Review of the “Hifaz’s Trading Club” Telegram Channel: Gold Signal Scam Uncovered
- Anna Taimes

- 10 hours ago
- 3 min read
The rise of free trading signal channels on the Telegram platform creates a minefield for novice traders. Although trading signal channels are useful for educating traders, many are created with the sole purpose of luring traders into their paid services with empty promises. "Hifaz’s Trading Club" is one trading signal channel that clearly fits into the empty promise category. Although this channel looks professional and very active, an examination of its trading signal system and performance will reveal that this channel is one that relies on deception and will result in its followers losing funds.

Channel Overview:
Telegram Channel Link - https://t.me/hifazstradingclub
Metric | Details |
Channel Name | Hifaz’s Trading Club |
Launch Date | 24 October 2025 |
Subscribers | ~8,183 |
Activity | Very High (20+ posts/day) |
Avg. Views/Post | ~1,300 |
Primary Market | Gold (XAUUSD) |
Trading Style | Scalping (New York Session) |
Free Signals/Day | ~2 on average |
Claimed Win Rate | Not publicly stated |
Backtested Win Rate | 33% (Last 6 months) |
Free Education | No |
Paid Service | Premium Channel Promotion |
The Illusion of Activity and Transparency
On the face value, it looks like a genuine channel. It is very active; it has a medium-sized audience (as can be judged by the view counts) who seem to be actively watching it. The principal contents of the channel involve free gold signals, trade information, results, and offers for its paid VIP members. This is a very clever front.
The Signal Structure: Designed to Fail
The inadequacy of "Hifaz’s Trading Club" is in its trading signals’ structurally incorrect design. We will analyze a standard example of such a signal:
Example Signal:
Buy Gold High Risk
4506-4500
Sl 4495
Tp1: 4509
Tp2: 4514
This is another free gold signal channel on Telegram that is always deceiving people about their gold trading signals. They use testimonials as proof of their profitability.
Here are the actual back-testing results that we obtained.
First, check their signal format: every free signal contains a very vague statement: “High Risk” or “Low Risk”. We have not found any clue or instruction in the group to understand what does it exactly mean.
Being an entry, it signals the use of entry zones. This, in most cases, measures 60-70 pips wide. However, TP1 in the above trade is only 30 pips, implying that the size of the entry zone is on average twice the size of TP1. The stop loss of the trade in the above example is 110 pips.
From the reward to risk analysis point of view, these signals are very bad. Having a low winning rate of 33% on average, this group’s performance is negative. Most of the trades are being closed with a loss and small winners; you will never be profitable following these signals.
These fake testimonials serve to confirm the effectiveness of the signals as well as to lure people to become subscribers to the VIP group. It is a profit-gaining illusion.
Analysis of the Flaws:
Terrible Risk/Reward: The signal example has a Stop Loss (110 pips) which is many times larger than the first Take Profit (30 pips). For a strategy to have a positive expectancy when it wins 33% of its trades, its winners must be much bigger on average than its losers. In this case, it’s just the opposite.
Vague “Risk” Labels: Phrases such as “High Risk” are not defined, providing little help in terms of position size determination or trade management.
Large Entry Zones: A scalping system entry zone that is "60-70 pips" is illogical and imprecise, and as such, duplication is impossible.
Mathematical Guaranteed Losses: Because the win probability is 33% and the risk/reward ratio is very much on the side of larger losses, the system has a negative mathematical expectation. Its use guarantees a depletion of capital.

The Scam Funnel: From Free Signals to Paid VIP
The aim of such loser-free signals will now be understood. They act as bait. The program employs fake testimonies for the creation of an impression of staggering gains in the VIP members' group. The last thing the loser-free signals' hungry followers would want would be to pay for the 'genuine' winning signals. The VIP bot's absence can be an indication of the use of less transparent payment systems.
Conclusion
“Hifaz’s Trading Club” is not a credible source to learn trading or receive trading signals. It is a scam channel using:
A mathematically losing signal strategy for its free content.
Intentionally deceptive signal formatting with suboptimal risk-reward.
Fake testimonials for creating success.
A funnel intended for turning frustrated free subscribers into paid VIP subscribers.
0/10 TRUST SCORE
This is a channel to avoid completely. Anyone following this channel’s free trade signals will end up losing cash. The profits will remain the owner’s benefit, derived from charging subscriptions, not from making profits in the gold market.


