Hypertech is the company's parent corporation. Three similar systems have collapsed in the past, and now all three are being relaunched at once.
The most recent one, HyperCapital (Hyper Capital), was a "failed" attempt to revive a nearly worthless currency called Hypercash (which they somehow got on exchanges) (HCash).
Ryan Xu, who claims to be Australian, is the founder.
Hyperfund asserts they were developed by industry leading Blockchain "Experts."
Multi-level-marketing/network-marketing/passive-cryptocurrency-investment firm
Hyperfund (Hypertech has been actively attempting to circumvent Security Regulators' investor fraud alerts by continuously switching domains.
Thehyperfund.com is their newest domain, but I wouldn't be shocked if they have more.
The new domains are meant to prevent potential fraud and protect new investors (to not scare new money away from the platform).
Click here: Hyperfund Login
Not one of their services or products is available for sale to the general public. Affiliates and MLM Distributors can only advertise and promote their affiliate links to unwary investors.
The compensation scheme is based on the number of HU tokens invested (300, 500, or 1,000). (for reasons that will become clear in a moment).
Partners and investors of Hypertech must first convert their assets to Tether before they can purchase HU, Hypertech's proprietary cryptocurrency (USDT).
The marketing for Hyperfund claims a 20% return on investment is possible.
Network marketers at Hyperfund have made an attempt to triple the ROI from 200% to 3000%.
This is the guarantee the networkers are offering to potential customers in order to entice them to take part in the offer.
The 300, 500, or 1,000 HU Coins package is the standard investment package.
Investors are converting USDT for HU Tokens because of a guaranteed 200% return on investment.
Hyperfund Final Thoughts
Although Hyperfund is being advertised as a group of Blockchain "experts," it is actually simply another MLM/Network Marketing operation that isn't properly registered with the government.
In exchange for "investing" in their proprietary tokens (HU), the company promises users actual, legitimate, and value-based Tether (USDT).
In an effort to entice investors, Network Marketers (who appear to have added another 100% ROI to the company's projected 200% ROI) use a sales pitch based on the golden rule.
Investors "purchase" a package of 300, 500, or 1,000 HUs.
Because most investors would be left with worthless HU Tokens once money from network marketing recruitment dries up, the Hyperfund scam will eventually fail.
The'real' Crypto (USDT) provided by unknowing investors is what Ryan Xu and his homies are after.
Throughout my time spent online, I've witnessed the rise and fall of countless communities, businesses, and technological frameworks. I have been active in multi-level marketing (MLM) online since 2006 and offline since the 1980s (as an affiliate marketer).
Reviewing is something I've been doing since 2013.
If you're still on the hunt for a means to make money on the side, you might want to check out: