The Elite Trade Club 1% Scam: How Neoh Yong’s Trading Course Took My Money
People were praising his methods, sharing screenshots of their supposed profits, and claiming they had quit their jobs thanks to his mentorship. I was intrigued.
The course wasn’t cheap, $2,050 for lifetime access but according to Neoh Yong, that was just a “small investment” compared to the money I’d make after learning his elite strategies.
He even warned that only 1% of traders have access to this level of knowledge, which meant spots were limited. The pressure was on. “Are you ready to be part of the 1% or stay broke like the 99%?” he messaged me.
I bit the bait.
The Illusion of the Course After I paid, I was given access to a private Telegram group filled with other students. At first, it seemed active—people were chatting, asking questions, and sharing their trades. But something felt off.
Most of the members just kept posting vague messages like:
“Just made another $500 thanks to Neoh’s strategies!” “This course changed my life! Best investment ever!” Yet, whenever I asked for details, no one responded. It felt staged. The actual “course materials” were nothing but a few low-quality videos with generic trading advice I could’ve found for free on YouTube. There were no groundbreaking strategies, no live trading sessions, no insider tips—just recycled information.
When I confronted Neoh about it, he dismissed me: “Success depends on YOU. If you don’t make money, it’s because you didn’t follow the system.” Worse, he started pushing “VIP upgrades” for extra money. $500 for a ‘one-on-one’ session $1,000 for ‘advanced signals’ $5,000 for ‘personal coaching’
It was clear what this was, just another money grab to fund his lifestyle and expensive watches.
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