Pharaoh
Brigadier General
- Messages
- 20,314
This gets more interesting. Some people say they can withdraw without an issue and others report getting a series of excuses. I still say that ANY irregularities in withdrawals are a big red flag for any company which controls client money. Issues with regularly scheduled withdrawals are an even bigger red flag. It's too bad we don't know the amounts involved in each case, so there's no way to tell yet if any particular sized accounts might be targeted. Or, perhaps Exential's biggest fans in this thread are known to the company and will be the last to experience problems (or even that one or more of them is nothing but a company shill put here to increase investor confidence.).
You challenged and I answered. Please allow me to restate the answer very thoroughly so that maybe this time you will be able to fully understand it:
I'm not representing, recommending, or introducing any company (except for Mattress Bank - protecting people's assets worldwide since 1929. - If you don't get the joke, you need to research the biggest financial events in 1929). Instead of promoting any company, I am here to protect the interests of innocent investors, and I've got over 14,000 posts and 8 years of history at the FPA to back that claim up. I've got dedicated educational threads on managed account and Ponzi's as well as broker selection. If I wanted to recommend a company, why didn't I bother to do it in those places which would bring in large numbers of clients? Why hasn't one of the people who privately messaged me about Exential or other companies over the years ever popped up to tell the world about my "secret recommendations" that you fantasize about me giving? Would you like to ask the forums admin to check my PMs/Conversations to verify that I haven't been quietly promoting some company behind the scenes? What he'll find is me repeatedly turning down requests to recommend a broker or other service. The fact is that I've repeatedly told people over the years to learn the basics of trading for themselves even if they want to use an account manager. That education will be an invaluable resource in understanding if an investment is being handled properly as well as to spot the warning signs if something starts to go wrong. The closest I've ever come to "recommending" a company is to tell someone who's already planning to sign up for a service that doesn't look like an obvious scam to test it out with the smallest possible amount of money.
Unlike you, I have no vested financial interest in keeping the Exential Ponzi scheme going longer in order to drag in new victims-to-be. You also keep avoiding the questions I asked you about your culpability in promoting something that eventually will wipe out many investors. I guess your profits are more than enough to keep your conscience out of the equation, assuming you still possess one.
My advice for everyone remains to get your money out of Exential now. If you can't see that there is something very wrong with Exential's structure from day 1, spend a small amount of time and money getting an opinion from a well qualified accountant or licensed investment adviser who works for a large and well known firm. Or, call up the fraud squad at your city's police department. Ask to speak to their most experienced investigator. Ask that officer about these "guaranteed, safe" levels of return in all markets.
To pharaoh
And now your question is answered. We challenge you to show yourself and what company you want to introduce.
You challenged and I answered. Please allow me to restate the answer very thoroughly so that maybe this time you will be able to fully understand it:
I'm not representing, recommending, or introducing any company (except for Mattress Bank - protecting people's assets worldwide since 1929. - If you don't get the joke, you need to research the biggest financial events in 1929). Instead of promoting any company, I am here to protect the interests of innocent investors, and I've got over 14,000 posts and 8 years of history at the FPA to back that claim up. I've got dedicated educational threads on managed account and Ponzi's as well as broker selection. If I wanted to recommend a company, why didn't I bother to do it in those places which would bring in large numbers of clients? Why hasn't one of the people who privately messaged me about Exential or other companies over the years ever popped up to tell the world about my "secret recommendations" that you fantasize about me giving? Would you like to ask the forums admin to check my PMs/Conversations to verify that I haven't been quietly promoting some company behind the scenes? What he'll find is me repeatedly turning down requests to recommend a broker or other service. The fact is that I've repeatedly told people over the years to learn the basics of trading for themselves even if they want to use an account manager. That education will be an invaluable resource in understanding if an investment is being handled properly as well as to spot the warning signs if something starts to go wrong. The closest I've ever come to "recommending" a company is to tell someone who's already planning to sign up for a service that doesn't look like an obvious scam to test it out with the smallest possible amount of money.
Unlike you, I have no vested financial interest in keeping the Exential Ponzi scheme going longer in order to drag in new victims-to-be. You also keep avoiding the questions I asked you about your culpability in promoting something that eventually will wipe out many investors. I guess your profits are more than enough to keep your conscience out of the equation, assuming you still possess one.
My advice for everyone remains to get your money out of Exential now. If you can't see that there is something very wrong with Exential's structure from day 1, spend a small amount of time and money getting an opinion from a well qualified accountant or licensed investment adviser who works for a large and well known firm. Or, call up the fraud squad at your city's police department. Ask to speak to their most experienced investigator. Ask that officer about these "guaranteed, safe" levels of return in all markets.