Before You Invest in MMM: The shocking dark past of MMM and its founder
MMM stands for Mavrodi Mondial Moneybox and it was founded in 1989 by Sergei Mavrodi, his brother Vyacheslav Mavrodi, and Olga Melnikova.
After a rapid growth of the company, it all came crashing in 1994 when the police closed down MMM over tax evasion. The company owed its investors $50m-$1.5bn. This made about 50 of the MMM investors commit suicide as they couldn’t cope with the huge loss of money.
After a rapid growth of the company, it all came crashing in 1994 when the police closed down MMM over tax evasion. The company owed its investors $50m-$1.5bn. This made about 50 of the MMM investors commit suicide as they couldn’t cope with the huge loss of money.
According to
Wikipedia, the company was involved in one of the biggest Ponzi schemes in the
1990s. It was estimated that thousands of people lost up to $10 billion
dollars.
MMM prides itself on the success of a nonexistent
enterprise achieved by the payment of quick returns to the first set of
investors from money invested by later investors. Investors are paid certain
percentage of the money they put into the scheme after some days. Although the scheme
doesn’t make any profit, it pays older investors with the money from newer
investors. We can say it’s a case of robbing Peter to pay Paul.
No wonder the Chinese government banned MMM in
January 2016. Mavrodi himself is reported to have gone into hiding after a
separate entity designed to reward investors with the cryptocurrency bitcoin –
dubbed the “Republic of Bitcoin” – folded in April this year.
MMM Global has however danced it’s way into the
heart of Africa, with branches promising returns on investment of 30 per cent a
month in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Nigeria and some other east African states.
Recently, MMM Global Zimbabwe system collapsed with millions of people on the
scheme losing lots of money. This was after the country’s National Reserve bank
warned its citizen against having anything to do with the Ponzi scheme. Well,
no one listened. Everyone wants to get rich quickly by all means. A few weeks
ago MMM in Zimbabwe stopped withdrawals, no investors could get help.
In South Africa, MMM crashed in May 2016. The
company claimed that it was a media panic and said it was ‘starting all over’.
In January 2016, MMM landed in Nigeria and it’s gaining momentum not minding
the company’s shady background in Russia. Yes, MMM pays (like the popular saying)
but it’s for a while. Have you ever noticed how you decide to put a small
amount of money the first time and when you see the return, you decide to raise
the amount you invest the next time? Yes, that’s how it works. Gullible people
are caught right in the middle and by the time you know it, the company fizzes
into tiny air. Even the Central Bank of Government has warned Nigerians not to
invest in it but a lot of people swear MMM is legit and it pays. Have you ever
tried to check the meaning of the word ‘Mavro’ used in MMM? According to Urban
Dictionary, Mavro is a black person or a stupid ghetto person who exudes
black-like qualities. Mavro is of Greek origin, and many Greeks use the word as
a derogatory to label inept, black, and/or ugly dark people.
Remember
Wonderbank? Only time will tell!
Source: Naij.com
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