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Crypto Currency is a digital currency, created and held electronically. It is an internet-based medium of exchange which uses cryptographic functions to conduct financial transactions. They are not printed, like other currencies – they are produced by people, and increasingly businesses, running computers all around the world, using software that solves mathematical problems.


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Our values and goals

About us

growwealth-invest.com is a private, legally registered online investment company with the goal of earning the greatest profit possible from Foreign exchange trading. If this sounds like your ideal situation, and if you are considering entering the online investment marketing, we strongly recommend giving us here at growwealth-invest.com a try; we are positive that you will be able to become a huge success in partnership with our company.

sign H.E DR TARIQ ABDULQADER Founder & CEO

Core Technology services

Our services


Investment Management

We serve high-net-worth individuals, and foundations, providing investment management services and offer investment products to achieve investment goals and financial well-being.

Investing and Lending

We provides a variety of services to bring investors together with projects and organizations in need of capital.

Transaction and Investment Banking

At growwealth-invest.com, we have been continuously transforming the traditional money management industry, in order to open the financial markets to everyone, everywhere.

At growwealth-invest.com firm

We precisely provide value in those areas that matter. We assist portfolio companies in developing and executing strategic growth, building the board and executive management team, exploring capitalization structures, pursuing growth mergers and acquisitions, and enhancing market presence.


Do not compare yourself with anyone in this world… if you do so, you are really insulting yourself.


How growwealth-invest.com generates profits

Exclusive benefits


  • Bitcoin mining and Trading Economic Assets

    To put it simply, trading is the buying and selling of financial assets. However, actually trading yourself isn’t quite as straightforward.

    There’s a lot to learn and we want to make things as simple as possible for you. That’s why we’ve created guides covering the most important things to know as a new trader. Don’t worry, you’ll find no overcomplicated jargon here. Just easy-to-understand explanations you’ll get your head around in no time.

    Basics of Bitcoin Mining

    There are three ways to acquire Bitcoin:

    • Purchase them on an exchange
    • Receive them in exchange for goods and services
    • Mine new Bitcoin

    The process of discovering new Bitcoin is described as mining because it resembles the process of mining for any other resource. With gold mining, miners search and dig through the earth in hopes of striking gold.

    With Bitcoin, miners attempt to find Bitcoin through solving complex mathematical problems. Blockchain is the technology that the cryptocurrency is built on. It is a ledger that is publicly distributed and records every Bitcoin transaction.

    It is literally a digital chain of blocks. Each block contains a group of Bitcoin transaction information. Miners add to the blockchain by using computer processing power to solve complex mathematical problems. Solving the problems will result in the block being successfully added to the chain. The miner who correctly solves the problem is awarded Bitcoin.

    The above forms the basis of the complex process of Bitcoin mining. It helps keep the payment network secure and trustworthy. The network is built on a peer-to-peer network, meaning that every single miner across the globe is contributing their computing power to maintain the network, confirm its transactions, and keep them secure.

  • Crude oil trading

    Crude oil trading offers excellent opportunities to profit in nearly all market conditions due to its unique standing within the world’s economic and political systems. Also, energy sector volatility has risen sharply in recent years, ensuring strong trends that can produce consistent returns for short-term swing trades and long-term timing strategies.

    Crude oil moves through perceptions of supply and demand, affected by worldwide output as well as global economic prosperity. Oversupply and shrinking demand encourage traders to sell crude oil markets, while rising demand and declining or flat production encourages traders to bid crude oil higher.

    Professional traders and hedgers dominate the energy futures markets, with industry players taking positions to offset physical exposure while hedge funds speculate on long- and short-term direction. Retail traders and investors exert less influence here than in more emotional markets, like precious metals or high beta growth stocks.

    Retail's influence rises when crude oil trends sharply, attracting capital from small players who are drawn into these markets by front-page headlines and table-pounding talking heads. The subsequent waves of greed and fear can intensify underlying trend momentum, contributing to historic climaxes and collapses that print exceptionally high volume.

  • Agricultural trades and investment

    Trade plays a crucial role in delivering food and clothing to consumers worldwide. It helps to provide greater choice in consumer goods, and has played a role in reducing food insecurity across the globe.

