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Abstract:The regulator has refrained from concluding that this may be a hoax, although all the indicators point to it being one. The regulator has refrained from concluding that this may be a hoax, although all the indicators point to it being one.
The regulator has refrained from concluding that this may be a hoax, although all the indicators point to it being one. The regulator has refrained from concluding that this may be a hoax, although all the indicators point to it being one.
One can't help but worry whether individuals would heed the Financial Sector Conduct Authority's (FSCA) advice against transacting with or investing in Cash FX Group (CashFX).
The latest warning prompts the following inquiries: Do those who promote and finance these scams even know about these cautions? If so, do they give a damn? Do they ever consider the possibility that CashFX is a pyramid scheme?
The FSCA warning only notes that Cash FX lacks a license under the Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act to provide any intermediary services or financial advice. The CashFX website, according to the FSCA, “creates the impression that it provides a foreign exchange trading platform” and seems to trade on clients' behalf via “copy trading,” the agency claims.
Furthermore, it seems from social media that CashFX guaranteed its customers a weekly financial return of between 5 and 20%. The FSCA alert claims that CashFX allegedly does public presentations and provides several training programs in South Africa.
The FSCA does not, however, assert that CashFX could be a fraud.
danger signals
Every indication is present. CashFX makes a lot of claims and guarantees, but the fundamental design of the “investments” and the significant rewards for recruiting new members are reminiscent of a pyramid scam.
For whatever reason, these frauds frequently demand a membership fee or payment of about 25%. They consistently provide various bundles or investment levels (often referred to as a matrix).
In the instance of CashFX, packages vary from $300 to $100,000, with the remaining funds being placed in a forex trading account and 30% going to CashFX.
The cheapest $300 plan's 30%, or $90, is designed to cover the cost of training materials.
The so-called forced matrix, which encourages investors to purchase more costly plans after they have made some money, is a second hallmark of investment frauds.
Investors must upgrade to a higher plan with CashFX once they have received a 100% return.
A supporter offers his thoughts
According to one of the scheme's promoters, if investors upgrade quickly enough, they just pay the price difference between what they earned and the cost of the new plan. This was stated in an article that appeared in the Lenasia Rising Sun a few months ago.
According to Bongani Fakude in the article, Our product is the Trading Academy Pack (TAP), which is where people interested in forex trading may study from our group of trading specialists from the very fundamentals of trading to the advanced trading classes.
Our trade contract bundles start at $300 and go up to $100,000. This guarantees that the business can serve everyone. 30% of the money you pay in when you invest goes to the TAP, and 70% is instantly added to the Trading Pool. When you invest $1,000, $300 goes to TAP, but half of that sum—$150—goes to your sponsor as a rapid start incentive rather than to the business.
The unilevel commissions are paid out of the remaining $150. Therefore, the compensation plan absorbs 30%. If you decide to leave the program, the corporation will reimburse 70% of your money, minus a penalty charge. However, the 30% that has already been used for the compensation plan cannot be repaid because it has already been distributed, warns Fakude.
It is obvious that bringing in new members is quite profitable; Fakude notes that recruiters might make twice as much as investors.
The second red flag is that CashFX guarantees consistently high profits of 5% every week, which is unusually high.
Fakude, who claims to have been active for the past 24 months, was contacted by Moneyweb. Fakude submitted screen images of a few of his payouts as evidence that CashFX is still operating and paying out trading winnings.
This is not a rip-off. I posted a full-page advertisement in the newspaper and invited my family, the majority of my close friends, and coworkers since I trust this firm, the man claims.
They organized a competition where members could win tickets to the ribbon-cutting ceremony, and very soon they will have one at their headquarters in Panama.
He continues, suggesting that it must be true, “That would be a massive swindle.”
With the instability of Bitcoin, the majority of businesses in the same industry as CashFX have failed, yet it is still operating and more expenditures are being made for better improvements. I see a futuristic business that is properly organized, adds Fakude.
An inside look at how MTI extended a remarkable losing run on social media.
Regarding the FSCA warning, he claims that the broker CashFX has worked with is governed globally and has the finest certifications available.
The advocates of CashFX frequently make this assertion.
Another promoter for CashFX on YouTube claims that the company's broker and primary partner is governed by the Financial Conduct Authority (FAC) of London, the Financial Services Authority (DFSA) of Dubai, the Financial Sector Conduct Authority of South Africa (FSCA), and the Financial Services Authority of Seychelles (FSA).
Nobody knows if the FSCA's warnings have the same impact.
One issue with scams is that their advocates are so effective at marketing them on social networking sites that they start to appear like common investments.
Do viewers recognize the distinction between a video promoting CashFX and presentations from traditional, registered investment managers that post their content on YouTube?
Simple money
Contrary to what CashFX and its supporters claim, offering training modules is not the company's primary source of revenue. Most investors are looking for quick gains and wouldn't even give the training materials more than five minutes of their time.
According to the CashFX website, more than $5 trillion is traded daily on the world's foreign exchange markets, attracting millions of people who all share the ambition of financial independence. CashFX claims that participants in the program to imitate the transactions made by its skilled specialists can generate passive income.
The benefit of copy trading, according to the statement, is that “the individual account holder is not needed to perform any trading activity” personally.
According to CashFX, “One need not have any trading knowledge to participate in copy trading.”
The too-good-to-be-true performance is reportedly based on the collaboration of “skilled forex trading teams, expert adviser algorithms, and artificial intelligence technologies.”
CashFX is either a pyramid scam that will fail when it runs out of fresh recruits, which might take years considering that CashFX appears to be targeting practically every nation on earth (unlikely) or it has created the world's winning formula.
While the FSCA cautions that the public should always check that an entity or individual is registered with the FSCA to provide financial advisory and intermediary services, it is difficult to stop the marketing of dubious schemes by foreign companies to SA citizens.
CashFX is registered in Panama and the local promoters are enlisting new members.
It might carry on for a long time – the world population is approaching 7.9 billion and new suckers are born every second.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
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