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Nigerian authority warns against LOOM MONEY

Nigerian authority warns against LOOM MONEY


Nigerian authority warns against LOOM MONEY

 

Nigerian authority warns against LOOM MONEY

 

Nigerian investment security authority, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has warned Nigerians to avoid an online ‘investment scheme’ Loom Money Nigeria.

SEC said the scheme is fraudulent and people behind it are not yet identified.

Acting Director-General of the commission, Ms. Mary Uduk, gave the warning at a news conference on Thursday in Abuja.

A statement by SEC’s Head of Media, Mrs Efe Ebelo, said that Uduk, who was represented by acting Executive Commissioner, Operations of SEC, Mr. Isyaku Tilde, said Loom Money Nigeria had taken over the social media.

She said that the scheme targeted young people, luring them to participate in a pyramid model of the Ponzi.

The director-general disclosed that the fraudsters carried out their illegitimate activities via social media platforms like Facebook and Whatsapp.

She added that they lured young Nigerians to invest as low as N1,000 and N13, 000 and to get as much as eight times the value of the investment in 48 hours.

Uduk said that the venture was a Ponzi scheme, where returns would be paid from other people invested funds, adding that it had no tangible business model.

“We are aware of the activities of an online investment scheme tagged ‘Loom Money Nigeria’.

“The platform has embarked on an aggressive online media campaign on Facebook and Whatsapp.

“They lure the investing public to participate by joining various Loom Whatsapp groups to invest as low as N1, 000 and N13, 000 and get as much as eight times the value of the investment in 48 hours.

“Unlike MMM that had a website and the promoter known, the people promoting Loom are not yet known and this pyramid scheme operates through closed groups mainly on Facebook and Whatsapp.

“If it were a local Ponzi scheme with known offices, it would be very easy for the Commission to seal their offices and freeze their accounts.

“We, therefore, wish to notify the investing public that the operation of this investment scheme has no tangible business model hence it’s a Ponzi scheme, where returns are paid from other people’s invested sum.

“Also, its operation is not registered by the Commission,” NAN quoted her as saying.

Uduk, therefore, advised the public to distance themselves from the scheme, adding that anyone that subscribed to the illegal activity did so at his own risk.

She assured that an inter-agency committee, Financial Services Regulation Coordinating Committee (FSRCC), was working on the issue, and that the commission was also collaborating with security agencies to track them down.

Victims of the investment scam make an upfront payment than can range from $3 to $40 (£31).

The scheme is operated through closed social media groups, mainly Facebook and Whatsapp, and promises as much as eight times return on investment within 48 hours of payment.

Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission says the people running the scam have not yet been identified.

It is also not clear how many people have fallen prey to the fraudulent investment initiative or how much money has been lost.

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