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How To Put Together Your Very Own Half-Assed Forex Scam

Scott the robberMy biggest pet peeve by far, when it comes to the Forex market, is all of the scams that people try to pull.  Forex is one of the best markets to trade and these slimeballs take people’s money before they ever have a chance at becoming successful.

The reason that there are so many scams in this market is because Forex was unregulated for a long time.  Until very recently, you could manage other people’s money in the Forex market without a license.  Think about those possibilities.

Anyway, there is a certain individual that came up on my radar recently that is a perfect example of how Forex scams are set up.  Hopefully this post will help beginners avoid such unscrupulous individuals.

For people who take things literally, I’m not actually telling you to do thisI hate people like this!  The following is my way of making fun of how badly some of these scams are set up.

Step 1: Create a fake name and back story

The first thing that you have to do is create a believable name and compelling life story.  In this case, I came across a “person” named Adrian Shiroma.  Luckily for Adrian, he is Japanese/Spanish, so most English speakers cannot understand his website enough to realize that it is BS.  I’m not even going to give the website the gratification of a direct link, so you can Google the name if you want to check it out.

Step 2: Setup a free blog

Yes, if you want to scam people out of millions of dollars, there is no need to spend $100 and get a real domain name and website hosting.  Just setup a free blog on Blogger or WordPress.  Nobody will know the difference.  If you Googled the name, you will see the blog that I am talking about.  He even uses a free Hotmail email account.

In all fairness, there was a very small chance that he is a real person, so I sent him an email.  After all, I have been known to be wrong in the past.  So this is what I said…

adrian-shiroma

No surprise, but I didn’t get a reply.  Probably because he speaks Spanish…yeah right!

There is a “track record” on his homepage going back to November 2009.  But if you actually go back through his blog posts, they only show records going back to March 2011.  That is half-assing at it’s best.

The actual currency pair and prices are mysteriously blocked out and somehow the account always starts with $30,000 in it.

Hmmm….

In addition, there are is no account name or number on the statements that are posted.  It looks like a random report from Metatrader that could have been done in a demo account.

Step 3: Create buzz

Now go out and spam as many Forex blogs as possible.  Here are the comments that were left on my blog:

adrian-shiroma

I left out the email address and IP addresses because I actually give a shit about privacy.  However, they were all from the same email and IP address.  But they were clever and used different names.  Important point there, be sure you are taking notes.

When looking around for proof that he won the Traders Marathon, I couldn’t find it.  No surprise there either.  Great idea though.

In addition, if you Google Adrian Shiroma, there are a bunch of “interviews” on different websites like Baby Pips and Forex Banks.  Well, actually it is the same interview, posted in different places.  Another key point, get the maximum mileage from your crappy broken-English interviews.

One funny thing is that if you look on his blog, he spams his own blog!  There are multiple comments that are exactly the same.

Apparently he had some videos too, but most have been taken down.  That is one area that you can improve on.  Be sure to make quality videos.

However, I did find one on YouTube and it is pretty funny.  I don’t know Japanese (in spite of my name and 6 years of Japanese School) or Spanish, but I’m pretty sure that she never says Shiroma at any time in the “broadcast.”  Look carefully at the subtitles…you will see Adrian Shiroma come up a couple of times, but she says “Yamanaka.”

The final thing to look for in the video is at about 0:53.  The name Adrian Shiroma comes up with the Japanese characters under it, but they are wrong.  If you do a quick search for the Kanji, this is what Shiroma should look like.  Hmm….

Step 4: Take the money

Now, this is the easy part.  Just get them to send you money.

I’m not exactly sure how he does it because I never got that far, but I’m sure it is pretty easy.

There you have it!  That is all it takes.  Pretty sad huh?

Why I posted this

Ordinarily, I would just ignore the spam comments on my blog.  But in this case, the scammers did put in a little effort into this, so I want this to show up in Google alongside the name.  Actually, I want this post to outrank him for his own name!

