Welcome to NexusFi: the best trading community on the planet, with over 150,000 members Sign Up Now for Free
Genuine reviews from real traders, not fake reviews from stealth vendors
Quality education from leading professional traders
We are a friendly, helpful, and positive community
We do not tolerate rude behavior, trolling, or vendors advertising in posts
We are here to help, just let us know what you need
You'll need to register in order to view the content of the threads and start contributing to our community. It's free for basic access, or support us by becoming an Elite Member -- see if you qualify for a discount below.
-- Big Mike, Site Administrator
(If you already have an account, login at the top of the page)
Just my fifty cents feedback on this guy after I did about 15 minutes of research:
1. I found two of his sites: https://www.mtradingacademy.com; and 6figurementoringgroup.com.
2. Both of those sites are typical "long copy marketing pieces," designed to walk you through the steps that will convince you to part with your money. Includes the required pictures of fast cars, jet planes, yachts, etc, presented as if "other gurus" try to sell you that, but NOT him.
3. Neither one of the two web sites show any history in the web.archive.org, which made me wonder how old they might be. The answer: https://www.mtradingacademy.com: Domain created on 2019-09-25
6figurementoringgroup.com: Domain created on 2019-10-07
Clearly this guy has not been "in business" for very long.
4. LinkedIn profile. Claims years of experience trading, but interestingly enough, not much other information provided. Education? crickets.
5. The https://www.mtradingacademy.com is written on the third-person. Doesn't that seem a bit strange coming from "Master Kim" himself?
6. Finally, and this is a personal opinion, I wouldn't buy anything from a guy that calls himself "Master Kim." Give me a break.
I know I'm not answering the original question that started this thread (that is a legal issue and I'm not an attorney); but I'm attempting to point out that we need to do some research before with let our hard earned money go.
I join the others in feeling bad that you are going through this BS. Like most others, I am not a lawyer. I have not had things like this happen to me, for one simple reason. If I was doing so well, I would not be telling others how to copy me. Maybe that makes me a selfish bastard, but I'd figure out how much I needed to bank in order to retire to a beach on Fiji or wherever and I'd trade with my secret system until I had that much and then adi-freaking-os. Plus, no one, and I don't care how much you pay them, can acurately predict the market. I do very well, but I do it by scalping, $50 here, $20 there, and so on. With no/low commissions, it adds up. But I could not tell you where to put your money if I had to. No one can predict the future. I don't care how much you pay them.
Now, that said, these "gurus" live and die, not from their trading, but by their merchant accounts. I have looked at the terms of some of these guru's terms and conditions. They are usually open about NO REFUNDS. But if you read further, they say that their life's blood is their merchant account. HUH? If you think about it, that makes perfect sense. Face it: the bull market we have had over the past several years has made millionaires out of many people; those people have graduated to telling us how to do what they did. As luck would have it, those things do not work any more. I do not know how you bought it, but I'd read up on it and go after their merchant account. Either through their bank, or PayPal or even the post office. Get them on mail fraud if they sent anything. There was a time when the BBB was good, but that is long gone. BUT, BUT, BUT today, there is social media. They cannot stop you from telling your story. No one can. Name names, make copies of statements and show them. You seemed afraid to name your "guru." Name him and put posts all over the internet. Scare the crap out of him. He could drag you to court. I'd welcome that. Then you could REALLY tell your story and it is public record. Someone said that he can keep charging you if you close your credit card and roll it to another account. I doubt that because I have lost credit cards and all of the auto pay things I had set up stopped working. I had WANTED those to roll over and they did not. I would go after this creep and tell everybody who it is. Then he has a choice: lose the business from one guy, or the potential business from 100 guys. Completely his choice.
Thanks, received. I am not concerned about legal threats personally. Anyone is welcome to share their experiences about a vendor so long as they follow site rules.
i have experience in the matter, i agree with everyone else scammers do not sue. relax, close the account, tell the bank or banks it is a disputed charge , sit back and relax.
the saame thing happened to me with an entity called ams, i mention it here so all beware. they used to post at top hat, not anymore thank god. but they had charts that incorporated several methods i like. after speaking to a guy in Florida who sounded honest. i paid whatever the cost was. later i found out that they weren"t selling a course , or a chatroom but the charts. which only work with ninja, i have trade station. upon requesting a return through paypal. after repeated back and forth, the main guy who is in the Netherlands. returned half the fee. mind you i never took anything from them. never downloaded the charts, in other words nothing was taken. i"m down $700 they"re up $700. total scam. and paypal does not like to give you back your money. now they have a policy that before you file a claim you have to negotiate with the scammer first. good luck with that.
in your case you never got to pay it all. consider yourself lucky and move on , the guy won"t sue you. besides there are legal tidbits, where is he going to sue? (diversity of jurisdiction).what is the amount in controversy?. jurisdictional issues, under what legal theory is he suing? you can not enforce an illegal contract, or contract to commit an illegal act. it goes on and on.
relax and follow one or several of the people on this site they come on from time to time and explain their approaches. one of them is bound to work for you. sorry it happened. live and learn. i"ve never posted before but for you i did.
Hmmm. So the vendors premium product offering cost roughly $3K / Month for 12 months (Around 36k annual earnings) BUT claims he taught his son how to make 1500 / day ( 30k monthly earnings and roughly 360K annual earnings). It doesn't make sense. Had this been a poker game I would push ALL IN with J high .
Isnīt that bastard Henry Roche he used as an alias, he is a portugese guy who supossedly lived in Canada and ran a training trading online site named New Futures Trading.
I am so worried and my thinking is in a limbo, I almost forget he has another group at FB please also look up Ferrari Trading Group, Kim Mangalindan was also the administrator of this group.
I initially met him at Stock Navigator (SN) on Facebook (Paid Membership $6K for the whole class, one time pay)and SN are mostly give you the fundamentals on this group, like the Elliot Wave Theory and to make Fibonacci and so forth, he start showing all his winning images and start mentioning that he gives classes to, then if you friend with him, he will invite you to Ferrari Trading Group and if you start asking questions, he will start connecting with you and link you to his website and making a personal call and telling all the good things he made, feeding the homeless, helping a girl in a saloon etc. He uses his son as bait to welcome you and talking to you, how much he made that day... that's the story, we are all humans and we have soft heart, when we hear something like that, you thought he is genuine... believe it or not the members in Freedom Challenge are still sticking with this guy, I emailed one member that I befriend with and Master Kim give them specific instruction to not talk to me or they will be kick out. Anyway I submitted a formal Complaint to CFTC and filled up Form TCR.
I guess it's true what they say, no publicity is bad publicity.
The intrigue that is created by suggesting that this could somehow be a viral marketing scheme -- true or not -- may even be enough to add a significant amount of curiosity about (and views for) his channel.
Just wanted to add, the link tracking id -- referred to earlier as being potentially in kind with a such a scheme -- is a FB tracking id. It seems the FBCID doesn't have a use as of yet by marketers - but it does allow facebook to track unique clicks from FB logged in users if necessary, maybe as a click fraud investigation tool, or something along those lines. I'm guessing that anyone who does a "copy link" of one of these linke while using facebook would get the appended id, even though the link does not visually show it.