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ponzi scheme | Zikoko!
  • How Do People Fall for Ponzi Schemes? Ask These 7 Nigerians

    How Do People Fall for Ponzi Schemes? Ask These 7 Nigerians

    Ponzi schemes pop up every few years in Nigeria before disappearing again with billions of naira in people’s funds. We spoke to seven Nigerians about the times they fell victim to these schemes.

    Joshua. 25

    “I thought if it had been paying my friend for so long, it had to be be legit somehow”

    I lost my job in 2020 due to the COVID lockdown and started looking for other means of making money. A friend of mine had been investing with this forex investment scheme for about six months, and he was being paid 20% every month. He’d tried to get me into it, but I was skeptical. 

    After I lost my job, I needed money to come in from somewhere. I already had about ₦3 million saved up, so I thought to take some risk with the investment scheme my friend was into. I was still skeptical, but I thought if it had been paying him for so long, it must be legit somehow. So, I put ₦1 million into the scheme in October 2020 and I was paid a ₦200,000 return in November. 

    The following month, they started having issues with paying out. They said the markets were down, but they had enough reserves to keep up with payments. LMAO. Nobody saw anything. After two months of nothing, people went to the head office of the firm to protest, and it was empty. That’s when everyone got to know what had happened. We’d been scammed. 

    We eventually saw videos of the main guy who was the face of the business on the internet. Man was on vacation. I eventually got a much better job in March 2022, so I recovered.

    Dapo, 22

    “I saw my friend make ₦104,000 within two weeks after investing only ₦13,000. At this point, the pressure started getting wesser”

    There was a stupid Ponzi scheme in my school one time that everyone knew was a scam but we somehow rationalised it as “investment”. It was called Loom. 

    Loom had the structure of a bunch of concentric circles, just like this.

    The whole point was that there’s a race to the center of the circle, and how fast you moved depended on how many new people you signed up. These new people would “invest” some money, and that funded the exit of older members. Once the outermost circle gets filled with eight people, the person at the center cashes out and leaves the loom so others can move up. These schemes were peer-to-peer and ran on Whatsapp groups.

    When I first heard of it, I thought it was clearly stupid. But it quickly became popular in my school as people were investing as little as ₦13,000 to cash out ₦104,000 in the space of a few weeks. The pressure was hot. My friend changed his phone within a week of joining the scheme, and at that point I just thought, “Well, it’s just ₦13,000. Let me do it too.”

    I think I probably have very badluck when it comes to get-rich-quick schemes because when everybody was doing it, they were eating good. But the week I joined, the admin of the group closed the group and all our money disappeared. I haven’t gotten an explanation till today. It burnt me because that was supposed to be a part of my allowance, but I moved on sha.

    Jane, 24

    “MMM promised me 30% returns, and I said ‘take my hostel fees’.”

    You know how you get into university and you’re high on the amount of money you just started getting from home? That was me in 2016. I’d just started school and MMM was the popular thing. It wasn’t even just among students. I had way older cousins who did this thing. But never felt the need to do anything because I had money. 

    My second semester started and money got a bit tight at home. I went from collecting ₦50,000 to collecting ₦25,000 every month. I started running out of cash too soon and found myself needing more before the month was up. That’s when I had a conversation with my friend who put some of her hostel fees into it and made about ₦60,000 in profit after a month. That was a 30% return on ₦200,000. My brain lit up. I decided I was going to do it too.

    My hostel fees for the second year came early, and I put it all into MMM. This was around November 2016. In December, they stopped paying out money to people. The site became slower, people started panicking because they thought it would crash, and they were right. I lost all the money I put in without making ₦1. And on top of that, I was going to be homeless. 

    Ruth, 27

    “I knew it was a Ponzi scheme from the start, but I just wanted to cashout before it crashed”

    I joined Racksterly in 2019 before they crashed and came back to life as Racksterli. It was clear to me that it was a Ponzi scheme from the start. But I just thought I had to be smart about joining them. I’m usually on the lookout for these things. 

