How to Verify if an Investment Company Is Legit in the Philippines

I. Introduction

Investment scams are common in the Philippines. They often appear as business opportunities, online trading platforms, cooperatives, lending programs, cryptocurrency ventures, foreign exchange schemes, real estate pooling, franchise investments, crowdfunding projects, agricultural ventures, casino financing, artificial intelligence trading systems, “passive income” programs, or social media investment groups.

Many scams look professional. They may have a website, app, office, receipts, contracts, celebrity-style endorsements, testimonials, seminars, group chats, screenshots of payouts, and even business registration documents. Some scammers claim they are “SEC registered,” “DTI registered,” “BIR registered,” or “mayor’s permit approved.” Others say they are “not an investment company” but still solicit money from the public with promises of profit.

In the Philippines, the most important point is this: registration as a business is not the same as authority to solicit investments from the public. A corporation may be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission, but that does not automatically allow it to sell securities, investment contracts, pooled investments, shares, notes, tokens, memberships, or profit-sharing arrangements to the public.

A legitimate investment company must be properly registered, properly licensed where required, transparent about risks, honest about returns, and compliant with securities, banking, consumer protection, anti-fraud, anti-money laundering, data privacy, and other applicable laws.

This article explains how to verify whether an investment company is legitimate in the Philippines, the legal red flags of investment scams, the documents to check, the agencies involved, the rights of investors, and the remedies available when a person has already invested in a suspicious scheme.


II. Basic Rule: Business Registration Is Not Enough

Many Filipinos are misled by the phrase “SEC registered.” A company may show a certificate of incorporation and claim that it is legitimate. However, a certificate of incorporation merely proves that the corporation exists as a juridical entity. It does not automatically mean the corporation is authorized to solicit investments from the public.

A legitimate investment activity may require additional authority, such as:

Registration of securities;

License to sell securities;

Secondary license from the SEC;

Authority to operate as an investment company, broker, dealer, investment house, financing company, lending company, crowdfunding intermediary, or similar regulated entity;

Authority from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas if the activity involves banking, quasi-banking, e-money, remittance, virtual asset services, or other BSP-regulated activity;

Authority from the Insurance Commission if the product is insurance, pre-need, HMO, or similar regulated product;

Authority from the Cooperative Development Authority if the entity is a cooperative, subject to limitations on who may invest;

Other specific permits depending on the nature of the business.

Thus, the first legal question is not only “Is the company registered?” but “Is the company authorized to offer this specific investment product to the public?”


III. What Is an Investment Scam?

An investment scam is a fraudulent scheme that solicits money from people by promising income, profit, dividends, interest, commissions, trading gains, or returns, while misrepresenting the nature, legality, risk, profitability, or source of the investment.

Investment scams may involve:

Fake corporations;

Real corporations without authority to solicit investments;

Ponzi schemes;

Pyramid schemes;

Fake trading platforms;

Fake cryptocurrency exchanges;

Fake mining operations;

Unregistered securities offerings;

Unauthorized lending pools;

Fake cooperatives;

Fake franchises;

Agricultural investment scams;

Real estate pooling scams;

Casino or junket financing scams;

Online tasking schemes;

Foreign exchange schemes;

Fake AI trading bots;

Fake mutual funds;

Fake private placements;

Fake government-backed investments;

Fake charity or religious investment programs.

A scam may continue paying early investors for a while to create trust. But if payouts come mainly from new investors rather than real business profits, the scheme is unsustainable and may collapse.


IV. What Is a Security?

In Philippine law and securities regulation, the term security is broad. It may include shares, bonds, notes, investment contracts, participation certificates, profit-sharing agreements, units in investment schemes, and other instruments where people invest money in a common enterprise with expectation of profits primarily from the efforts of others.

Many scammers avoid calling their product a “security.” They may call it:

Package;

Slot;

Membership;

Account;

Capital placement;

Funding agreement;

Partnership share;

Co-ownership;

Trading subscription;

Staking;

Mining contract;

Profit-sharing plan;

Lending pool;

Franchise package;

Advertising package;

Task package;

Educational package;

Donation program;

Blessing circle;

Community fund;

Savings program.

The name does not control. If the substance is that people give money and expect profits from the efforts of the promoter or company, securities regulation may apply.


V. Investment Contract

An investment contract usually exists when a person invests money in a common enterprise and expects profits primarily from the efforts of others.

