Seedchange Investment Scheme: A Fake Broker-Dealer Running a Ponzi Racket

Seedchange doesn't tell you who runs it—and that's the least of its problems.

The operation claims to be an investment platform founded in 2012 in San Francisco. It says securities are offered through Seedchange Execution Services, Inc., a broker-dealer registered with the SEC and FINRA. The website domain, scinvesting.com, was first registered in 2014. None of it checks out.

The California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation caught them red-handed in an October 29th consumer alert. Someone simply registered a domain and copied Seedchange Execution Services' name, address, logo, and website template wholesale. It's identity theft on an industrial scale.

The real Seedchange Execution Services has been registered with the SEC since 2014. Its last public filing came June 3rd, 2019—reporting $145,975 in losses for the year ended March 31, 2019. That legitimate company has nothing to do with the fake investment scheme operating under its stolen name.

Seedchange's fake operation offers no actual products. Members can only recruit other members and funnel money into fictional "investment opportunities." The compensation structure is pure Ponzi mechanics, with returns paid from new investor deposits, not actual business profits.

The scheme wraps itself in fake companies. Auric Energy promises 0.5% daily returns for 285 days on a $100 minimum investment. JMW Farms offers the same daily rate for 290 days starting at $200. Serene Fishing Company demands $2,000 for 0.6% daily returns over 255 days. XT Energy wants $5,000 for 0.7% daily. Energeotek requires $8,000 for 1% daily returns. Legacy Measurement Solutions extracts $10,000 for 1.1% daily. St. Nicholas Court Farms takes $18,000 for 1.3% daily. Lakes Oil NL demands $20,000 for 1.3% daily returns.

Those percentages are fantasy. No legitimate investment generates 0.5% to 1.3% daily returns consistently. Anyone offering such numbers is stealing money.

The math collapses fast. Someone investing $100 into Auric Energy would earn $142.50 over 285 days—if the company actually existed and actually paid. In reality, that money vanishes. Seedchange pays early investors with money from new recruits. When recruitment slows, the whole structure implodes and everyone loses.

The operation's anonymity should trigger immediate suspicion. A legitimate investment firm publishes names, credentials, office locations, and regulatory history. Seedchange publishes nothing. The stolen identity of a defunct broker-dealer is the closest thing to legitimacy they can claim—and they stole that too.

Law enforcement and financial regulators have warned consumers about this scheme. If you've already sent money to Seedchange, document everything and report it to your state attorney general's office and the SEC. Don't expect to recover funds. Cut losses, learn the lesson, and warn others.

Anyone considering investing with an operation that hides its ownership deserves the fraud they'll inevitably suffer. Seedchange isn't investment—it's theft with a fake website.


🤖 Quick Answer

Is Seedchange a legitimate investment platform?
No. Seedchange operates as an unauthorized broker-dealer running a Ponzi scheme. The California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation issued a consumer alert identifying it as fraudulent. The operation illegally uses the identity of the legitimate Seedchange Execution Services, copying its name, address, logo, and website design without authorization.

What are the red flags of the Seedchange investment scheme?
The platform fails to disclose its operators, claims SEC and FINRA registration without authorization, and uses a domain (scinvesting.com) registered in 2014. The California financial regulator determined operators registered a domain and systematically copied the legitimate firm's branding and website structure—constituting identity theft at scale.

How does Seedchange operate as a Ponzi scheme?
Seedchange functions as a fraudulent investment platform that misrepresents regulatory compliance and


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