This Blog is a review of all the possibilites of making money on the internet, make money at home, and it's details

Google

Thursday, December 01, 2005

What Is Ponzi Scheme

Ponzi schemes: what are they?

The words "ponzi" and "pyramid" can often be seen on online investment
forums and scam warnings. In this article, I intend to clearly explain
the nature of these schemes and why people should be careful about
them.

Ponzi schemes are a type of illegal pyramid scheme named for Charles
Ponzi, who duped thousands of New England residents into investing in a
postage stamp speculation scheme back in the 1920s. Ponzi thought he
could take advantage of differences between U.S. and foreign currencies
used to buy and sell international mail coupons. Ponzi told investors
that he could provide a 40% return in just 90 days compared with 5% for
bank savings accounts. Ponzi was deluged with funds from investors,
taking
in $1 million during one three-hour period—and this was 1921! Though a
few early investors were paid off to make the scheme look legitimate,
an investigation found that Ponzi had only purchased about $30 worth of
the international mail coupons.

Decades later, the Ponzi scheme continues to work on the
"rob-Peter-to-pay-Paul" principle, as money from new investors is used to pay off
earlier investors until the whole scheme collapses.

In the classic "pyramid" scheme, participants attempt to make money
solely by recruiting new participants into the program. The hallmark of
these schemes is the promise of sky-high returns in a short period of
time for doing nothing other than handing over your money and getting
others to do the same.

The fraudsters behind a pyramid scheme may go to great lengths to make
the program look like a legitimate multi-level marketing program. But
despite their claims to have legitimate products or services to sell,
these fraudsters simply use money coming in from new recruits to pay off
early stage investors. But eventually the pyramid will collapse. At
some point the schemes get too big, the promoter cannot raise enough money
from new investors to pay earlier investors, and many people lose their
money.

Pyramid schemes now come in so many forms that they may be difficult to
recognize immediately. However, they all share one overriding
characteristic. They promise investors large profits based primarily on
recruiting others to join their program, not based on profits from any real
investment or trading activities. Some schemes may purport to be trading
currencies, stocks, or bonds, but they often simply use these excuses to
hide their pyramid structure.

A Ponzi scheme is closely related to a pyramid because it revolves
around continuous recruiting, but in a Ponzi scheme the promoter generally
has no product to sell and pays no commission to investors who recruit
new "members." Instead, the promoter collects payments from a stream of
people, promising them all the same high rate of return on a short-term
investment. In the typical Ponzi scheme, there is no real investment
opportunity, and the promoter just uses the money from new recruits to
pay obligations owed to longer-standing members of the program. In
English, there is an expression that nicely summarizes this scheme: It's
called "stealing from Peter to pay Paul." In fact some law enforcement
officers call Ponzi schemes "Peter-Paul" scams. Many of you may be
familiar with Ponzi schemes reported in the international financial news. For
example, the MMM fund in Russia, which issued investors shares of stock
and suddenly collapsed in 1994, was characterized as a Ponzi scheme.

Both Ponzi schemes and pyramids are quite seductive because they may be able to deliver a high rate of return to a few early investors for a short period of time. Yet, both pyramid and Ponzi schemes are illegal because they inevitably must fall apart. No program can recruit new members forever. Every pyramid or Ponzi scheme collapses because it cannot expand beyond the size of the earth's population. When the scheme collapses, most investors find themselves at the bottom, unable to recoup their losses.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home