and respond with an analysis scope and timeline within 3–5 business days.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is forensic financial analysis the same as an expert witness report?

They serve related but distinct purposes. Forensic financial analysis produces the verified financial evidence record and damages quantification that a case is built on. An expert witness report is a formal document prepared by a qualified expert for submission to a court — typically drawing on forensic financial analysis findings as its factual foundation. Where expert witness testimony is required in European proceedings, our forensic financial analysis is structured to serve as the underlying work product for that testimony.

What if the fraudulent platform's financial records are the only documentation I have?

Platform records are a valid starting point and are frequently the primary source of documentary evidence in investment fraud cases. Forensic analysis will review those records, identify fabrications, and compare reported data against any independently verifiable transaction information available — including blockchain records, payment processor data, and banking records. Where platform records are fabricated, that fabrication is itself significant evidence — and forensic identification of it converts a liability into an asset for the claim.

How is the damages figure calculated where returns were promised but never paid?

Where a fraud operator made specific representations about investment returns — guaranteed rates, projected yields, or contractual profit commitments — the financial value of those representations is assessed under the applicable legal framework of the relevant EU jurisdiction. In some jurisdictions, claimed but withheld returns form part of the damages figure. In others, the measure of damages is limited to the out-of-pocket loss plus interest. We calculate the damages figure appropriate to the specific jurisdiction and legal basis of the claim.

Can forensic financial analysis support both civil and criminal proceedings simultaneously?

Yes. The forensic financial analysis report is structured to serve as the financial evidence foundation for both civil damages claims and criminal referrals simultaneously. Criminal referrals to national financial crime units benefit from a quantified loss figure and a documented financial mechanism — both of which are produced as standard components of the analysis.

What if I made transfers in multiple currencies?

Multi-currency loss quantification is standard in the cross-border fraud cases we handle. All transfer amounts are documented in their original currency, and the damages figure is expressed in a primary reference currency — typically USD or EUR — using authenticated exchange rate data for the relevant value dates. Currency conversion methodology is fully documented in the analysis report.

How does forensic financial analysis connect to asset recovery proceedings?

The unjust enrichment quantification produced by forensic financial analysis is the figure that asset recovery proceedings are designed to recover. It establishes the maximum amount the fraud operator is legally required to disgorge — which, combined with asset tracing findings identifying where those assets are held, gives legal representatives both the quantum and the location information required to pursue and execute recovery.

Veritas Advisory Group provides legal and advisory services to fraud victims across Asia-Pacific. We operate in European jurisdictions and work exclusively on cross-border financial fraud cases.