This is important because many scams do not sell traditional shares of stock. Instead, they offer “investment packages” promising fixed returns. Even without stock certificates, the arrangement may still be a security if it functions as an investment contract.

Examples may include:

“Invest ₱10,000 and earn 20% monthly.”

“Fund our trading bot and receive daily profits.”

“Buy a package and earn passive income.”

“Place capital in our lending pool and receive guaranteed interest.”

“Invest in our farm and receive harvest profits without doing work.”

“Buy crypto mining shares and receive weekly payouts.”

If the public is being asked to invest and rely on the company’s efforts to generate profits, the scheme may require SEC registration and authority.


VI. Difference Between a Legitimate Business and an Investment Solicitation

A business may lawfully sell goods or services. But when it asks the public to put money into the business in exchange for profits, it may be soliciting investments.

For example:

A restaurant selling food is ordinary business.

A restaurant asking the public to invest ₱50,000 per slot for monthly profit-sharing may be offering securities.

A farm selling vegetables is ordinary business.

A farm asking people to invest in “goat packages” or “crop packages” with promised returns may be offering investment contracts.

A trading educator selling lessons may be a service provider.

A trading educator pooling money and promising profits from trading may be soliciting investments.

The legal issue depends on substance, not marketing language.


VII. Main Agencies to Check

1. Securities and Exchange Commission

The SEC is the primary agency for corporations, securities offerings, investment contracts, brokers, dealers, investment houses, financing companies, lending companies, crowdfunding, and many investment-related activities.

For investment verification, the SEC is usually the first agency to check.

2. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas

The BSP regulates banks, quasi-banks, non-bank financial institutions under its authority, e-money issuers, remittance agents, money service businesses, and certain virtual asset service providers.

If the company claims to be a bank, digital bank, e-wallet, remittance company, payment platform, crypto exchange, virtual asset service provider, or deposit-taking entity, BSP authority may be relevant.

3. Insurance Commission

The Insurance Commission regulates insurance companies, insurance agents, pre-need companies, HMOs, and related products.

If the investment is packaged as insurance, pre-need, memorial plan, pension plan, education plan, health plan, or annuity-like product, check the Insurance Commission.

4. Cooperative Development Authority

Cooperatives are registered with the CDA. However, cooperative registration does not authorize unrestricted public investment solicitation. A cooperative generally serves its members and must follow cooperative law.

A fake cooperative or a cooperative soliciting from non-members may be suspicious.

5. Department of Trade and Industry

DTI registration may apply to sole proprietorship business names. However, DTI registration does not authorize a person to solicit investments from the public.

A DTI certificate only means a business name was registered. It is not an investment license.

6. Local Government Units

A mayor’s permit or business permit allows local business operation in a locality. It does not authorize securities solicitation.

7. Bureau of Internal Revenue

BIR registration allows tax compliance. It does not authorize investment-taking.

A company may have a BIR certificate and still be running an illegal investment scheme.


VIII. Step-by-Step Guide to Verify Legitimacy

Step 1: Get the Exact Legal Name

Ask for the exact registered legal name of the company. Do not rely only on brand names, app names, Facebook page names, group chat names, or trade names.

Ask:

What is the registered corporate name?

What is the SEC registration number?

Does the company have a secondary license?

What specific investment product is being offered?

Is the securities offering registered?

Who are the directors, officers, promoters, and agents?

What is the official address?

What is the official website?

Who is authorized to solicit investments?

If the promoter refuses to provide these, that is a red flag.


Step 2: Check SEC Corporate Registration

Verify whether the corporation exists. But remember: corporate registration is only the first step.

A certificate of incorporation does not mean the company may sell investments. The articles of incorporation may even say that the corporation has no authority to solicit investments without prior SEC approval.

If the company shows only a certificate of incorporation, ask for the separate authority to offer securities or investments.


Step 3: Check for Secondary License or Authority

For investment-related activities, a company may need a secondary license or specific authority.

Ask:

Is the investment product registered with the SEC?

Does the company have a permit to sell securities?

Is it licensed as a broker, dealer, investment house, investment company, crowdfunding intermediary, or other regulated entity?

Is the person talking to you a licensed salesperson or representative?

Can they show official proof of authority?

If there is no authority to solicit investments, do not invest.


Step 4: Check SEC Advisories and Warnings

The SEC issues advisories against entities soliciting investments without authority. A company appearing in an advisory is a serious red flag.

However, the absence of an advisory does not automatically mean legitimacy. A new scam may not yet have been reported. Always verify authority directly.


