Criminal Christopher Angus Fakes IG Data
Video Background
Investment guru, psychopath, and criminal fraud Christopher Angus is kicking off a confidence series, providing free video tutorials on how to defraud investors. This nineteenth video is 8:46 & was shared on November 21, 2016. The criminal who shot these videos delivered over a 99% investment loss, as he simply stole the money and integrated it into other investment scams abroad.
https://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/news/18693916.conman-christopher-angus-pay-...
The UK Crown Police never followed the money trail.
Christopher Angus is associated with Stella Huh and Timothy Barton, who stand trial in the United States on November 2, 2026.
http://www.seobook.com/stella-huh/criminal-case-docket-sheet%204-22-2026-(22-cr-00352).pdf
Video Highlights
- chart date shows November 21 of 2016 near bottom.
- the same date appears at the top right of the browser and the words "Christopher Angus iMac"
- the deal.ig.com/platform/index.html URL contains the variable ?201611161220 which I believe means it was 12:20 on November 16 of 2016
- the alleged account shows balance of 4,487,582 GBP (either this account was real at the time or he doctored not just the static images he sent me but also videos - yet another indication of intent to defraud)
- it also shows S&P 500 at 2187 to 2188. on that date the s&p 500 traded specifically in that range. finance.yahoo.com/quote/%5EGSPC/history?period1=1479456000&period2=1479801600&interval=1d&filter=history&frequency=1d low: 2,186.43 & high: 2,198.70
- the November 21, 2016 date is also shown via the interactive chart scroll over at 1 minute and 5 seconds
- this video was created LONG AFTER Chris took all the deposits from me, indicating all the IG stuff he ever showed me was absolute constructed fraud from the onset and Chris did indeed do what he "joked" about on Skype - he had converted my investment to Bitcoin and then laundered it through Stella Huh across to the Wall Cos controlled by Timothy Barton.
A version of this video is available for download at
https://www.dropbox.com/s/trxqkc39j76iy9d/algovid2.mp4?dl=0
Video Transcript
00:00 Christopher Angus: Hello, Mr. A, just a very quick video, just to follow up on the one from Friday, if you took the time to watch that. If not, well, maybe you won't watch this one either, but let's have a go anyway. So I wanted to show you what it actually looks like instead of just like looking at some numbers flashing up and down, but on a chart. And you'll see why you need to actually look at the order book to see when the market turns. But anyway, let me just change this to a candlestick chart, because you can't really see it with the line, that's if you look at charts, which when I was trained, I was trained not to look at charts, because they can be very misleading. But let me just zoom out a bit here and just show you what it looks like.
00:58 Christopher Angus: If you remember on Friday, the volume came down, the market came down, paused, went down a couple of more ticks, and then it sprung back up. And that's exactly what I'm going to show you here. So this is a classic example of a pullback move. Now, you can see there's actually been quite a few. If I was making one tick, I could have done it there, there, there. But let's just look at the most extreme example, which is here. So remember the padding. As the market starts to come down, you'll see there's a huge spike in volume. And this is generally selling volume. So you'll see a big, big spike in volume, or you'll see a building amounts of volume, and that will be when the market can't break through the next level. It can't actually break down, and you'll see a big surge of selling.
01:55 Christopher Angus: And then what will happen is... I'll just get off there... The market will then pause, which is exactly... Look, it's come down two ticks. This looks like exactly what happened on Friday, but this is today. It comes down, flutters around, and then starts to go back up. And then the opposite is true in reverse. You can see what happened here about like a quarter passed. There was a huge volume of buying, I mean, it's not a huge, because it has moved like two points, but it looks like a big move. So the market's moved up a couple of points. And then the market stalled, it stalled in about... That's a one... Basically one or two tick range. And then it started to come off again. And that's how it looks. Let me just see if I can find one more example in hours from last week. So Friday... God, I hate these charts so much. Alright, this is the open, just ignore that, because it's always really, really noisy.
03:21 Christopher Angus: But this one would have worked here. You can see there's has just been a sell-off. Big spike down, hovers around, and then it comes back up one tick. It's not the greatest example, but that would have worked. And then if we go out to the next one here, because the volume has to really be two or three times higher than the kind of the average volume. So you're looking for really big bursts of volume. Also, the market has to have a direction. So if it's going sideways and then you have a burst of volume, you can't touch it. If it's moving down and there's a burst of volume, then you can touch it. If it's moving up, and there's a burst of volume, then you can touch it. And also you need to see a falling... An amount of falling volume, so you see a big spike volume, and then you see falling volumes.
04:13 Christopher Angus: So, it goes high and then it goes low, and if the market is stalled there for about 30 seconds, then you can usually take the trade. So this first one here, you couldn't, because you need to see a falling volume. So this one here would be the first time we could have taken it. So here we are. So the market's been moving down, sharp move down, two-volume, high spikes. Can't make a lower low. Okay, can't break down to the next level. Falling volume... Trade here, wait... That would have even a long trade there, but... What's that, about 5, 10 minutes. But you see, it just doesn't break lower. Occasionally you do get stopped out, but if you get stopped out for two or three ticks maybe, and you're doing 7, 8, 9, 10 of these a day, it's fine. Mine is through commissions.
05:04 Christopher Angus: I worked out that I'd probably make... If you make, say, a 1000 pounds in gross profit, you probably would have made 2000 pounds throughout the course of the day. Because capital losses and then your commissions, but that's just roughly half. But you know, that doesn't matter. High-frequency trading guys lose 50, 47% of the time, so that's another example. And you can see another one here. Okay, there's another high burst of volume that's around two times that the number average of the last... It's a really... This that stands out tremendously. And then there's falling volume. So then you can see the next buy, there's a lower volume and a pause. And then you would have sold it, you would have sold it there and then picked up once it hit there. And the goal is... Really is to automate that and then stream it across all the different markets, like you can see here.
06:13 Christopher Angus: The S&P, Wall Street is the Dow. The tick 100 is the Nasdaq. Probably won't work on the Russell, but it will work on the Dax. Probably won't work that well on Forex, but there's lots and lots of markets here. The treasury markets, which are really, really liquid and have the same kind of behavior. And the goal is to really get 10 or 20 different instruments running at the same time. Run to buy and sell like 100, 200, 330 lots at a time, depending on the market and pick up three or 4000 to trade. Multiply that out by, let's call it five trades a day, that's 15 grand, then multiply that out again by 10 different instruments, that's like a 150,000, that's like the top line, but that's what I was saying. And... Like really consistent churn of 20 files a day. This is really what I'm excited about, and what I'm working towards.
07:16 Christopher Angus: But I wanted to follow up the video on Friday, with what I said or showed you with the numbers and stuff because it's very really hard to see if you don't sit there. And you're going to look at it for five years and you can't read the order volume properly... That's what I sort of trying to point it out, but I wanted to kind of show you in reality what... People puking out looks like. The parading, the reversal, and it's pretty straightforward. Now, one thing I'll finish off with is, remember I said that I think you need the order book. And that is if the order book... The candle chart doesn't really show you what's on the order book, it only shows you what's happened.
08:05 Christopher Angus: So if you see the order books, like really, really thin on your side, so say you're trying to buy it, but you see it's like really, really thin, the candle chart would still show you the same thing, but it doesn't show you that the order book's really weak. So if you don't have the order book, you'll come in and buy this, and then just watch the thing collapse away from you, and then you'll be... And then you'll be stopped out. And without actually seeing what's going on in the order book, it's very, very hard to tell what's going on and whether the move is a really a safe move to make. And that's it, for now. So, hope you enjoy the video, and I'll catch you later. Bye for now.
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