Charles Ponzi Archives - The World of Direct Selling https://worldofdirectselling.com/tag/charles-ponzi/ The World of Direct Selling provides expert articles and news updates on the global direct sales industry. Tue, 13 Jul 2021 20:50:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://i0.wp.com/worldofdirectselling.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/cropped-people2.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Charles Ponzi Archives - The World of Direct Selling https://worldofdirectselling.com/tag/charles-ponzi/ 32 32 Ponzi Schemes in 10 Questions https://worldofdirectselling.com/ponzi-schemes-in-10-questions/ https://worldofdirectselling.com/ponzi-schemes-in-10-questions/#respond Mon, 07 Jun 2021 05:00:34 +0000 https://worldofdirectselling.com/?p=19203 When Bernie Madoff died in prison last April, this fraudulent way of doing business once again made the headlines. Madoff is known to have orchestrated the largest Ponzi scheme in history. He had been held at prison since receiving 150-year sentence in 2009. This article aims at explaining these schemes, answering the most frequently asked […]

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When Bernie Madoff died in prison last April, this fraudulent way of doing business once again made the headlines. Madoff is known to have orchestrated the largest Ponzi scheme in history. He had been held at prison since receiving 150-year sentence in 2009.

This article aims at explaining these schemes, answering the most frequently asked questions.

1. What is a Ponzi Scheme?

A Ponzi scheme is an investment fraud that pays existing investors with funds collected from new investors. In other words, it is a scheme where the investors who join earlier are paid off with funds raised from new ones, not from the returns from their own investments.

2. Does It Have Resemblances with a Pyramid Scheme?

Yes! Just like a pyramid scheme, a Ponzi organization creates returns for those who joined earlier by bringing in new investors. The main focus in both is on attracting new people to pour money in.

3. Where Does the Name Originate?

These deceptive businesses have been named as “Ponzi schemes” after Charles Ponzi. He was not the first such schemer in history. Yet his organization grew much bigger than its predecessors and his “business model” was much more sophisticated, at least on paper.

4. What Are the Most Noteworthy Ponzi Schemes in History?

Following Charles Ponzi’s, many similar schemes have emerged to deceive people. Some of the most notorious ones can be seen here. Among those that left many victims behind, what had happened in Albania in 1996-1997 requires a special attention as it was about to bring a country almost to a total collapse.

5. How Does the System Work?

It is pretty simple: The “creators” take the money from a new investor and gives it to other investors who joined the system previously as “returns”. So, basically the source of “Person A”s return is the investment made by “Person B”.


6. Are They Sustainable or Bound to Fail?

The model depends solely on the acquisition of new investors but not on generating income from invested funds. Thus, all are bound to fail and unfortunately, leaving so many shattered lives behind.

7. How Do Ponzi Schemes and Network Marketing Differ?

Network marketing is a model based on the trade of goods and services. Participants’ incomes rely on sales of these goods or services. In the case of a Ponzi, though, income solely depends on the funds brought by newcomers.

8. What Are the Common Characteristics of Ponzi Schemes?

Such schemes share two main common characteristics in their claims. They promise:

1) Quite high returns with little or no risk
2) Unrealistically stable / guaranteed returns

9. How Can One Avoid a Ponzi Scheme?

First of all, one should be very cautious if the two above features exist. Overwhelming desire for more can be very costly. The best client for a Ponzi scheme is a greedy amateur investor.

Secondly, the company should be able to explain where the investor’s funds will be allocated very clearly.

As the old saying goes, if it sounds too good to be true, then it most probably is. And it’s likely a Ponzi scheme.

10. Are These Schemes Illegal?

Yes! These businesses are seductive as they claim to be generating very high returns. They actually can do this for a short period of time (i.e. as long as there is an increasing inflow of new investors). Because it is not possible to maintain an ever-increasing inflow, they all collapse without an exception.

When they collapse, we generally see two groups of people: 1) Organizers and early participants with profits in their pockets. 2) Crowds with huge losses.

Needless to say, all who take part in the formation and execution of the scheme are prosecuted.

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Hakki Ozmorali is the publisher of The World of Direct Selling.Hakki Ozmorali is the Founder of WDS Consultancy, a management consulting and online publishing firm in Canada, specialized in providing services to direct selling firms. WDS Consultancy is a Supplier Member of the Canada DSA. It is the publisher of The World of Direct Selling, global industry’s leading weekly online publication since 2010. Hakki is an experienced professional with a strong background in direct sales. His work experiences in direct selling include Country and Regional Manager roles at various multinationals. You can contact Hakki here.

