THE RISE OF FOREX SCAMMERS IN SOUTH AFRICA from wisepowder's blog
For the past few years in South Africa forex has gained alot of popularity and hype amongst the people of Africa. Forex caught the attention of many people from the age 16 to the age 40, forex really only started becoming a big thing in South Africa around 2015. Before 2015 not many people were aware about the foriegn exchange market nor how it works.To get more news about WikiFX, you can visit wikifx.com official website.
Since then popularity grew amongst young South Africans. Social
media, specifically, Instagram had many young forex traders showing off
their lifestyles, cars and money. This caught the attention of many
people between the ages of 16 & 30. These forex traders on social
media were not only showing off their lifestyles but they were marketing
it too, they were promoting forex courses that promised financial
freedom, mocking 9 to 5 workers. This marketing strategy caught the eyes
of many South Africans, thus when the rise of scamming begun. As South
Africans poured into the forex industry thinking it‘s a “get rich quick
scheme”, many South Africans were left disappointed when they realised
that forex was way harder than they thought and that it takes alot time
to become profitable. Besides them finding out that it was harder than
they thought, many of the forex traders that were promoting forex
courses weren’t the best teachers at it, although the lifestyle they
portrayed on social media gave people the idea that they were the best
of the best. Many of these traders were useless teachers, this led a big
number of unsuccessful traders.
In that number of unsuccessful traders, some of them decided to do the
exact same thing as the Forex Traders on social media. Many of them
started there own forex companies on Social media with the exact same
marketing strategies such as posting pictures of money and fancy cars.
Around this time many more people became aware of forex and was buying
these courses which led to many people wasting tons of money on
different forex courses and forex signals. It became apparent that
atleast 85% of retail traders in South Africa were unsuccessful,
including the people with the best cars and houses, majority of them
were either born rich or made alot of money through selling useless
courses that taught almost nothing. There are a very few legit forex
companies in South Africa that brought up successful traders thus
resulting in the amount of scammers in South Africa outweighing the
amount of legit traders by a massive difference. The easiest way to tell
if someone is a forex scammer is when they introduce themselves as
account managers.
What are account managers? People who offer to trade for you. Account managers are usually people who don‘t have money to trade for themselves so they offer to trade for other people hoping they get lucky enough to make money for them and their client, this usually ends up in tears as the account manager usually blows the account and ask for more money in order to “release” the funds or they block their clients from contacting them. You’re safer trading on your own than giving someone else the responsibility of growing your money, the cold truth is 90% of these account managers dont care about your funds, they just care about the moment they get their hands onto your funds. In fact I've never came across a legit account manager in South Africa, but I have came across many account managers. In conclusion KEEP YOUR MONEY AWAY FROM ACCOUNT MANAGERS.
The Wall