INBS International is a continuation of the Mainston Ponzi scheme.
In an attempt to create the illusion of distance, Mainston is presented on INBS International’s website as a partner company.
In reality INBS International is run by the same people who run Mainston; Fabrice Kerherve and Patrick and Sandra Colin.
For all intents and purposes Mainston and INBS International are the same company.
Mainston originally launched
in 2015 as a simple four-tier deep pyramid scheme. I believe it collapsed by the end of the year.
Fabrice Kerherve resurfaced in 2019 with
Flash4People
, a failed MLM crypto Ponzi attempt.
A few months later Kerherve resurrected Mainston to try again.
Mainston’s Ponzi reboot
saw it market STON tokens, which Kerherve and his Colin partners sold to gullible investors.
According to Mainston’s website, the company bilked investors out of €8.5 million euros.
After investment dried up, so too did interest in Mainston.
To placate angry investors and as predicted in our July 2019 Mainston reboot review, the company opted for the exchange exit-scam model.
Once their secret ICO is over, or Kerherve and his partners are satisfied they’ve milked as much as they’re going to get out of investors, attempts to get STON listed on some dodgy public exchanges will begin.
Once one or more suitable exchanges are found, STOR will set a public listing launch date.
This will hype the initial listing price, further allowing Kerherve and his partners to cash out at STON’s pumped initial listing value.
Because STON is an utterly pointless shitcoin that brings absolutely nothing new to the table, it’ll then start to dump.
The exit-scam plays out by way of angry affiliates realizing they’ve been cheated, only to be told Mainston upheld their part of the contract by providing them with a token.
Fabrice Kerherve and his co-conspirators make off invested funds, and if it’s enough they’ll never be seen again.
The exchange Mainston found to list its token on was Latoken, a dodgy shitcoin exchange run out of Russia.
STON’s Latoken listing appears to have taken place last December or so.
After the initial dump, STON flatlined until earlier this month:
This coincides with ramped up promotion of INBS International.
Read on for a full review of INBS International’s MLM opportunity.
INBS International’s Products
INBS International has no retailable products or services, with affiliates only able to market INBS International affiliate membership itself.
In order to participate in the attached MLM opportunity, INBS International affiliates are forced to purchase in-house products each month.
Rhin Blue – phycocyanin liquid energy supplement
5K – “particularly suitable for anyone looking for increased performance and an antioxidant effect (sports, students)”
10K – “this is our most powerful product in terms of the quantity of phycocyanin it contains”
INBS International claims all of their supplements are manufactured in Europe.
Including sh
🤖 Quick Answer
# INBS International Review: Mainston Ponzi Reboot
What is the relationship between INBS International and Mainston?
INBS International represents a continuation of the Mainston Ponzi scheme. Although presented as a partner company on INBS International's website, both entities are operated by identical management, including Fabrice Kerherve and Patrick and Sandra Colin, functioning as a single organization.
What was the original Mainston scheme?
Mainston launched in 2015 as a four-tier deep pyramid scheme structured to generate revenue through recruitment rather than legitimate product sales. The scheme reportedly collapsed by year's end.
What occurred between Mainston's collapse and its reboot?
Following Mainston's failure, Fabrice Kerherve emerged in 2019 with Flash4People, an unsuccessful MLM cryptocurrency Ponzi venture. Subsequently, Ker
🔗 Related Articles
- XRP AI Bot Review: Gohar bros launch AI bot ruse Ponzi
- DexNet Review: Dubai MLM crypto securities fraud
- Defi Synergy Review: AI trading bot ruse MLM crypto Ponzi
- Loanledger pyramid fraud warning from Russia
- Quantex securities fraud warning from QC, Canada
