No charges have been laid and nothing has been proven against any of the players named.
When asked to confirm if the Aces were involved, NZC chief executive David White said: "All we can tell you is it does not involve the New Zealand national team."
Auckland Cricket chief executive Mark Cameron said he was not aware of the details of the ICC anti-corruption investigation.
"Until such time as the investigation has run its course, it would be inappropriate for me to comment," he said.
The ICC last week confirmed the investigation, which involves head of the Australasian branch of the anti-corruption unit John Rhodes, but said it would not comment further until it was completed.
Auckland won both their qualifying matches comfortably, but were ousted in the group stages, losing two, winning one match and having a no result.
The CLT20 is one of the most lucrative cricket tournaments in the world. The 2012 edition was played for a total prize pool of US$6 million ($7.3 million), with the winners taking $2.5 million, the runners-up $1.3 million and losing semifinalists $500,000.
Teams eliminated in the group stage, as Auckland were, earned $200,000. Auckland receive two-sevenths of that money, with the five other New Zealand major associations earning one-seventh each.
The ICC probe is also investigating Chris Cairns. Cairns has categorically denied any involvement in match or spot fixing and says "I am not a cheat". He has never played for the Auckland Aces.