As an experienced trader, I always begin by verifying a broker’s regulatory standing and transparency around core services. When I examined Carlyle, I immediately noticed major gaps that impact confidence in any operational details—especially around topics like withdrawal minimums. Carlyle is not regulated by any recognized authority for retail brokerage, and in my experience, the absence of oversight is a significant red flag. Furthermore, Carlyle does not offer typical trading services or retail accounts; their business clearly revolves around institutional investment management, such as private equity and credit funds, not individual forex or CFD trading accounts. I could not find any information about retail trading conditions, withdrawal processes, or transaction-specific limits. Reliable brokers always publish clear withdrawal terms—including minimum amounts—since these are critical for clients managing risk and liquidity. Carlyle’s lack of published withdrawal policies or client-facing trading infrastructure means there simply isn’t a defined minimum withdrawal amount for individual traders because, by all visible evidence, such accounts don’t exist with this firm. Given my experience, when a firm lacks regulatory clarity and does not disclose retail account or withdrawal details, I view this as a strong signal to proceed with utmost caution. Personally, I would avoid placing any funds with a company under these circumstances. For those requiring explicit withdrawal policies or basic trading terms, Carlyle does not meet fundamental transparency or accountability standards.