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17 Years Old Made $92 Million In A Year Trading Penny Stocks !


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kkr.gifcinemalo evado rape chesadani rechipoyi nuvvu chesthava

 


Mahesh+babu+GIF.gif

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May b Not.. No Frauding Akkada.. sa.gif

 

newyork times paper inko 1 yr regular ga follow avvu..byta padthad

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yankama diii Indian Media entaaa kii digajarindi antey.... vadu chesindi 72M itey headlines emooo 92 matter emoo 72 naaa.... and nenu neee news chadivaa but edoo fake anukunaa... 21 min undalii kadaa account ki...

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enduku vaaya ilaantivi eesi db prajalani rechagodatharu

sa.gif

 

rechagodedhi emi vundhi sona ... motivation laga tesukoo vochu kadhaa ..

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rechagodedhi emi vundhi sona ... motivation laga tesukoo vochu kadhaa ..

haha....nenu edo joke ga annanu le baa......ayina manam chepthe maatram prajalu vintaara endi. 

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haha....nenu edo joke ga annanu le baa......ayina manam chepthe maatram prajalu vintaara endi. 

bemmiRTlaugh.gif?1403645933

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UPDATE:

 

Whiz kid stock picker: I didn't actually make $72M trading 1 Hour AgoCNBC.com
 
 
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Source: Mohammed Islam via Linkedin
Mohammed Islam, a 17 year old high school student and stock trader, who was reported to have made a huge windfall trading on his lunch breaks.

The improbable story making the rounds today of the 17-year old whiz kid of Wall Street who is rumored to have made $72 million trading the markets, while still in high school, is being widely disputed.

Mohammed Islam, the alleged teenaged prodigy, said he had no idea where that dollar figure came from and that it's not accurate.

Instead the figure is believed to be a few million dollars, but Mr. Islam declined to be more specific.

"The attention is not what we expected – we never wanted the hype. This was about friends trying to make something exciting together, " Mr. Islam said in an exclusive CNBC interview.

Mr. Islam and one of his colleagues were scheduled to appear on CNBC's "Halftime Report" following the publication of a New York Magazine profile. The ensuing publicity however, and pre-interview by CNBC, prompted them to reconsider.

"We expected a regular article about what we hope to do" in our career, he said. "The way we were portrayed is not who we are."

 

 

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/...stack:topnews:5

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biscuit newss aaa idi       lol........

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