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Teach newbies how to identify whether a lead in copy trading group is reliable.
1. lead in copy trading logic
99% of trading strategies can be understood in one sentence by a newbie. If your group leader's trading logic comes with a bunch of indicators for every trade, and you still can't understand it even after using AI for analysis, they are definitely a scammer.
2. Paid group members are classified by levels.
It is important to know that for every trade, regardless of how skilled the trader is, the win rate is only around 50%. Excluding those anomalous cases that exploit bugs in the system.
Since he doesn't even know if the next trade will be profitable, what right does he have to use this trade as a reason to give you "Gold Card, Black Card, Supreme VIP"?
You are trading, not opening a foot massage parlor!
3. The group friends are licking people like robots.
You see the entire group chat history,
99% are:
"Hahaha"
“666”
"The teacher is awesome"
This kind of group already tells you the answer with its atmosphere – normal people won't stay long in a place where everyone just flatters (except for yellow groups).
4. Many Twitter followers but almost no lottery for group friends.
If the group owner does not communicate with the exchange staff, it essentially means that the exchange staff has already assessed that this person is not good merchandise, because this KOL has no united front value in the eyes of the exchange.
5. There are no other players in the group that make you feel impressive.
A great group must have diverse opinions. If your group is basically just the group owner leading every day and the members only say 666 without anything else, listen to me, it's time to leave.
6. The group owner's temper is good.
Leading in copy trading is a very stressful thing. If a person has a high sense of morality, leading in copy trading can be very pressuring. Additionally, since there are generally many newbies in the paid groups, the group owner can be driven crazy by them. The more impatient the group owner gets, the more it proves that this group owner is a good person.
7. Often in small groups, teasing others.
There is a saying that people elevate others. If your group leader often belittles other KOLs in a small group, and it's not a direct battle on Twitter, then it's likely a scam.
The reason for saying they don't like forming cliques is that the group leader lacks the ability to make friends.