Actually, this is incorrect. You can verify the facts yourself on official government websites:
SEC Verified: Look up CRD #339172 on the official SEC website (adviserinfo.sec.gov). It’s an active federal filing—you can't fake that on a .gov database.
Real Office: They are located at 1 Bryant Park (Bank of America Tower) in NYC, one of the most vetted buildings in the world.
14-Year History: NY State records show they’ve been around since 2012. The recent PR is just because of their new $3M funding and 2026 expansion.
Skepticism is good, but public federal records prove this isn't a scam. Check the SEC site for yourself.
It’s easy to call everything 'fake' when you don't look at the actual evidence. If you're going to claim a company is a scam, you should at least check the public record first.
First, your claim that they 'just write SEC' is a flat-out lie. Go to adviserinfo.sec.gov right now and search for Casder Institute of Wealth Inc. They are listed under CRD #339172 as an active, registered Exempt Reporting Adviser. You cannot 'fake' a federal SEC ID—it requires a physical HQ (which they have at 1 Bryant Park, NYC) and a legal paper trail that the government verifies.
Second, about the 'fake news'—major financial outlets like MarketWatch just covered the launch of their Phase 21 practical training course. This isn't a 'paid bot' post; it's a press release about a real educational curriculum. You can even find students discussing their experiences on Reddit in threads like this one.
https://www.marketwatch.com/press-release/casder-institute-of-wealth-casder-officially-launches-phase-21-trading-practical-training-course-99cd084fThird, about the 'fake founder'—Nathaniel Casder has been talking about these systems since long before the public launch. There’s even a video from an official source explaining exactly what they do: they are an educational institute focused on Vanguard AI, not a hedge fund asking for your capital. They are in a testing phase for their tech, and they’ve been very transparent about it.
https://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/news/binary-news-network/nathaniel-casder-leads-casder-institute-1350189259.htmlYou’re applying a 'crypto scam' playbook to a legit educational institute that has a verifiable SEC CRD number and actual media coverage. If you want to 'expose' someone, try starting with the facts instead of your feelings. The proof is right there on the government websites.
Before anyone takes this post at face value, ask yourself: Who is actually behind this account? Let’s be honest about what is happening here: This post is a funnel. You are using the name of a 'company' that only recently filed paperwork (October 2025) to pretend it has a decade of history. It’s a classic impersonation tactic: look like a 'legit' company just enough to lower people's guard, then pivot them to 'Tradeknows'—a platform with zero legal standing, no verifiable history, and no consumer protections.
To the person posting this: * What is your actual goal? If you are a 'wealth expert,' why are you hiding behind a social media profile instead of a licensed firm with a clear CRD/FINRA record?
Why the pivot? You start by talking about 'wealth' and 'AI,' but you end by pushing people to your own private website. This is the exact pattern of a 'Pig Butchering' scam: build trust, show fake gains on a platform you control, and then vanish when someone tries to withdraw.
Where is the proof? You claim SEC regulation, but 'Exempt Reporting' status is a loophole used by many offshore operations to claim legitimacy without undergoing the strict audits of a real broker-dealer.
To everyone else reading:
This user is trying to make a fake platform look like a 'secret opportunity.' Ask yourself why a 'multi-million dollar AI system' needs to be promoted by anonymous accounts on social media.
Watch for the red flags:
The 'Tradeknows' Trap: They will lead you to a site where they control the numbers you see. It looks like you're winning, but the money is already gone.
The Withdrawal Wall: They might let you take out $100 to prove it's 'real,' but try to withdraw $20,000 to $50,000 and suddenly you'll be hit with 'taxes,' 'verification fees,' or a frozen account.
The Scripted Defense: Watch the comments—any minute now, a bunch of accounts with no post history will show up to call me a 'hater' and say how much money they made with Tradeknows. That is a bot farm, not a community.
Unless you can provide a CRD (Central Registration Depository) number or a verifiable SEC filing, this remains a textbook high-risk operation. To everyone else: stay away from platforms that use social media 'experts' to bypass real financial regulations.