Forex trader and popular TikToker Raymond Omosa, alias Kenyan Prince, has hit out at fellow TikToker Tiffy Doll after she claimed to have Ksh590,000 in her M-Pesa wallet.
The flamboyant content creator dismissed the claim, accusing Tiffy Doll of living a fake lifestyle.
Taking to his Instagram stories just hours after Tiffy posted the video, Kenyan Prince wrote that her claim was unrealistic and technically impossible.
“Hamjaona M-Pesa ya Tiffy Doll inabeba Ksh590K, wueh!” he questioned.

He then added that whenever his M-Pesa hits Ksh500,000, the system notifies him that the wallet is full.
“M-Pesa yangu ikifika 500K inasema imejaa ama kuna special sim card???!!! MPESA CAN HOLD A MAXIMUM OF KES. 500,000,” he said.

Fake lifestyle
This comes barely a month after Kenyan Prince denied suggestions that he lives beyond his means.
In a video posted on June 24, 2025, he addressed his critics directly, asking why people were so determined to label him as fake.
“This life that you all claim I am faking is not fake at all; let us all begin faking and compete at it, then we shall see who outdoes the other,” he said in the video before showing off his luxurious cars, a Mercedes-Benz C-Class convertible and a Mercedes-Benz GLE.
He also zoomed in on the GLE’s custom number plate, saying it alone cost him Ksh1.5 million.
Kenyan Prince went on to challenge his online detractors to try faking life at the level he does.
“Zoom, zoom. If you believe faking life is easy, then let us come together and fake side by side, and let us see who can do it better than the other.
“Do not always imagine that this pretending is as simple as you make it sound,” he added, clearly unfazed by the criticism.
In a separate video shared on June 11, 2025, the TikToker boldly claimed that his net worth had reached $2 million (about Ksh260 million), thanks to his journey in forex trading.
When asked by a viewer during a livestream to reveal his total net worth, he said without hesitation, “My net worth is around 2 million dollars, which I have made in trading.”
However, he also acknowledged that the path to success had not been smooth. He admitted to having lost over Ksh12 million in trading but said the profits far outweighed the losses.
“I have made more than I have lost. Sometimes I lose even 100K USD; it is normal,” he said.
He also advised fans not to think of forex as an easy way to get rich.
“You need real capital to trade,” he said, warning that most beginners were only risking small amounts that wouldn’t generate meaningful returns. “Most beginners are using peanuts,” he added.