    The hack is to join when it’s early and leave when the hype starts gaining momentum. That’s what I did with the first one. I put in ₦1,200,000 and earned daily rewards for doing tasks like sharing an ad on Facebook. At the end of the month, I got ₦1.6 million in total. I reinvested my capital and did this for about five months before deciding I’d had enough. By that time I’d made over ₦2 million in profit alone.

    In 2021, I joined Racksterli with about ₦2.8 million with the same plan and same calculations. I thought I’d be able to make it big before it went bust. LMAO. My calculations were off. The site blew up really quickly because they started using artists and influencers to promote the site. Within two months, problems started. 

    People couldn’t withdraw their money, and it went viral online. That further fuelled the fear of people who’d put money in it and everything just scattered. 

    I knew I had messed up, but I didn’t bother trying to get my money. 

    It’s been a year and nobody has gotten their money back. I know I was greedy sha. I should have just enjoyed the money I made the first time and moved on.

    Elvis, 32

    “I thought I should take small risk and succeed”

    Sometimes, looking for money too much makes you lose money. I did a crypto investment thing in October 2021. I wanted to “blow” and I felt like I was running out of time. So I thought I should take a small risk and succeed. That’s when I took most of the savings I had, ₦1.2 million, and put it in a crypto investment scheme that I found on a Telegram channel. They said I’d get 20% returns every month, and I could withdraw my capital whenever I felt like it. 

    I invested in the thing, and I got a 20% return after thirty days. That was about ₦240,000. I was already gingered for more. I kept my money in and we did this for about 5 months. By this time, I had already put in an additional ₦1 million. I was basically reinvesting all the money I had made, as per, investor wey sabi.

    When the market crashed around May/June, they started delaying payments. Some people received their pay while others didn’t. I thought it was normal. Until one time when one angry investor actually sent a message on the Telegram group asking everyone who hadn’t been paid to signify. I did that and left my phone for a bit. When I came back 30 minutes later, I had over 200 hundred messages from the group alone. I just knew everything had scattered. An argument started in the group between the members and admins, and they eventually just closed the group and deleted everything else. I took my L and moved on.

    Chika, 35

    “I was looking for something to invest in, but I didn’t like my options”

    My case was funny because I saw an ad online in 2021 and actually went to look for these people. I was looking for something to invest my money in, and I didn’t like my options at the time. Mutual funds were offering 10% annually, bonds were doing 5%, and I didn’t understand crypto. But there was an agro-investment “company” that was promising 30% returns on a monthly basis for any investment I made. It looked like a sweet deal, and a part of my brain thought it made sense because it’s agriculture. 

    The firm eventually went bust after 3 months, and I lost around ₦5 million. I took my L and moved on. It was a lot of money, but I knew better than to stress over something I’d never get back.

    Right now, if I want to invest in anything and someone says 30% monthly ROI beside me, we’ll fight.

    Jamal, 27

    “Everything about it was giving Ponzi, but I didn’t mind”

    I was introduced to 86FB by a friend. It was supposed to be an investment platform that focused on football, but everything about it was giving Ponzi. The main gist was that I’d be earning 3% interest daily, and that could translate into a lot of money depending on how much I put in. So I decided to do it with a little amount of money. I initially put in ₦10,000, but because I wanted more profit, I increased my investment to ₦100,000. My plan was to double the money and withdraw the profit. But when I’d doubled it and the thing hadn’t crashed, I reinvested the whole thing. 

    The problem started with payment delays. I hadn’t been paid for about three days after requesting withdrawals. Then, they cancelled withdrawals. Last last, I made ₦600,000 that I couldn’t withdraw, and I lost my initial investment.


