YourNewEarnings, operating as a micro Ponzi scheme, registered its domain "yournewearnings.com" on August 11, 2012. The website's registration information remains set to private, concealing the identities of its owners and operators from public view.
A message at the bottom of the YourNewEarnings website credits "Created By C. Jansson." However, no further information confirms whether Jansson owns the company, merely designed the site, or both. This lack of transparency about who runs an MLM company often signals caution for potential participants considering an investment.
The YourNewEarnings platform offers no retailable products or services. Its business model centers entirely on members joining and purchasing "positions" within the system.
Upon acquiring a position for $1, members reportedly earn 2 cents daily for up to 75 days. This structure promises a total return on investment of $1.50 per position.
After five initial positions mature, members receive a spot in a 2x3 matrix. This matrix begins with the member at the top, branching out into three positions, which then each expand into three more, totaling 12 positions. A member collects $7.50 once all 12 matrix positions fill. YourNewEarnings specifies that only personally recruited members can fill these matrix spots, and only after their own five position investments have matured.
The scheme also pays referral commissions. Recruiters earn 5 cents for every $1 position purchased by someone they personally referred. Membership itself is free, but earning money requires buying these investment positions.
Without any external products or services generating revenue, the daily guaranteed return on investment offered by YourNewEarnings depends entirely on new member funds. The system uses money from new investments to pay returns owed to existing investors. This model aligns with the definition of a Ponzi scheme.
YourNewEarnings claims its scheme is "indefinitely sustainable." They attribute this to a mechanism they call "the C.A.P." This system reportedly closes down investment positions that have not yet generated at least 40 cents for their owners. The funds from these collapsed positions are then "pumped" into the matrices, supposedly to keep the system running.
