
Top 10 Influencers in 2025
MarkelActually, I didn't discover Brother Xueqiu. Brother Xueqiu was forwarded to me by @差佬的交易员. However, I suddenly miss an old friend, so let's praise him @西嗯爱姆🕊️
Sharing a few of Brother Xueqiu's glorious deeds:
1. Hundred-Faced Hassan
First, he claimed to be an English teacher at New Oriental, then inexplicably switched careers to become an accountant, then inexplicably became a software expert, and then inexplicably became a journalist. Anyway, he had eighteen different professions.
2. Self-Definition
First, it was IELTS 9.0, then it became 8.5, then someone posted his score report, and he changed it to 6.5 with a one-on-one signature; sharing news is just sharing news, but Brother Xueqiu would always say that what he shared was 100% correct, that he had reviewed it before posting, and then if it was wrong, he would just delete the post as if nothing happened. But beforehand, he kept emphasizing 100% correctness and how professional he was.
3. Gang Operation
His client base is distinct. When encountering Chinese concept stocks, he would say they would rise 10x, 100x; for US blue-chip stocks, he would say they would fall 90%. The goal is to harvest a specific group of people. Then he developed an offline matrix; some were deceived, some were his accomplices. When leaving, he would leave a message saying 'stay away from Longbridge's XXX,' only to turn around and come back trying to harvest naive investors. So, Brother Xueqiu, has your entire family tree been buried six feet under?
Scams operating under the banner of investment/arbitrage/low-risk high-return typically have several classic tactics:
1. Jargon Bombardment
Using seemingly professional terms like cigar butt stocks, parent-subsidiary arbitrage, margin of safety, etc., to make people think he's knowledgeable and systematic. In reality, it can't withstand scrutiny and lacks concrete logic.
2. False Certainty
Packaging patience and low-position leverage as sure-win signals, avoiding the real uncertainty of the market, making people mistakenly believe they can replicate returns just by following him.
3. Clear Targeting
Targeting people who want to make steady money but don't understand deep value investing. Offering both the security of high dividends and hinting at excess returns through arbitrage and penetration return rates, appealing to the contradictory psychology of wanting both safety and high returns.
4. Follow-up Operations
Once you show interest, they will most likely guide you to:
- Pay to join a group/buy courses/buy indicators
- Download a specific app for copy trading
- Directly transfer money or let them operate on your behalf
If you have already suffered specific losses or are being induced to operate, it is recommended that you:
- Stop all transfers, sharing account details, scanning QR codes
- Keep chat records, transfer receipts, and the other party's account information
- Report to the National Anti-Fraud Center (96110) or the platform
The National Anti-Fraud Center reminds you: Please don't let scammers calculate your assets, penetrate your accounts, and finally use you as a margin of safety; don't be treated as a high-yield asset for arbitrage by scammers. Anyway, when asked to transfer money or hand over your account, calling the police won't hurt.

The "Snowball Brother" is back and starting a new account, but he's smarter this time and blocked me first; however, I'm no longer playing the role of an anti-fraud pioneer; the only reminder is, as soon as someone starts a group to charge tuition fees, or collects fees in various indirect ways, just report it to the police like this buddy did.
Some people release information just to lure the fish to bite. In the past, even I, your little brother, tried paying a few hundred bucks for a broken tin box; you don't need to care about asset rankings or return rankings either, if you guys want to see them, I'll send them for you to see, but since I have nothing to ask from you, naturally I don't need to prove anything to you.
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