From zero to confident — risk management, technical analysis, regulator literacy, trader psychology.
Offshore brokers are not automatically unable to withdraw, but users should test small and keep evidence.
A broker is usually not your tax authority; tax payment before withdrawal is a major red flag.
The core risk of 1000:1 leverage is extremely short liquidation distance. Beginners should not treat it as an advantage.
Crypto CFDs may quote 24/7, but weekend liquidity, pricing source, liquidation and support can differ.
Do not argue first. Build evidence, stop sending more money, create a timeline, then complain through payment and regulator routes.
Spot crypto means owning an asset. Crypto CFD means trading a price contract with leverage, liquidation and platform pricing rules.
The danger of 500:1 and 1000:1 is that a tiny adverse move can destroy the account.
Turn withdrawal disputes, slippage disputes, frozen accounts and support promises into an evidence pack regulators can read.
When a withdrawal is delayed, stop adding funds first, then organize evidence, support replies and complaint routes.
Slippage does not always mean a bad broker, but frequent one-sided slippage, off-news rejections and missing records are warnings.
Stable trading starts with controlling maximum loss per trade, not chasing win rate or high leverage.
Do not only chase support. Preserve evidence, build a timeline, verify the entity and choose the complaint path.
Higher leverage means less room for error. 1000:1 is not a feature; it accelerates liquidation.
30 trades/day ≠ effort. 3 carefully picked trades/day = real profit path.
Risk no more than 2% of equity per trade — this single rule matters more than every indicator combined.