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What is the official corporate registry status of Apex Force and who are its listed officers and directors?
Executive summary
Available public records in the provided results show multiple entities with “Apex” in their name; the corporate registry status and officer/director listings for a company simply called “Apex Force” are not found in the supplied reporting. The most detailed registry data in the results concern Apex Group and related Apex fund/corporate services entities registered in the Bailiwick of Guernsey with GFSC licence numbers and registration numbers (e.g., Registration No. 43046; GFSC licence 1025942) [1] [2].
1. No direct registry entry located for “Apex Force” — search came up empty
I could not find a corporate registry entry, official filing, or leadership listing for an entity named “Apex Force” in the supplied sources; none of the Apex-brand pages or profiles in the results show an “Apex Force” corporate registration or officer list (available sources do not mention Apex Force). The supplied results instead return multiple different “Apex” organizations — Apex Group (global fund services), Apex Fund and Corporate Services (review/warning), Apex Officer (VR training), and others — creating a risk of mistaken identity if you’re trying to verify a single firm [2] [3] [4].
2. Closest authoritative corporate records: Apex Group and its Guernsey registrations
For firms named “Apex” that provide fund and corporate services, the Apex Group site provides explicit registry information: several Apex entities are registered in the Bailiwick of Guernsey (addresses at 1 Royal Plaza, Royal Avenue, St Peter Port) with GFSC licence numbers and registration numbers — for example, Registration No. 43046 with GFSC licence 1025942 and other entries listing Registration No. 17484 with GFSC licence 1019127 [1] [2]. Those pages describe regulated activities (fund services, corporate domiciliation, registrar services) and indicate these are supervised by national regulators such as the Guernsey Financial Services Commission and Luxembourg/Belgian-style authorities through affiliates [2] [1].
3. Warnings and blacklists: “Apex Fund and Corporate Services” and FCA note
A traders/consumer portal referencing regulator registries reports that “Apex Fund and Corporate Services” is not FCA-regulated and that the UK Financial Conduct Authority added the name to a warning/blacklist “due to Other,” advising UK investors to exercise caution [3]. That source aggregates regulatory warnings and asserts the company may lack authorization in the UK; it is not the regulator itself, but it cites FCA action. If you are focused on UK activity, check FCA registers directly — the supplied results do not include FCA primary documents [3].
4. Multiple “Apex” brands — don’t conflate entities or leadership
The supplied results show different companies operating under “Apex” with entirely different lines of business and leadership pages: Apex Group (financial services, global fund administration) provides regulatory-status pages and leadership/team content [2] [5]; Apex Officer is a VR training firm with its own profiles on Crunchbase/CB Insights [4] [6]; there is also an “Apex Trader Funding” support page and other organizations named APEX involved in events or defense [7] [8]. Each has separate governance and director/officer listings on their own sites; the results do not show a unified “Apex Force” corporate officer roster to draw from [7] [4].
5. What the sources say about officers or directors (where available)
Where leadership or governance is published, it appears on corporate pages: Apex Group publishes an “Our team / Leadership” section and an Executive Committee and leadership-team content describing senior roles and global executive committee membership — but the provided snippets do not enumerate a full board roster nor give named officers specific to a legally distinct “Apex Force” [5]. The traders/portal warning does not include officer names, only regulatory status commentary [3]. Other Apex-branded sites (Apex Officer, Apex Tool Group, Apex Mining) have leadership pages in the results, but those are unrelated companies and their officer lists refer to different businesses [9] [10] [4].
6. Practical next steps and verification checklist
- Confirm the exact legal name and jurisdiction you mean by “Apex Force” (e.g., country, suffix like Ltd./Inc./SA). Available sources do not identify such a registered entity (available sources do not mention Apex Force).
- Search the corporate registry for that jurisdiction (Companies House, Guernsey GFSC, SEC/EDGAR, or local commercial register). The supplied material shows Apex Group records in Guernsey that are authoritative for those Apex subsidiaries [2] [1].
- If you suspect UK-facing trading/financial activity, cross-check the FCA register directly; the traders portal cites an FCA warning about “Apex Fund and Corporate Services” [3].
- If you find a company record, request the filed annual return or corporate extract to see named officers/directors — the sources here show that where companies publish registry data (Apex Group) you can get registration numbers and licensing details that support further public-record searches [2] [1].
Limitations: The supplied results do not contain any primary company registry extract or officer list for an entity called “Apex Force,” so I cannot provide names or a legal status for that exact name from these sources (available sources do not mention Apex Force). The analysis above relies on the registries and corporate-pages for other “Apex” firms included in the search results [2] [1] [3].