FAKE E-MAIL WARNING (Fraud)

Tens of thousands of "spoof" e-mails (spam) have been sent out by fraudsters advising recipients to purchase shares in little known companies. In most, if not all cases these e-mails do not come from the people or companies shown in the return address. The addresses have simply been stolen.

Unfortunately one of those stolen was "tradingskills.plus.com" which is a legitimate address of this organisation. Very often the e-mail will show the sender as a random series of letters before our root address (qxtyzp@tradingskills.plus.com). Other times the sender might be Olivia Bates [jugfz@tradingskills.plus.com]

None of these addresses before the @ symbol are connected with TradingSkills. If you receive any personal e-mail from TradingSkills, and the person sending the mail is not Malcolm Blazey, then the e-mail is a fake. Please also see our additional comments below regarding unsolicited mail.

In all of these cases TradingSkills has had nothing to do with the e-mails. Our computers are virus checked on a very regular basis and our IP address is clean and not listed as a "spammer". Many of these fake e-mails originate in the U.S. (we are U.K. based) but are washed through Taiwan and Korea.

Please note.

TradingSkills.Com does not promote or invite anybody to buy or invest in securities at any time. We are solely in the business of training investors and traders to maximise their profits in financial instruments of their own choosing (including commodity futures).

If you receive any e-mail promoting specific securities that appears to come from TradingSkills (whether it appears to be from our .Com, .co.uk or .plus.com addresses) then it is a fake. As it is the policy of TradingSkills not to contact anyone unless it is in reply to an enquiry, then any unsolicited e-mail you receive from us should also be treated as a potential fake.