The One Cent Review: Adcredit matrix cycler Ponzi
The One Cent fails to provide ownership or executive information on its website.
The One Cent’s website domain (“theonecent.com”), was privately registered on September 19th, 2023.
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.
The One Cent’s Products
The One Cent has no retailable products or services.
Affiliates are only able to market The One Cent affiliate membership itself.
Once signed up, The One Cent affiliates invest in a matrix cycler.
Bundled with each each position purchase are ad credits. The One Cent adcredits can be used to display banner advertising to other affiliates.
The One Cent’s Compensation Plan
The One Cent affiliates purchase matrix cycler positions for 1 cent in $1 batches.
Matrix sizes within The One Cent aren’t disclosed, but we do know there are ten matrix cycler tiers.
Regardless of the size of matrices used in The One Cent’s cycler, the premise is the same.
Positions within each matrix are filled via subsequent position purchases by newly recruited and existing The One Cent affiliates. Funds from these position purchases are used to pay returns on prior position purchases.
The One Cent’s marketing pitches a $125,800 ROI off a $1 investment. This scales upwards, depending on how many $1 positions are purchased.
Matching Bonus
The One Cent pays a 100% Matching Bonus on cycler returns paid out to personally recruited affiliates.
Joining The One Cent
The One Cent affiliate membership is free.
Full participation in the attached income opportunity requires a minimum $1 investment.
The One Cent solicits investment in various cryptocurrencies.
The One Cent Conclusion
The One Cent lets you know it’s scam via marketing copy on its website:
Navigating the world of M2M Platform
“M2M” stands for “member to member”. This means that all that happens within The One Cent is members are paying each other – specifically later recruited members are paying off earlier members.
This is your classic MLM Ponzi schemes.
As with all MLM Ponzi schemes, once affiliate recruitment dries up so too will new investment.
Being a cycler Ponzi, this will see matrices within the cycler stall. Once enough matrices have stalled, an irreversible collapse is triggered.
The math behind Ponzi schemes guarantees that when they collapse, the majority of participants lose money.
Owner has the email Forex4all2022@(removed). It is the default referral.
This one is run by Stephen Clark or Andy Scott aka Kamrain Baig (same guy that uses different aliases)
His scam sites:
wealthwaves.org
way2wealth.online
thefastpay.com
theonecent.com
mlmwhales.com
25centsclub.com
He is working with Elton Potts of itsonly5.com
Their new site is called itsonly25cents.com
Thanks for the heads up!