    NEXT READ: How to Recognise a Pyramid Scheme from Afar


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  • How to Recognise a Pyramid Scheme from Afar

    How to Recognise a Pyramid Scheme from Afar

    Whether it’s weird forex academies or people who ask you to invest in hopes of getting double your capital, there’s one common thing about pyramid schemes: your money will suffer for it. This guide is to help you notice them from afar and hold on tight to your pocket.

    They want to teach you how to make money

    Think about it. Why would anyone want to do that?

    But they want you to bring your own money first

    It should be obvious at this point that these people are up to no good.

    They want you to bring your friends and their money too

    They’ll ask you to bring three people who’ll bring three people who’ll then bring three people. It can only be one of two things: witchcraft or a pyramid scheme. Run!

    They use a lot of motivational quotes

    They’ll bombard you with all these nice-sounding buzzwords like “abundance mindset” and “not limiting yourself”. This is just to get you dizzy on motivation till you drop your house rent.

    The returns look fishy

    If “30% interest after 4 weeks” doesn’t make you wonder if there’s some yoruba movie shenanigans going on, then you should at least be worried.


    RELATED: 4 Nigerians on the Bad Spending Experiences They’ve Had


    There’s always one person at the top

    There’s always someone who seems to have done everything right and now makes a lot of money from the scheme. This is to keep the dream alive in your mind. 

    Your friends join and try to sell you on it

    This is most likely how you’ll find out about it in the first place. Just remember, if you do it, you’re their lunch money.

    The business is looking somehow

    If you can’t figure out what they actually do to make money, in a way that’s as simple as selling biscuit for ₦10, it’s probably a pyramid scheme. 

    You’re wondering if it’s a business or a cult

    They do usually give off cult vibes. Because why else would they ask you to recruit your family members?


    ALSO READ: 6 Nigerians Share Their Experiences With Pyramid Schemes

  • 6 Nigerians Share Their Experiences With Pyramid Schemes

    6 Nigerians Share Their Experiences With Pyramid Schemes

    “Money is not peace of mind. Money is not happiness. Money is, at its essence that measure of a man’s choices.” – Marty Byrde.

    There are no statistics to back this, but I think every Nigerian knows at least one person who has done a pyramid scheme. Whether directly or indirectly. These schemes have existed for the longest time and they just revamp under new names: Loom, Ultimate Cycler, MMM, Product marketing. Etc.

    Curious about people’s direct or second hand experience with these schemes, I asked people to share their stories.

    Tola/Female.

    “Loom lu mi ni jibiti. I remember I saw it trending and my husband warned me not to do it. He said people hardly call you to make money unless you are the source of that money. So, I wasn’t really that interested. However, I saw a friend talk about it on her status and I was curious. I asked her and she said it was legit and she was next in line to cash out.

    She didn’t give me any reasonable explanation but she just kept saying I should join first. That when I join, I would understand.

    So, I paid and joined the group. Only for me to see people writing “you guys need to bring people o.” I didn’t even spend up to one hour before I knew it’d be difficult to cash out. That my friend was now saying I should bring at least one person. I didn’t even have strength to drag anything.

    For me, it was very painful because I trusted my friend. I thought she’d have opened up to me if it wasn’t legit.

    I just summoned the courage to tell my husband because he warned me.”

    Mark/ Male.

    “Hmmm. On the blessed day I knew Mavrodi, I knew he was an oloriburuku.

    I got a call from Abuja that we made a profit of N900,000 from a car we pimped and sold. One of us said he knows MMM and we should do it for a month before inserting the cash into our account to pay school fees.

    I no gree but 4 against 1. They did it, it worked. People started paying us o, I was happy. Oya, let’s not do again…

    They said lailai. Me I cashed out and paid school fees but those ones went on and on. They were constantly dissing me.

    One day, Mavrodi got stuck. My guys went mad. All their investment went down the drain – Almost 4.2 Million naira.

    Do you know the funny thing? – They still had school fees of almost 1.2 Million naira to pay. That day, see MMM induced diarrhea. Diarrhea drugs stopped working for my guys; they were just shitting anyhow.

