November was an interesting month for the HyperTech and its HyperFund Ponzi scheme:
HyperTech owner Ryan Xu has disappeared;
one of Ryan Xu’s and Sam Lee’s Australian shell companies collapsed;
HyperFund withdrawals have been disabled;
HyperTech has a new Boris CEO;
Hyperverse was announced; and
HyperFund’s website has been pulled offline.
Ruh-roh…
What was originally supposed to be a
HyperFund promotional extravaganza in the US
, instead went ahead as just another cryptobro snorefest.
To the best of my knowledge HyperTech owner Ryan Xu was a no-show at Rodney Burton’s “Reinvent Yourself With Crypto” event.
HyperTech is the umbrella shell company Xu runs his various crypto Ponzi schemes through.
If Xu (aka Zijing Xu) attended Burton’s event, it was kept extremely low-key. Ditto any mention of HyperTech and/or HyperFund.
Perhaps more concerning to HyperFund’s investors, is that Xu hasn’t been seen since he announced plans to attend Burton’s event.
That was now two months ago.
Xu, along with the rest of HyperTech/HyperFund management, are believed to be
hiding out in Dubai
.
To explain away Xu’s disappearance, HyperTech revealed a new Boris CEO:
“Steven Reece Lewis” introduces himself as HyperTech’s “new executive officer”.
Lewis’ Boris CEO cover story is that he “joined HyperTech Group in the beginning of 2021”.
Nobody in or outside of HyperTech and HyperFund has ever seen Lewis until now. Naturally Lewis doesn’t exist outside of this one HyperTech marketing video either.
There was a LinkedIn profile featuring what appeared to be a younger Lewis, however that was recently deleted.
Probably around the time Xu hired Lewis to play HyperTech CEO.
In his introduction video, Lewis suggests Xu disappeared due to crypto regulations in China:
It is unfortunate with the China crypto ban, Chinese leaders in our management team have to step down a little bit.
Seeing as Xu is hiding out in Dubai since at least Q1 2021, this of course makes no sense.
Xu disappearance and Lewis’ appointment as Boris CEO, HyperFund MOF withdrawals have been disabled.
I noted this in the
comments of BehindMLM’s HyperFund review
on November 22nd.
The timing of HyperFund disabling withdrawals was the week before the holiday shopping season commenced in the US.
This is obviously not a coincidence.
The official excuse though is that HyperTech is switching MOF from an ERC-20 shit token to a TRC-20 shit token.
Again, this ruse makes no sense.
Setting up an ERC-20 token takes 5 minutes. Setting up a TRX-20 token is as trivial an undertaking.
After spending five minutes to create a MOF TRX-20 token, all that’s left is switching out MOF ERC-20 from HyperFund’s database to MOF TRX-20.
This certainly wouldn’t take almost two weeks and counting.
In related news, November also saw Blockchain Global shell company
collapse
.
Blockchain Global
was co-founded by Ryan Xu and Sam Lee (aka Xue Lee), as “BitCoin Group” in 2014.
Blockchain Global was a the precu
🤖 Quick Answer
What major changes occurred at HyperTech and HyperFund in November?HyperFund experienced significant disruptions including disabled withdrawals, its website being taken offline, and the appointment of a new CEO named Boris. Simultaneously, HyperTech owner Ryan Xu disappeared, one of his Australian shell companies collapsed, and a new project called Hyperverse was announced.
Who is Ryan Xu and what is his role in HyperTech?
Ryan Xu, also known as Zijing Xu, is the owner and operator of HyperTech, an umbrella shell company through which he manages multiple cryptocurrency investment schemes, including HyperFund, which has been characterized as a Ponzi scheme.
What was the significance of Rodney Burton's "Reinvent Yourself With Crypto" event?
The event was originally planned as a major Hy
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