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Behind Every Fake Profit Screenshot: The Math That Reveals the Truth
You’ve probably seen them dozens of times scrolling through trading communities. A jaw-dropping screenshot showing a $4,557 gain from just $9.21 in margin. The comments are flooded with “teach me,” and the poster’s follower count mysteriously spikes. But here’s what most people don’t realize: these fake profit screenshots are meticulously crafted lies, designed to exploit your FOMO and sell you the next “secret signal service.”
The problem isn’t that people post them—it’s that most traders don’t know how to verify them. They assume the numbers must be real because the math looks consistent. That’s exactly the trap. Let me show you how to spot the deception and protect yourself.
Why These Misleading Screenshots Keep Spreading
The psychology is simple and brutal. Someone posts an outrageous gain, and suddenly three things happen:
First, beginners think it’s possible (because they don’t understand the math). Second, they become willing students, eager to buy a course or join a discord. Third, the poster builds credibility, which they monetize. The cycle continues.
What makes these schemes particularly dangerous is that they exploit a gap in knowledge. Most people understand percentages and basic arithmetic, but they don’t understand how leverage, position sizing, and PNL calculations actually work in derivatives trading. The fraudsters know this.
The Real Calculation: Breaking Down How They Fake the Numbers
Let’s examine an actual fake profit screenshot that’s been circulating. On the surface, it claims a +49,470% return on equity (ROE) with $4,557 in profit from just $9.21 in initial margin. Here’s what the screenshot shows:
Position Details:
Now, let’s verify this using actual futures trading math. Follow along carefully, because this is where the fraud unravels.
Step 1: Calculate the Actual Number of Coins
In futures trading, you need to know how many coins you actually own at the entry price. This is calculated as:
Size in Coins = Position Size ÷ Entry Price Size in Coins = $465.43 ÷ $0.1668390 Size in Coins = 2,790 BAS tokens
Step 2: Calculate the Real Profit
For a SHORT position, profit is made when the price goes down. The actual PNL formula is:
Real PNL = (Entry Price - Mark Price) × Number of Coins Real PNL = ($0.1668390 - $0.0153000) × 2,790 Real PNL = $0.1515390 × 2,790 Real PNL = $422.79
There’s your smoking gun. The claimed profit was $4,557.71, but the actual profit based on the position size and prices shown is only $422.79. That’s a lie by a factor of 10.
The fraudsters didn’t stop there. They also faked the ROE calculation to make it seem consistent with the claimed profit. They used the formula: ROE = PNL ÷ Margin, and fed it fake numbers to arrive at 49,470%. But when you use the real PNL, the actual ROE is:
Real ROE = $422.79 ÷ $9.21 = 4,591.86%
Still impressive, but nowhere near the 49,470% they claimed. More importantly, it’s mathematically impossible to achieve the numbers they showed with the position they posted.
How to Verify Before You Invest: A Step-by-Step Guide
This is your defense. Every time someone shows you a trading screenshot claiming insane returns, run through this checklist:
1. Verify the Position Size Math Take the position value and divide it by the entry price. Does it match the number of coins claimed? If not, walk away.
2. Recalculate the Profit Independently Use the entry price, mark price, and the actual number of coins to calculate PNL yourself. Compare it to what they claim. If they don’t match, it’s fake.
3. Check the ROE Against Your Calculation If ROE = PNL ÷ Margin, verify that the claimed ROE actually matches their claimed numbers. Inconsistencies reveal the lies.
4. Look for Red Flags in the Numbers Suspiciously round numbers, positions that seem too perfectly sized, or screenshots that conveniently cut off liquidation price data are all warning signs.
5. Ask Yourself: Who Benefits? If someone is posting this screenshot, what are they selling? A course? Signals? Access to a group? Their incentive structure is fundamentally misaligned with your success.
Current market data for the coins mentioned shows realistic prices: BAS is trading at $0.01, HANA at $0.04, and COAI at $0.31. None of these are experiencing the kind of explosive moves that would justify the fake screenshots circulating about them.
The Takeaway: Protecting Yourself from Trading Fraud
This is the most important lesson you’ll take away: Do Your Own Math (DYOM). Don’t just look at a screenshot and assume it’s real because the person posting it seems confident. Don’t assume because the numbers appear internally consistent that they’re accurate.
Fake profit screenshots are a form of financial fraud dressed up as social proof. They prey on hope, FOMO, and the gap between what beginners think is possible and what’s actually possible with leverage.
The traders who really make money don’t need to post fake screenshots to prove it. They don’t need to sell you a $199 course. They’re quietly building wealth while the fraudsters are building follower counts.
Your job is simple: stay skeptical, verify the math, and understand that if something sounds too good to be true in trading, it almost always is. The moment you develop the habit of checking the numbers yourself, you become immune to these schemes. That’s your real edge.