X user posts 95% trading claim

- On May 22, 2026, X user @GajianCrypto posted a Bitcoin Pizza Day message promoting forex and crypto trading signals with screenshots. - The post’s central sales claim was “95% accuracy” for signals tied to BTCUSD and XAUUSD, two heavily traded crypto and gold markets. - Readers can still find the post on X under @GajianCrypto, where the account shared the message and screenshots.

An X account identified as @GajianCrypto posted on May 22, 2026 about Bitcoin Pizza Day while promoting trading signals for BTCUSD and XAUUSD, according to the post referenced in the source briefings. The message paired the holiday-themed crypto reference with screenshots and a claim that its signals had “95% accuracy.” The account presented the post as a trading promotion rather than a market update, based on the briefing and linked X post. The post was one of several finance-related social media items flagged in the briefing for May 22. ### What exactly did the account claim? The May 22 post promoted forex and crypto signals tied to BTCUSD and XAUUSD and said the signals had “95% accuracy,” according to the social briefing and the linked X item in the card materials. BTCUSD is the trading pair for bitcoin priced in U.S. dollars, while XAUUSD is the standard symbol for gold priced in U.S. dollars. The screenshots included in the post were presented as trading evidence in support of the sales pitch, the briefing said. (x.com) A Telegram channel tied to the GajianCrypto name also exists online and describes itself as a crypto-focused tutorial and community platform, providing some public trace of the branding used in the X post. Search results surfaced a Telegram channel labeled “Gajian Crypto Earn,” though the available web capture did not independently verify the specific May 22 X post text beyond the briefing and linked post reference. (x.com) ### Why does a “95% accuracy” line stand out? The Federal Trade Commission says investment scams often claim people will make “lots of money” or “big returns” from cryptocurrency or other hot opportunities. The FTC also says no one can guarantee a specific return on an investment, and that anyone promising guaranteed returns at low or no risk is a scammer. While the @GajianCrypto post, as described in the briefing, used an “accuracy” claim rather than an explicit guarantee of profit, U.S. regulators treat unusually strong performance promises as a key warning sign for investors. (t.me) The Securities and Exchange Commission has separately warned that promises of “guaranteed” returns and unsolicited online pitches can be signs of fraud. The SEC says every investment entails risk, and the CFTC says many crypto and forex frauds begin on social media or messaging apps. ### Why are BTCUSD and XAUUSD often used in these pitches? (consumer.ftc.gov) BTCUSD and XAUUSD are two of the most recognizable speculative trading symbols online, one tied to bitcoin and the other to gold. The CFTC says fraud involving crypto or forex trading websites often starts when someone on social media or a messaging app directs users toward a trading offer, a signal service, or a platform they do not know. That warning is particularly relevant when a post combines popular trading pairs, screenshots and a headline performance number. (sec.gov) The CFTC also says users should be cautious when promoters use social platforms to advertise trading systems or “signals” that tell people when to buy and sell. The agency’s investor materials list social-media-driven signal offers among the patterns consumers should examine closely before sending money or signing up. (cftc.gov) ### What can a reader actually verify from the public record? The source materials verify that an X post attributed to @GajianCrypto was shared on May 22, 2026 and described as celebrating Bitcoin Pizza Day while advertising signals with a “95% accuracy” claim. The same materials say the post referenced BTCUSD and XAUUSD and included screenshots. Because the X page did not render usable text in the web tool, this report relies on the source briefing and linked post reference for the wording and date. (cftc.gov) The next concrete step for readers is to review the post directly on X and compare any performance claim against regulator guidance from the FTC, SEC and CFTC before responding to any signal offer or moving a conversation to Telegram or another messaging app. (consumer.ftc.gov) (x.com)

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