    Over the past decade, international agricultural and food markets have witnessed a number of changes, which have brought domestic and international markets closer together. Since 2000, trade in agro-food products has grown strongly – more strongly than in the preceding decade at close to 8% in real terms annually between 2001 and 2014 compared to 2% between 1990 and 2000 – as world markets responded to a more rules-based trading environment, falling tariffs, and reductions in trade-distorting producer support. Global agricultural production has also continued to increase, driven by rapid growth in a number of developing regions, in particular those of Asia and South America.

    But agro-food trade isn’t just increasing, it’s becoming ‘global’. The food and clothing that consumers find in their local stores are increasingly made from a wider range of products, produced in a wider range of locations across the globe. Among the changes seen in agro-food markets, there has been a significant increase in trade among emerging and developing countries, which are increasing in importance, both as suppliers and markets for agro-food products. Increasing trade has also been accompanied by deeper integration of the world’s food system. A growing share of agro-food trade is taking place in global value chains (GVCs) – agricultural and food processing value chains that are spread over several countries – linking agro-food sectors and other sectors of the economy from across the world.

    Trade and domestic support measures continue to constrain trade and further integration of agro-food markets

    While international agro-food markets have evolved, most countries continue to provide support and impose barriers through measures that distort trade and limit the benefits that international agro-food markets can deliver for consumers. These measures continue to have significant and negative effects on the welfare, resilience and food security of consumers and producers, as well as on agricultural sustainability, and also reduce agricultural and food trade volumes. And while an objective of many trade and domestic support policies is to increase food production, there is little evidence that they achieve this goal: global agricultural and food production would be higher if distorting support was removed.

    New and closer linkages between agricultural and food sectors, and between these and other sectors of the economy, mean that the impacts of trade and domestic support measures are transmitted more widely. Globally, around 24% of agro-food export value comes from imported inputs: industrial inputs (machinery and fertiliser) and services, as well agriculture and food. Trade policies that act as barriers to imports directly reduce the competitiveness of a country’s own agro-food exports by raising input costs.

    Other measures that affect the flow of agro-food products across borders can also reduce trade. Non-tariff measures (NTMs) – those related to laws, regulations and requirements such as sanitary and phyto-sanitary measures (SPS), technical barriers to trade (TBT) and customs procedures – can increase trade costs. Since agro-food products in GVCs may cross borders multiple times before reaching final consumers, those trade costs can have significant ripple effects and are most problematic for smaller businesses. While NTMs are in place to achieve legitimate regulatory goals, they can restrict trade depending on how they are designed and enforced.

    The greatest benefits from reform come when everyone acts together

    With regions and sectors becoming more globally connected, countries at all stages of development have a greater common interest in ensuring that international agro-food markets are free from distortions.

    The gains from reform are greatest when all countries – developed and developing – act together to reduce trade-related and domestic support. Developed countries benefit from lower prices for their consumers and production shifts towards more efficient sectors. For some countries, the gains largely come from reforming their own distorting policies.

    The welfare gains to developing countries are significantly larger when all countries reduce trade-related and domestic support. This is because the benefits from reform for developing countries are critically linked to the actions of other developing countries – reflecting the increase in ‘south-south’ trade.

    As the distorting effects of tariffs and domestic support are reduced, the potentially trade-reducing effects of NTMs will become more apparent. The trade impacts of such measures can be reduced by removing unnecessary costs that may arise from poor design or implementation.

    In sum, policies matter for the gains from agro-food trade

    At the OECD, we analyse the impacts of trade and agricultural policies to assist countries in making informed policy decisions that will help make agro-food trade work for all. Countries’ policies that restrict trade or unnecessarily increase trade costs harm their own domestic economies as well as their trading partners, by constraining the development of the agro-food sector.

    To enhance the gains from trade for agro-food sectors, countries should reduce their own distorting domestic support and their trade measures,such as tariffs. By increasing the cost of inputs, these policies reduce export competitiveness and can constrain a country’s ability to participate in agro-food GVCs.

    Well-designed regulations can help build trust and support trade, so countries should also ensure that NTMs, including SPS and TBT measures, are appropriate, transparent, and well-founded in science – all ways to ensure that they do not unnecessarily restrict trade.

    Finally, government policies have an important role in providing an enabling environment that can promote agricultural productivity growth and enhance the competitiveness of agro-food exports and participation in GVCs through appropriate investments in key areas such as transport infrastructure, education and research & development.

You should choose us

Learn From Experts

Anyone can invest in crypto currency,forex trade and mining investment and lots more but we advice you understand the markets and protect yourself from losing money. During our courses, you can discover the secrets of transacting crypto currency and forex trade to minimize investment risks.


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