A new entity called Unity Club emerged on April 21, replacing the defunct Global Unity scheme. Its domain, unityclub.biz, registered that day, lists "Utf CN" as the owner and ZhiQiang Peng as the admin contact. Both share a Hong Kong address, suggesting a continuation of previous operations.

Global Unity directly followed the WCM777 Ponzi scheme. Founder Phil Ming Xu announced selling WCM777 after facing regulatory pressure, claiming new owners would legitimize the business. Instead, Global Unity continued a similar model.

The new operators based Global Unity in Hong Kong. Affiliates then claimed the company was safe from the SEC due to its offshore location. They asserted, "SEC is only for USA. As already known the company not operating currently in USA. The rest of the world continues its activity." Promoters also suggested the new Hong Kong management team operated with "much more professionalism" than previous iterations, promising that Global Unity would "not close, will continue its activity and will continue to pay according to the payment Plan."

Operations went quiet in late March. Global Unity's website went offline a week into April, displaying an "under construction" message.

The Unity Club domain was registered on April 21. "Utf CN" is listed as the domain owner, with ZhiQiang Peng as the administrative contact. Both names are tied to the same Hong Kong address. The Unity Club website currently displays an affiliate login portal, offering little public information. It shows diagnostic data similar to what Global Unity's site displayed before its closure.

Both the Global Unity and Unity Club sites appear to run the same backend script. The shared backend script between Global Unity and Unity Club indicates the operators simply rebranded the scheme.