Do you know what 0.5% daily compounded actually means?
The Math Doesn’t Lie — It Screams
Let’s say TrexBic.com promises just 0.5% per day. Sounds harmless, right? ‘Just a little extra.’ But compounding doesn’t care about your feelings. It multiplies — every single day.
Start with $1,000.
Day 1: $1,000 × 1.005 = $1,005
Day 2: $1,005 × 1.005 = $1,010.03
…
After 365 days? You’d have $6,168.
That’s a 517% annual return.
Warren Buffett’s lifetime average is ~20% per year. The S&P 500 averages ~10%. Even Renaissance Technologies — the most successful quant fund in history — rarely cracks 30% net after fees over full market cycles.
So ask yourself: if TrexBic.com can generate 517% annually — reliably, risk-free, with no regulatory oversight, no audited balance sheet, no real trading infrastructure — why are they begging for your $100 deposit instead of quietly turning $1 million into $6.1 million in one year and walking away rich?
No Exchange. No Withdrawals. No Explanation.
TrexBic.com isn’t even pretending to be a real exchange. There’s no order book. No liquidity providers. No API integration with Binance or Bybit. No proof of cold wallet addresses. Just a flashy front-end that looks like a trading dashboard — and a withdrawal button that never works.
You’ll see ‘profits’ ticking up in real time. You’ll get fake trade confirmations. You might even get a ‘verified’ support chat where someone types back in broken English: ‘Withdrawal processing. Please wait 24–48 hours.’
But it never comes.
Because there’s nothing to withdraw. Your money didn’t go into a vault. It went into a bank account registered to a shell company in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines — and then vanished.
Ray Dalio Was Right — And You’re Ignoring Him
‘The biggest mistake investors make is to believe that what happened in the recent past is likely to persist.’ — Ray Dalio

That fake 0.5% daily gain you saw on your dashboard? It’s not performance. It’s theater. A looped animation. A spreadsheet cell updating itself every 3 seconds. It has zero connection to actual markets, real assets, or even real math beyond the UI layer.
You’re not watching returns. You’re watching a loading screen dressed as success.
Here’s What $1,000 Actually Bought You
Not profit. Not security. Not access to a financial tool.
It bought you:
- A false sense of control (you ‘chose’ to invest),
- A dopamine hit from fake green numbers,
- And — eventually — the slow dawning horror when the ‘processing fee’ email arrives, then the ‘KYC verification failure’, then silence.
Real exchanges don’t lock withdrawals behind ‘security audits’ that last 17 business days. Real exchanges don’t require you to pay a ‘network upgrade fee’ to access your own funds. Real exchanges don’t use domains registered 3 weeks ago (check WHOIS — trexbic.com was created March 2026).
This isn’t a glitch. It’s design.
If TrexBic.com were real, it would be the most profitable financial entity in human history — and it would be regulated, scrutinized, and featured on Bloomberg every morning. Instead, it’s hiding behind a .com domain, a stock-photo ‘team’ page, and a promise that violates arithmetic, economics, and common sense.
You didn’t lose money to bad luck. You lost it to a lie wrapped in compound interest syntax.
Stop refreshing the dashboard. Stop messaging ‘support’. Stop hoping the next deposit will unlock the last one.
Walk away. Block the site. Tell one friend — especially the one who just DM’d you a screenshot of their ‘$2,400 profit’.
Expose scammer



