    If not for God and my small sense in helping them pay the fees, my guys wouldn’t have written exam. To date, I am their benchmark for doing any business.”

    Frank/ Male.

    ‘M.M.M was reigning in my school at that time. My friends were guiders and they were making money. I couldn’t be looking at my friends making money so I had to join.

    I collected my school fees three months ahead of time so we could make enough for flexing – my school fees that time was N450,000 – it was a private school. I did the first month, money came and I was happy.

    I put all of it back so I could make it bigger. The aim was to remove my capital after the second round. Some days later, the story started that they are doing system maintenance, and that’s how till today, they are still doing system maintenance with my school fees.

    I couldn’t even call home for another school fees and semester exam was near. It was two days to the exam that two of my girlfriends in my class gave me money to pay the fees. Some girls are God sent sha.”

    Anu/Female.

    “Well, my dad did one of these product marketing schemes. He spent a good portion of his gratuity buying the products. He sold few and definitely didn’t convert anyone into a seller. He ended up using all the products by himself.”

    Adeola/Female.

    “I did the ultimate cycler. Put 12,500 and get N50,000. So, I did it once and I got my money. I then introduced my mum and cousin to it and they never got their own. That’s how ultimate cycler died. I felt bad about it. Out of guilt, I returned my mummy’s money.”

    Jola/Female.

    “I did it ohh. Then, I tried as much as possible to resist the urge to join but one spirit eventually pushed me. Let’s say I joined today, it crashed three days after. I couldn’t cry. It was the small money I managed to save that I put into it.

    I did it because my friends were all doing it. They had already cashed out like three times – All those times I refused to join because I was scared. After so much persuasion from them, I felt I should do it once and back out. Not knowing it was going to crash eventually.”


    This story was edited for clarity. Some details have been changed to protect the identity of the subject.

    Glossary:

    Loom lu mi ni jibiti – Loom defrauded me.

    Oloriburuku – an unfortunate person/person with bad luck.

  • 7 Insane Facts About Sergei Mavrodi’s Life (MMM Guy)

    7 Insane Facts About Sergei Mavrodi’s Life (MMM Guy)

    If you had no idea who he was when his insanely popular Ponzi scheme took the country by storm, then you definitely heard about him when news of his death spread and Nigerians fist pumped in unison and celebrated.

    His name was Sergei Mavrodi, Russia’s Jeffrey Dahmer look-alike and founder of MMM, the Ponzi scheme that defrauded millions of people around the world.

    Now, this isn’t me making him out to be some kind of legend or anything, but I recently found out some details about his life that legit made me scream. (My curiosity not only killed the cat, but it also buried it too.)

    Details like:

    1. You see this MMM thing? No be when e come Nigeria e start.

    This nigga actually started this thing in 1989 with his brother, Vyacheslav Mavrodi, and some woman named Olga Melnikova. It initially started as a network of computer-importing cooperatives but underwent several transformations (after tax police accused the business of tax evasion in 1992) to become a Ponzi scheme in 1994.

    2. He was arrested for tax evasion in 1994 and, while still being investigated, ran for office in his country (Russia) AND WON.

    3 weeks after being released from police custody, this guy saw an opportunity and went for it. You see, a politician in the Federal Assembly of Russia had just been killed and an election was scheduled to replace him. Mavrodi somehow ran in this election and won, automatically gaining immunity from the crime he was was being investigated for at the time.

    That wasn’t the end of his problems though. During his tenure, Mavrodi showed up in the Federal Assembly just once, to vote against an attempt to strip him of immunity. He was eventually stripped of his immunity in 1995, which led to him trying to run for PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA in 1996. However, his bid was denied after officials discovered that most of the signatures he submitted were forged.

    This guy!

    3. After his plot to run for the presidency was foiled, he declared MMM bankrupt and vanished in 1997.

    With a shit ton of people’s money. He wouldn’t be found for another six years.

