Pascal Moreno registered the Ahyio Trading DWC-LLC domain on March 28, 2016, listing an address in the Parisian region of France. This entity, which uses a Dubai P.O. Box, offers 3D devices and a proprietary cryptocurrency called Ahyio Coin, but lacks clear ownership details.
Moreno's online presence shows a history of promoting various multi-level marketing (MLM) programs. His YouTube channel features promotional videos in French for Lifevantage and the BeOnPush Ponzi scheme. His Facebook profile markets Empower Network, Rippln, and Wor(l)d Global Network, all known for their MLM structures. The exact nature of Moreno's involvement with Ahyio remains undefined on the company's public-facing materials.
Ahyio's Terms of Service list contact details for a company named Adquatic. Adquatic's website describes itself as an "offshore development centre with teams in Africa, Europe, India, and Dubai." The connection between Adquatic and Ahyio is not publicly clarified, adding to the opacity surrounding Ahyio's operations.
Ahyio does not offer retailable products. Affiliates primarily market Ahyio affiliate memberships. Two affiliate packages include devices advertised to display 3D content without glasses. The Xtrem pack costs €820 EUR and contains an "X-trem" tablet with Android 4.0, a 10.1" FULL HD 3D screen at 1920x1200 resolution, a TI OMAP4470 1.5GHz Cortext-A9 + DUAL-CORE M3 CPU, and 16GB internal memory. The D-Trem pack, priced at €880 EUR, includes a "D-trem" cell phone running Android 5.1, featuring a 1.7GHz octa-core MailT720 processor, 32GB EMMC internal memory, 3GB DDR3 RAM, dual SIM card support, and a 6050mAH battery. Both packages include a mining position in an Ahyio Coin mining pool.
The Ahyio Coin itself does not yet exist. The Ahyio website provides no specific details about this proposed cryptocurrency. The company's marketing materials offer little substantive information regarding the 3D technology in their devices. One video shows a person watching content on a tablet, but the content itself is not visible, making it impossible to verify the 3D functionality.
The compensation plan pays affiliates to recruit new members through a unilevel structure. An affiliate occupies the top position, with directly recruited individuals placed on their first level. Subsequent recruits by those individuals populate lower levels, up to a maximum of ten payable levels. Affiliates earn a percentage of package fees: 10% from level 1, 2% from levels 2 through 5, and 1% from levels 6 and 7.
Residual commissions operate under a binary structure. An affiliate leads a binary team split into left and right sides. Positions fill through both direct and indirect recruitment. Sales volume generates when recruits purchase affiliate packages, excluding basic memberships. At the close of each day, Ahyio calculates sales volume on both sides. Affiliates receive 10% of the volume from their weaker side. Matched volume clears from both sides, while any leftover volume on the stronger side carries over.
Career Plan Bonuses activate at specific binary volume thresholds. Reaching €100,000 EUR in volume yields a €5,000 EUR bonus. A €200,000 EUR volume milestone results in a €10,000 EUR bonus. Further bonuses include €15,000 EUR for €300,000 EUR volume, €25,000 EUR for €500,000 EUR volume, €50,000 EUR for €1,000,000 EUR volume, and €100,000 EUR for €10,000,000 EUR volume.
The basic affiliate membership costs €40 EUR. The X-trem and D-trem packages, at €820 EUR and €880 EUR respectively, include the 3D devices and the Ahyio Coin mining position. The specifications of these devices do not justify the high price point, suggesting the 3D function, if present, is likely software-driven. These products are not offered for retail sale independent of the income opportunity. This structure means commissions rely solely on affiliate recruitment and package purchases, a characteristic of pyramid schemes. Without a genuine retail offering, the financial model depends entirely on new participant money.
The Ahyio Coin component appears to be an addition without clear integration into the core offering. The lack of detailed information regarding its development, purpose, or market value raises questions about its legitimacy. This opaque setup, coupled with the absence of transparent ownership and management, leaves participants exposed to significant financial risk. The business model will inevitably collapse when recruitment slows, as it is the only source of commissions.