Fairity Life Review: Crypto trading = annual ROI of up to 2190%?
Fairity Life provide no information on their website about who owns or runs the business.
In fact at the time of publication, the Fairty Life website is only accessible with an affiliate referral link, and even then it’s nothing more than an affiliate login/sign up page.
The Fairity Life website domain was registered on February 28th, 2017 and appears to contain bogus information. An address in Antarctica for “John Karna” is provided as ownership details.
As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money.
Fairity Life Products
Fairity Life has no retailable products or services, with affiliates only able to market Fairity Life affiliate membership itself.
The Fairity Life Compensation Plan
Fairity Life affiliates invest $20 to $200,000 on the promise of a 160% ROI.
The ROI is paid out Monday to Friday at a rate of 0.5% to 6% a day.
Fairity Life affiliates who invest in $15,000, $50,000, $100,000 and $200,000 “VIP packages” receive an extra 0.05%, 0.1%, 0.15% or 0.2% respectively extra a day.
Residual Commissions
Fairity Life pay residual commissions via a unilevel compensation structure.
A unilevel compensation structure places an affiliate at the top of a unilevel team, with every personally recruited affiliate placed directly under them (level 1):
If any level 1 affiliates recruit new affiliates, they are placed on level 2 of the original affiliate’s unilevel team.
If any level 2 affiliates recruit new affiliates, they are placed on level 3 and so on and so forth down a theoretical infinite number of levels.
Residual commissions are paid out as a percentage of funds invested by affiliates in a unilevel team.
How many levels a Fairity Life affiliate can earn on is determined by the following criteria:
- all Fairity Life affiliates earn a 5% residual commission on level 1 (personally recruited affiliates)
- recruit at least ten affiliates who each invest at least $20 and earn 5% on level 1, 3% on level 2 and 2% on level 3, plus 2% of ROI payouts to personally recruited affiliates
- generate at least $100,000 of investment within your unilevel team and receive 10% on level 1, 5% on level 2, 3% on level 3 and 1% on level 4, plus ROI residuals of 3% on level 1, 2% on level 2 and 1% on level 3
There is also a “Global Bonus” that pays 0.5% to 2% of investment volume across all levels of the unilevel team.
At the time of publication Global Bonus qualification criteria was not available.
Note that Fairity Life affiliates are only able to withdraw funds every Wednesday and Friday.
Joining Fairity Life
Fairity Life affiliate membership is tied to a $20 to $200,000 investment.
Conclusion
If affiliate marketing material is to be believed, the ruse behind Fairity Life’s 160% ROI payouts is cryptocurrency trading.
Naturally there’s no proof of any trading taking place provided, despite Fairity Life providing fixed daily and total ROI amounts.
And yet the company expects people to invest $200,000 on nothing more than empty representations that it can consistently and legitimately generate up to 6% a day.
The reality is anyone able to generate up to 6% a day is going to keep it a secret and profit only for themselves.
6% a day translates into a 2190% annual ROI. Even a small loan in this scenario turns into a fortune in very little time.
Here’s the rub though, Fairity Life affiliates claim the company has been trading “forex, commodities and stocks” for over ten years. Cryptocurrency trading has been going on for “about three years”.
And yet here we have the anonymous owners of Fairity Life launching what at the very least is a pyramid scheme, despite promises of 2190% annual ROIs?
Please.
As with all Ponzi schemes, Fairity Life will collapse once affiliate recruitment dies down. This will see the company starved of revenue to pay existing investors with, prompting a collapse.
The mathematics behind Ponzi schemes guarantees that upon collapse, the majority of Fairity Life investors lose money.
This one is associated with a chap called Bystrik Stefak who ran Website2share and swore blind that it was a legitimate investment opportunity before abruptly shutting it down and running off with everybody’s money.
https://behindmlm.com/mlm-reviews/website2share-review-1-to-50-chain-recruitment/
Mr. Stefak posts on Money Maker Group as byto2903 and he’s currently promoting this scam as well as another one called Buy Time.