Been and obtained that legal advice… This document exhibits multiple, severe red flags that are characteristic of high-yield investment fraud and advanced-fee scams. You should not proceed with this agreement, nor should you provide any personal or banking information to the entities involved. Primary Red Flags Impersonation of Established Entities: The document repeatedly uses the name and branding of Repsol, a legitimate, global multi-energy company. The document provides a link to the official Repsol website (www.repsol.com) to create a false sense of legitimacy. However, this "Deed of Agreement" regarding USDT-to-cash conversions is not a standard business practice for a major energy corporation. "Too Good to Be True" Financial Terms: The proposal promises to provide $1,000,000,000 (one billion USD) in cryptocurrency. In exchange, you are expected to return only 60% of these funds via bank transfer while keeping 40% as "project capital". No legitimate, large-scale corporation would offer to "give away" 40% of such a massive sum of capital in this manner. Technical and Logical Inconsistencies: The document claims Repsol ceased cryptocurrency activities in 2014, yet this is presented as a 2026 deal involving massive USDT transfers. It mentions a "quocoin wallet," which is not a recognized or reputable institutional financial platform. The "Proof of Funds" section displays a screenshot from Etherscan showing a random wallet address holding USDT. Anyone can look up a wallet on the blockchain; displaying a screenshot of a balance does not prove that the sender has the legal right, authority, or intent to transfer those funds to you. Request for Sensitive Information: The document includes a template for "Party B" (you) to fill in your personal, company, and bank account details. Providing this information in the context of such a suspicious, high-value transaction puts you at extreme risk of financial theft, identity fraud, and becoming an unwitting participant in money laundering activities.