    4. He was found and arrested in Moscow in 2003 (which was weird because authorities believed he fled to Greece years prior) and was given until February 2006 to read the documents in the fraud case against him.

    If you’re wondering why he was given three years to read a bunch of documents, it’s because these documents had 650 volumes, and each volume was 270 pages long. He got lucky though because, by April 2007, he was convicted of fraud and sentenced to four and a half years in prison. And since he had already been in police custody for 4 years, he only spent less than a month in prison before he was released.

    This guy!

    5. A book he wrote about MMM and how the Russian government shut it down was eventually turned into a movie named The PyraMMMid. It was released in 2011.

    Eldar Salavatov, the filmmaker who took on the project, made the story into a Robin Hood-style narrative about a con man who turns a new leaf by deciding to fight a corrupt financial system. Frankly, I think it sounds insane which is why I absolutely have to watch it.

    6. In 2011, he launched the version of MMM we encountered lazily named MMM-2011.

    He launched it first in Russia and boldly stated that it was, in fact, a Ponzi scheme (there’s no law against them in Russia) he hoped would destroy the financial system, which he considered unfair. He then proceeded to launch it in India, China, Zimbabwe, South Africa, and Nigeria, all of which ended the same way.

    Alexa, play Madonna’s “Frozen.”

    7. After dying of heart problems in March 2018, MMM 2011 investors funded his funeral.

    We’re also going to assume that these heart problems were caused by millions of curses from the victims of his Ponzi schemes. God knows he deserved it.

  • MMM Nigeria Is Taking A ‘Break’ And We All Know What That Means

    MMM Nigeria Is Taking A ‘Break’ And We All Know What That Means
    It’s pretty popular here, but for those who don’t know, MMM is one of the many ponzi money schemes Nigerians are currently engaging in. Over a million Nigerians have invested money in the money pyramid scheme, hoping to get returns of 30% per month. With the tough economy and an all-time-high exchange rate, it’s no surprise that MMM has  an occultic following here.

    The hour we were warned about is finally here! MMM has taken a ‘break’!

    Apparently, Financial Watch warned us that MMM would activate a ‘Pause mode’ when the Christmas/New year period is here.

    See for yourself!

    But did we listen? Even when the CBN warned us, did we not block our ears?

    So we that put N1 million there now, are we not finished?

    Even though the MMM website warned us! But… wait, are they making fun of us now?

    https://twitter.com/MMMNigeriaHelp/status/808363412875055104

    MMM people! What will Chukwuemeka do now?

    You better ‘unfreeze’ our money! We’re dead serious!

    Where will we get Christmas money now? #MokuMogbeModaran

  • Zimbabweans Are In Trouble, And This Time It’s Not Mugabe’s Fault

    Zimbabweans Are In Trouble, And This Time It’s Not Mugabe’s Fault
    As if having President Mugabe leading them into a recession is not enough, Zimbabweans are facing another, probably bigger, financial problem.

    Thousands of Zimbabweans have lost their investments after the online money scheme, MMM Zimbabwe Global, terminated its services without prior notice to investors.

    Apparently, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe had earlier warned citizens that MMM was a scam, but Zimbabweans didn’t listen because initial investors had made profit from the scheme.

    It’s not surprising Zimbabweans were desperate to join the social financial network; the country’s economy is fast grinding to a halt.

    The Zimbabwean Finance Minister, Patrick Chinamasa, and ZANU PF, the leading party, have been widely criticized for their inability to map out strategic economic reform ideas to improve the situation.

    And of course, there’s this teeny tiny problem as well.

    Ponzi schemes like the MMM only work when new members invest money, which is used to pay off older investors until a point where the schemes don’t attract new investors and crash.

    The MMM Nigeria scheme is gaining traction and we heard someone even advised presido to put our money there.

    Please, we don’t want.

    The MMM scheme is known globally as a Russian scam network and the CBN has warned Nigerians against joining it.