The Guardian (Nigeria)

Nigerians lose over N911b to Ponzi schemes, related fraud in 23 years

• NDIC canvasses inter- agency collaborat­ion, public actions against schemes

- By Geoff Iyatse and Anthony Otaru

THE Director of the Bank Examinatio­n Department, the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Company ( NDIC), Michael Oladele, has disclosed that no less than N911.45 billion has been lost to various Ponzi schemes and related frauds across the country in the last 23 years.

The revelation came as the NDIC sought stronger collaborat­ion among relevant agencies in the financial regulatory space and public support to achieve a breakthrou­gh in the war against Ponzi schemes.

At the workshop for financial correspond­ents and business editors, which ended yesterday, Oladele said promoters of the schemes ha ve become so sophistica­ted and creative in their tricks that broad base collaborat­ion is needed to stay ahead of them.

In a paper on ‘ Rising Ponzi Sch emes and In vestment Scams in Nigeria’, Ola dele said Nigerians have lost at least N911.45 billion to different Ponzi schemes and related schemes in the last 23 years. While he admitted poor data on the trends, he said N700 billion was reportedly trapped in private placements in Nigeria in 2016 just as MMM swindled investors of N18 billion. Also, MBA Forex defrauded investors of N171 billion, while another N22.45 billion was lost to Nospecto.

He x- rayed local and global case studies of Ponzi schemes, which are popularly referred to as wonder banks in Nigeria, history of the frauds, their modes of operation, enablers of the schemes as well as regulatory approaches.

Other areas covered were specific actions by the regulatory authoritie­s, expectatio­ns of regulatory authoritie­s, pre- conditions for effective deterrence and responses and possible countermea­sures by the investing public.

He insisted that counteract­ions by the targets, who bear much of the brunt of the scams, are required to expose and prosecute suspects. According to him, there is much the public could do to evade the antics of Ponzi scheme traps, as it is a conceptual fraud.

Placing it side- by- side with affinity fraud, advance fee fraud ( 419), pre- IPO/ private placement investment scams, pump and dump investment scams among others, he warned that there are increasing reasons to be wary and conduct due diligence before any investor releases their money.

“A Ponzi scheme is a fraudulent investing scam which generates returns for earlier investors with money taken from later investors that is, robbing Peter to pay Paul. The premise of a Ponzi is that the value of the investment is not representa­tive of any underlying productive capacity that generates value over time. Ponzi schemes and investment fraud operators are into shadow activities,” he explained.

Tracing Nigeria’s Ponzi scheme history to 1980s and early 1990s when the famous Umana- Umana investment platform and Planwell took the market unaware, Oladele decried paucity of data on the activities of Ponzi schemes in the country, linking this to under- reporting and wrong classifica­tion.

A little more due diligence and recourse to history, he said, would have helped millions of Nigerians who lost an estimated N18 billion to the legendary MMM bust. More MMM cases, according to the NDIC boss, would be replicated as long as current desperatio­n, quick rich syndrome, financial illiteracy, ignorance and regulatory arbitrage continue.

 ?? ?? The Olowu of Owu Kingdom, Prof. Saka Matemilola ( left), Ogun State governor, Prince Dapo Abiodun ( MFR) and Chairman/ CEO, Gasoline Associates Int'l Ltd, Dr. Lukman Bolaji - Chairman/ CEO, Gasoline Associates Int'l Ltd. during a courtesy visit to the governor in Abeokuta.
The Olowu of Owu Kingdom, Prof. Saka Matemilola ( left), Ogun State governor, Prince Dapo Abiodun ( MFR) and Chairman/ CEO, Gasoline Associates Int'l Ltd, Dr. Lukman Bolaji - Chairman/ CEO, Gasoline Associates Int'l Ltd. during a courtesy visit to the governor in Abeokuta.

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