In-Depth Review: 69 FX Telegram Channel - A Masterclass in Deception
- Anna Taimes
- 12 minutes ago
- 3 min read
This review critically examines the "69 FX" Telegram channel. Upon deep research and backtesting of their signals, we have determined that this channel is no real educational/signal provider, but an advance scheme to entice traders with fake profitability and funnel them into paid services. Manipulative strategies are used on the channel to give an impression of being successful while concealing a poor real performance.

Channel Overview
Telegram Channel Link - https://t.me/maoyifx
Feature | Details |
Channel Name | 69 FX |
Operation Since | February 16, 2024 |
Subscribers | 48,578 (Largely Inactive/Fake) |
Activity Level | Very High (25+ posts/day) |
Avg. Views/Post | ~1,700 (Indicating Fake Subscribers) |
Main Market | Gold (XAU/USD) |
Trading Style | Scalping |
Free Signals/Day | 4-5 |
Claimed Win Rate | Not Explicitly Stated (Falsely Implied as High) |
Actual Win Rate (Backtested) | 19% |
Free Education | No |
Paid Services | VIP Channel |
Real Person/Identity | No |
Unraveling the Trickery: How the Scam Works
At first glance, the channel seems professional and busy, yet upon closer examination, it becomes obvious that it's a masterfully crafted con.
1. Illusion of Activity and Popularity
With 48,000+ subscribers and yet only ~1,700 views per piece, it becomes clear that by far the majority of the audience of this channel consists of fake or bot accounts. This is a familiar technique of generating a false impression of credibility and popularity in hopes of forcing new arrivals to believe that they've stumbled upon a successful group.
2. Manipulative Signal Structure and False Profit Claims
The very gist of the scam consists in the composition of its free signals and result reporting. The channel applies entry zones and excessive partial closing in a systematic manipulation of its track record.
One common signal format is shown below:
gold sell zone✅: 3974-3977
stop loss : 3980
take profit 1 : 3965
take profit 2 : open
This is how manipulation works:
The "Zone" Gambit: By introducing an entry zone (e.g., 3974-3977), the signal provider has a 3-pip interval in which to create a successful "entry." Any surge that happens thereafter that touches any level in this zone gets established as a win, even if the trade doesn't make it to the initial Take Profit (TP1) level.
Partial Close Trick: The channel frequently references "partial profits" taken at least once—4, 5, or even 6 times prior to TP1 kicking in. They close off part of a trade after a minimal 10-pip shift, referring to it as a profit.
Why it is misleading:
This system assures you of a high number of "winning" updates in their feed, a stream of continuous green checkmarks and profit screenshots. But mathematically, these "partial profits" amount to nothing in comparison to the risk outlined by the Stop Loss. A string of 5-pip "wins" could get undone with a loss of 30 pips, which coincidentally has a very poor risk-to-reward ratio.

3. Catastrophically Low Real Win Rate
In our own independent backtesting of all the free signals during the previous six months, we have discovered an astounding true win rate of only 19%. That means that only 19% of the trades actually made it to the announced TP1 level. Their other 81% of trades lost money had the signal been taken to the letter without the manipulative partial-close tale of the channel.
4. The Ultimate Objective: Selling the VIP Experience
The continuous flow of fake profit hype and "client testimonials" only has one purpose: to establish FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) and make the subscribers pay them to switch to their VIP pay channel. They make you think that while the "free" signals are "decent," where the "real" money is to be had is in the VIP group. Truthfully, paying them only results in continued losses, since the very methodology in itself is manipulative and unethical.
Conclusion: Stay Far Away
69 FX is no signal service; it's a marketing funnel predicated on deceit. The channel deploys phony subscribers, manipulative signal pattern, and statistically fraudulent reporting to create an illusion of profitability. In reality, the real strategy, if followed objectively, has a failure rate of more than 80%. Lack of a genuine person in the background of the channel, of lectures and videos on education, and single-pointed focus on marketing paid channels all go to confirm its fraudulent nature.
0/10 TRUST SCORE
RATING: AVOID. Don't risk your money on these alerts. Traders who wish to learn should seek out clear instructors with documented, real-time performance and an emphasis on risk control, not fantasy.