I became aware of HyperFund following a
securities fraud warning issued by the UK’s FCA
.
HyperFund is the latest launch by Ryan Xu’s company HyperTech.
HyperTech represents it operates from Hong Kong. Whether Xu is based in Hong Kong or elsewhere is unclear.
On LinkedIn Xu represents he is in Melbourne, Australia.
BehindMLM first became aware of Xu and HyperTech through our Jan 2020
HyperCapital review
.
HyperCapital was a Ponzi scheme launched to resurrect HyperCash (formerly HCash), a failed shitcoin Xu launched a few years earlier.
HyperCapital failed to have any impact on HyperCash’s public trading value:
HyperCapital was eventually abandoned and today its website is defunct.
HyperFund was announced in mid 2020. It is essentially Xu and HyperTech’s migration to DeFi.
Which is to say we can likely expect more the same crypto investment related fraud.
Read on for a full review of HyperFund’s MLM opportunity.
HyperFund’s Products
HyperFund has no retailable products or services, with affiliates only able to market HyperFund affiliate membership itself.
HyperFund’s Compensation Plan
HyperFund refer to their MLM opportunity and compensation pan as “HyperCommunity”.
HyperFund affiliates invest tether (USDT) into HU, an internal token, on the promise of a 300% ROI.
HU investment tiers are 300, 500 and 1000.
Apparently the regular return is 200% but there seems to be a perpetual 300% limited time offer.
The 300% cap is calculated based off a daily return plus earned commissions (detailed below).
HyperFund pays returns daily in HU. Withdrawals to actual money are made through an internal exchange (HyperPay).
Note that once 300% has been realized, reinvestment is required to continue earning. HyperFund reinvestment is made in 50 HU increments.
Also note that 20% of commissions paid out (excludes daily returns), must be reinvested into various tokens HyperFund is promoting).
Residual Commissions
HyperFund pays referral 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.
HyperFund caps payable unilevel team levels at twenty.
Referral commissions are paid as a percentage of daily HU earnings paid across these twenty levels as follows:
level 1 (personally recruited affiliates) – 20%
level 2 – 15%
level 3 – 10%
levels 4 to 6 – 5%
levels 7 to 15 – 2%
levels 16 to 20 – 1%
Note that each unilevel team level requires a recruited affiliate with an active investment to qualify.
E.g. you need to recruit and maintain one affiliate investor to earn commissions on level 1.
You need to recruit and maintain
🤖 Quick Answer
What is HyperFund and its connection to HyperTech?HyperFund is a cryptocurrency platform launched by Ryan Xu's company HyperTech, reportedly operating from Hong Kong. The project represents the company's expansion into decentralized finance following previous ventures including HyperCapital and HyperCash, which faced regulatory scrutiny and market failure.
What regulatory issues has HyperFund faced?
HyperFund became subject to a securities fraud warning issued by the UK's Financial Conduct Authority. The warning highlighted concerns regarding its operational legitimacy and investor protection compliance within British jurisdiction.
What was HyperCapital's role in HyperTech's history?
HyperCapital was a Ponzi scheme launched around 2020 designed to revitalize HyperCash, Xu's earlier failed cryptocurrency project. Despite the initiative
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