Of course, experienced traders will recognize this as a scam right off the bat.  But beginners may fall for it, so…

Avoid Adrian Shiroma!

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Photo: Matt From London via Flickr Creative Commons




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raultorres371 5 pts

People talk about things without knowing. I know Sdrian Shiroma and I have an account with. In addition he has a background PAMM Myfxbook with a very good profit. You should not speak ill of someone who does not know.http://www.myfxbook.com/members/adrianshiroma/adrian-shiromas-pamm-fund-httpadrianshiromablogspotcom/307256

Hugh Kimura 6 pts moderator

 raultorres371 Until I see some real proof, I'm not going to change my stance. How long have you been with him?  What has been your average profit/loss? 

 

1. Wow, so he had a good two months on his MyFxBook statement...just recently too.  Anyone can do that. Show me a 3 year track record, then I may change my mind.

2. Why does his blog say that he made 7.33% in April, while his MyFxBook account say that he made 12.97%?  If that really is official account, then why the difference? 

3. The account is not verified on MyFxBook.  That means anyone could have uploaded a false MT statement.  Here is the official statement from the MyFxBook blog on why verification is important: http://myfxbook.wordpress.com/2009/11/30/verification-system-is-finally-here/

4. What's wrong, don't want to show your face?  Why not link your LiveFyre comments to a real account on Facebook or Twitter?  When I click on your profile above, you don't have a real profile and only the comment you left above. 

5. I Googled the IP address you used to write your comment from and it is in a spam database under two other email addresses. 

6.  You have no answer to any of the issues I posed in the post above.  

7.  Do you really want me to keep going? 

 

You are only digging the hole deeper, quit while you are ahead.  Look, if he really is a real trader making real money, then I am happy to apologize and take down this post.  But you are doing to have to show me one hell of a lot more evidence than you are showing me now.

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Hugh Kimura 6 pts moderator

 raultorres371 For the record, here is the difference that I see between the blog and the MyFxBook report: http://ow.ly/i/DDT6

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Hi, I'm new to forex world, but from what i've heard it's perfectly legal and secure to have a third person administrating your forex account, right??I mean in a big broker like Dukascopy, if I agree that other person can manage my account, let's say mister X, there is no way mister X can withdrawal or transfer the money that I deposited with Dukascopy to another bank account or another forex account, right???I hope you can answer my because I was thinking about contacting Adrian Shiroma, and also a person is convincing me to trade my personal account trought his account, I thought this was secure but I'm still have doubtsthanks a lot, sorry my english I speak spanish as a native language, so maybe a can help you about what Adrian says in his blog, the guy looks like a scam but I thought maybe he's just trying to get some costumers and get his 30% legally and not scam, of course I'm not sure after reading thisthanks and regards!

Hi Remy,Well, it depends where you live. In the US, you have to be properly licensed to manage money for others. You have to check on the laws for where you live.If someone has your login and password, they can probably figure out a way to withdraw money from your account if you do not watch it closely. If they trade your account through a PAMM type system, then that is probably pretty safe because they never get your passwords, you just approve them within the system and their trades show up in your account. This is something you have to check out with your broker.Even if they don't steal your money, if they are a bad trader, the result will be the same, you will lose money.Based on the evidence above, you should avoid Adrian Shiroma, it looks like a total scam!If someone else is asking to manage your account, you need to check them out properly. They need to have the proper licenses (if required in your country) and you need to see AT LEAST a 3 year track record trading a system in a real money account. You need to see their statements AND verify their performance with their broker.Even if they check out, then it is a matter of how much you know them and trust them. If there is any doubt, I would stay away. I cannot tell you to invest with them or not, it is your responsibility to make that decision based on your research and gut feeling.I still believe that the best way to do it is to learn how to trade your own money!Hope that helps!Hugh

Hello Hugh,You can try to tell Google about spamming from that blog. If you prove the spam and scam, they can easily delete the blog (if blogspot) or remove from search results.