Million-Dollar Trading Influencer Exposed for Profiting from Selling Courses: Where's the Line Between Trading Experts and Content Influencers?

ChainNewsAbmedia

American Trading Influencer ImanTrading Recently Posted a Video on YouTube Accusing a Social Media Trading Influencer TJR (Tyler Riches), Who Has Millions of Followers, of His Trading Skills and Wealth Sources. The Video Contains Private Conversation Records, Chat Screenshots, and Trading Logs, Claiming That He Profits Through Courses, Discord Signal Groups, and Cryptocurrency Promotions, Not Genuine Trading.

Millionaire Trading Influencer TJR Accused: Borrowed Money from Friends to Trade

The exposé states that in 2021, before TJR became an influencer, he asked other traders in online communities for trading signals, entry and exit points, and profit targets. The video claims these timings conflict with later publicly shared screenshots of high trading profits. It also shows multiple message screenshots indicating that TJR solicited funds from university friends at the end of 2021 to trade on their behalf and share profits.

In one message, he told a friend he might earn $10,000 a month. However, the video alleges these funds were eventually lost due to trading losses, and several friends did not get repaid immediately. One investor, Frank, after a long period without a response, contacted TJR’s family to request repayment. Records show Frank finally received a refund on July 19, 2022.

The video suggests TJR’s initial social media traffic came from a MetaTrader screenshot showing $100,000 profit. This screenshot’s trading dates precede his borrowing from friends. If TJR truly made $100,000 profit, why would he need to borrow money to trade?

TJR’s live trading performance shown in streams was not from a broker account but input manually into a journaling app. The exposé argues this method could artificially inflate trading results.

One-on-One Coaching Is All a Hoax

As his followers grew, TJR started offering paid community groups and trading courses. His “Mastermind Course” claimed to limit enrollment to 30 students with one-on-one guidance. But some students say the actual class size exceeded 500, with almost no one-on-one coaching, and TJR only sent a few messages in the group. If each paid $4,000, the total revenue from 500 students could reach $2 million.

TJR Accused of Pump-and-Dump in Cryptocurrency

The video also mentions TJR’s alleged connection with a prop trading firm, which later shut down amid accusations of unpaid profits and refunds. Some students said they signed up partly because the course included a $100,000 trading account. After the company closed, some tried to get refunds but were refused. Others reported being removed from courses and Discord after requesting refunds.

The video also compiles multiple crypto projects TJR mentioned on social media. The exposé notes that some tokens surged rapidly after his promotion, then dropped over 90%. Someone claimed they paid $45,000 for promotional fees to push certain cryptocurrencies. On-chain data shows TJR’s wallet bought tokens before promotion and sold them afterward for profit.

Crypto Influencer Scandals in Taiwan: Fake Positions and Show-Offs

The video concludes that many of TJR’s followers are teenagers. Some content teaches minors how to bypass age restrictions to open trading accounts, promotes crypto gambling streams, and features luxury cars and lifestyles to attract attention. The exposé suggests this content easily appeals to young, inexperienced traders to buy courses.

This situation echoes Taiwan’s crypto scene: fake trading accounts showing “profits,” but many of these “screenshots” are suspected to come from simulated accounts rather than real trading. Since simulated trading involves no real funds, exaggerated results are common, fueling doubts about “paper millionaires.”

Another common phenomenon is marketing with high returns and exaggerated wealth stories. Social media often features “small investors doubling their money,” “turning a few thousand into hundreds of thousands,” or “becoming billionaires in a few years,” paired with luxury cars, travel, and lavish lifestyles—creating a strong narrative of sudden wealth. However, these often lack verified trading records or long-term performance proof and are mainly used to attract followers.

Paid communities, signal groups, and trading courses are also widespread business models. Some accounts sell signals, tutorials, or “trade-copying services” via Telegram, Discord, or private groups, claiming to offer real-time strategies or investment opportunities. The long-standing controversy is whether these so-called “mentors” truly have consistent trading skills or are just converting social media traffic into course revenue.

In this environment, some observers believe the crypto community is increasingly driven by “traffic-first” content: attractive stories of high returns, flaunting wealth, and then monetizing through courses and groups. Genuine, long-term trading ability, however, remains difficult to verify.

Whether TJR’s case is similar remains to be seen with more evidence and responses from involved parties. But this incident has reignited a familiar debate: in the age of social media, where is the line between trading experts and content influencers?

This article “Millionaire Trading Influencer Exposed for Profiting from Selling Courses: Where Is the Line Between Trading Experts and Content Influencers?” originally appeared on Chain News ABMedia.

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