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The 3 Most Infamous Ponzi Scheme Cases in History – Part 1 https://worldofdirectselling.com/most-infamous-ponzi-schemes-1/ https://worldofdirectselling.com/most-infamous-ponzi-schemes-1/#respond Mon, 05 Apr 2021 05:00:00 +0000 https://worldofdirectselling.com/?p=18695 In a two-part article, we will be explaining what is involved in a “Ponzi” and covering the three cases that stand out among all others. First, let’s take a look into what this is all about. What Is a Ponzi Scheme? A Ponzi scheme is an investment fraud that pays existing investors with funds collected […]

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In a two-part article, we will be explaining what is involved in a “Ponzi” and covering the three cases that stand out among all others. First, let’s take a look into what this is all about.

What Is a Ponzi Scheme?

A Ponzi scheme is an investment fraud that pays existing investors with funds collected from new investors. In other words, it is a scheme where the investors who join earlier are paid off with funds raised from new ones.

In the legitimate world, individuals invest in a variety of instruments and expect returns from their invested funds. If this is a stock for instance, they usually expect to gain as its value increases and to collect dividends as the company makes profits. If the instrument is a bond or a term deposit, then the expectation is the interest income. We can go on with these examples where the returns are dependent on that individual’s own investment.

In the case of a Ponzi scheme on the other hand, the source of “Person A”s return is the investment made by “Person B”.

The two most common characteristics of these schemes are “promise of high returns with no risk” and “overly stable returns”.

These plans almost all the time promise very high returns to be able to attract more and more investors, who are their lifeblood. And the scheme can only survive as long as there is an increasing inflow of new investments. Even a small slowdown or a hiccup in this flow results in the collapse of the whole structure.

Throughout history, there have been countless Ponzi schemes. Despite they are much more visible today with the help of media, especially the digital media in the recent years, they are still nowhere near to have disappeared.

While the history has witnessed numerous examples to these, I believe three of them deserve closer attention due to their very distinct stories.

Charles Ponzi

These fraudulent investing models have been named as “Ponzi schemes” after Charles Ponzi. He was not the first such “schemer” in history. Yet his organization grew much bigger than its predecessors and his “business model” was much more sophisticated, at least on paper.

He was born in Italy as Carlo Ponzi and immigrated to the United States in 1903. He later told reporters, “I landed in this country with $2.50 in cash and $1 million in hopes.”

From Boston as his first stop, he moved to Montreal where he was sentenced to three years for forging checks. Following another two-year jail time in Atlanta for smuggling Italian immigrants across the border into the United States, he ends up in Boston.

One day in 1919, he receives a letter from a company in Spain with an “international reply coupon” inside. This was a coupon that could be exchanged for postage stamps in another country allowing the recipient to mail for free. What Ponzi noticed was that an international reply coupon could have different values in different countries. In financial terms, there was a “spread” to benefit from.

So, the business model he “sold” to investors was as simple as this: His company would buy reply coupons in various countries at lower prices, send them to the United States where these coupons would be sold at higher prices. While this sounds like a good idea to start with, the reality was that it was logistically impossible those days to make such international transactions.

However, neither Charles Ponzi was serious about this model, nor his investors cared much about it. He was promising 50% returns in 45 days, 100% in 90 days, and was keeping these promises! Thousands of investors gave him about a total of $20 million (approx. USD 300 million today). The model in fact, was different than what it was advertised: Funds received from new investors was sent to those who joined previously as their return.

This went on until August 1920 when The Boston Post started running articles questioning the model’s legitimacy which led to a panic among Ponzi’s investors. Charles Ponzi was then, prosecuted. Facing a lifetime in jail, he pleaded guilty and was sentenced to five years.

After he was released, he was sent to jail a few more times for other crimes and finally, he died in Brazil at a charity hospital in 1949.

Next week’s article will cover two other notorious Ponzi scheme cases: The story of the ones that emerged in Albania in 1996-1997, and Bernie Madoff’s company.

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Hakki Ozmorali is the publisher of The World of Direct Selling.Hakki Ozmorali is the Founder of WDS Consultancy, a management consulting and online publishing firm in Canada, specialized in providing services to direct selling firms. WDS Consultancy is a Supplier Member of the Canada DSA. It is the publisher of The World of Direct Selling, global industry’s leading weekly online publication since 2010. Hakki is an experienced professional with a strong background in direct sales. His work experiences in direct selling include Country and Regional Manager roles at various multinationals. You can contact Hakki here.

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