What is a Scam: A confidence trick, confidence game, or  con for short (also   known as a scam) is an attempt to intentionally  mislead a person or persons   (known as the mark) usually with the goal  of financial or other gain. The   confidence trickster, con man, scam  artist or con artist often works with an   accomplice called the shill,  who tries to encourage the mark by pretending to   believe the  trickster.
Whenever there is an opportunity to make  large   amounts of money, there will be people who are eager to jump  right in and start   making money. And where there are people who are  eager to get rich quick with a   minimum of effort on their part, there  are fraudsters waiting to take their   money. Experienced traders are  wise enough to avoid the frauds – it’s the new   traders who are most  vulnerable to the forex scams that are slipping into the   currency  exchange market.                               
The U.S. CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading    Commission), which regulates futures and commodities trading, warns new    investors to be wary of frauds and scams that promise huge profits  from your   investments, in and out of the Forex market. The CFTC has  issued several   Consumer Fraud Alerts in connection with foreign  currency trading. They offer   the following tips to help you avoid  being scammed.                             
“I made $1900 in one   minute!” touts one  sidebar ad for a Forex trading company. Ads that promise high   returns  on small investments with little or no risk to you are tempting bait.    The fact is that while there are certainly big profits to be made in  forex,   there are correspondingly large losses. And most novice traders  drop out of   active trading by the end of their first year because  they can’t afford the   risk.                             
Before you part with a penny, thoroughly  check out the company or   trader you’re planning to do business with.  Check the CFTC’s consumer fraud   alert page. Check to see if the  company is registered with the CFTC, or is a   member of the National  Futures Association. Check to see if there’s any   disciplinary action  against the firm or company. Get even more basic. Get a   valid address  and telephone number, and verify that it belongs to the company.   Check  to be sure the person you’re dealing with actually works for the  company.   Especially if you’re doing business on the Internet, it’s  very easy for a   scammer to fake credentials.                             
The Internet has made it incredibly easy for    scammers to operate. It only costs $6.95 a month to have a  professional looking   web site hosted – that’s pennies a day to reach  millions of potential marks.   Before you part with credit card numbers,  bank account transfer permissions or   wire transfers, be sure to check  out the company with all the authorities listed   above.                             
Legitimate dealers don’t need to contact you  with unsolicited   email, or pressure you into doing business with  them. If someone is pushing you   to invest right now, tonight, this  moment, it should set off huge warning   signals in your head. A real  dealer is more concerned with keeping you as a   customer for the long  haul. He’ll be patient while you check out his credentials   and  reputation. A phony dealer can’t afford that luxury – he needs to get  you on   the hook right now, or risk losing his score.                             
The interbank market is a   term for a loose  network of currency traders that include banks, financial    institutions and large corporations. Fraudulent currency trading firms  often   tell customers that they’ll trade for them on the interbank  market where the   prices are better. It should be a warning signal to  you to stay   away.                             
While technically not ‘scams’, you should  also be wary of paying   good money for training courses that promise  you systems that are ‘guaranteed’   to earn you high profits. If the  course advertises that their system will earn   you huge profits with  minimal risk, or guarantee you 40% return on your money in   six weeks,  take the promises with a huge grain of salt. Experienced traders    understand that the forex market is a time market – while it’s possible  to make   large amounts of money in short-term trades, finding those  profitable trades is   a matter of being in the right place at the right  time… which means putting in   the time and the effort to be there.                              
They also understand that they’ll   lose  more often than they win – the trick is to keep your losses short and  your   profits long. Any company that guarantees that you’ll make a  profit on all or   most of your profits is coloring their advertising.  Stick with trusted companies   whose credentials you can verify and  whose background you can   check.                             
Always remember that if it sounds to go to be true....it probably   is... 
 
 
 
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