Step 5: Check the Product, Not Just the Company

A company may be registered for one purpose but offer another unauthorized product.

For example:

A corporation registered as a trading company offers public investment slots.

A lending company offers investment notes to fund loans.

A farm corporation sells guaranteed profit packages.

A tech company offers AI trading investments.

A cooperative solicits investments from non-members.

A real estate company pools money from the public for profit-sharing.

Verify whether the specific product is authorized, not just whether the company exists.


Step 6: Check How Returns Are Generated

Ask how the company produces income.

Legitimate investments should explain:

Business model;

Risk factors;

Use of funds;

Revenue source;

Costs;

Management;

Market risks;

Regulatory compliance;

Financial statements;

Audited reports;

Investor rights;

Exit terms.

Be suspicious if the explanation is vague, such as:

“Trading secret”;

“AI guaranteed system”;

“Crypto arbitrage”;

“Government partnership”;

“Casino financing”;

“High-frequency trading”;

“Imported goods”;

“Private lending”;

“Don’t ask too many questions”;

“Just trust the system.”

A real investment can explain how money is made. A scam often hides behind jargon.


Step 7: Check Whether Returns Are Guaranteed

Guaranteed high returns are one of the strongest red flags.

Examples:

5% daily;

20% monthly;

100% in 30 days;

Double your money;

No risk;

Guaranteed payout;

Fixed profit forever;

Capital guaranteed;

Guaranteed passive income;

Lifetime earnings.

All real investments carry risk. A company promising high, fixed, risk-free returns should be treated with extreme suspicion.


Step 8: Check Recruitment Incentives

If income depends heavily on recruiting new investors, the scheme may be a pyramid or Ponzi-type scheme.

Red flags include:

Referral bonuses;

Pairing bonuses;

Binary structure;

Level commissions;

Downline earnings;

Team cycle bonuses;

Rank advancement;

Package upgrades;

Leadership rewards;

Earnings larger from recruitment than product sales.

Legitimate businesses may have marketing commissions, but if the main source of income is recruiting investors, the scheme is suspicious.


Step 9: Check Contracts and Disclosures

A legitimate investment should have clear written documents.

Review:

Investment agreement;

Subscription agreement;

Risk disclosure statement;

Prospectus or offering document, where required;

Terms and conditions;

Refund or withdrawal terms;

Lock-in period;

Fees;

Penalties;

Investor rights;

Dispute resolution;

Company obligations;

Audited financial statements;

Use of proceeds;

Regulatory registration.

Be cautious if the contract is vague, one-sided, unsigned, undated, or inconsistent with verbal promises.


Step 10: Check Payment Channels

A legitimate company should use official company accounts.

Red flags include payment to:

Personal GCash accounts;

Personal bank accounts;

Crypto wallet of an individual;

Cash to recruiter;

Multiple rotating accounts;

Foreign accounts unrelated to company;

Accounts under a different name;

Payment through gift cards or gaming credits;

No official receipt.

Always ask for an official receipt or acknowledgment under the registered company name.


IX. Red Flags of Investment Scams

Be cautious if the company or promoter:

Promises high guaranteed returns;

Claims no risk;

Pressures you to invest immediately;

Uses “limited slots” or “closing today” tactics;

Pays commissions for recruitment;

Cannot show SEC authority to solicit investments;

Shows only business registration;

Uses personal payment accounts;

Refuses to disclose owners or officers;

Uses celebrity photos without proof;

Claims government approval without documents;

Uses religious, family, or community trust to solicit money;

Discourages legal consultation;

Says “don’t tell the bank” or “don’t tell SEC”;

Claims banks are too slow and their system is better;

Uses complex jargon to hide simple money pooling;

Cannot explain actual business operations;

Has no audited financial statements;

Has no real product or service;

Requires reinvestment to withdraw;

Delays withdrawals with excuses;

Changes company names frequently;

Moves group chats often;

Threatens investors who complain;

Blames “system upgrades” for payout delays;

Claims “SEC registration pending” while already soliciting.

Several red flags together strongly suggest danger.


X. Common Types of Investment Scams in the Philippines

1. Ponzi Scheme

A Ponzi scheme pays old investors using money from new investors rather than real profit. It may appear successful at first because early investors receive payouts. Eventually, it collapses when new money slows down.

2. Pyramid Scheme

A pyramid scheme rewards recruitment more than real product sales. Participants earn from recruiting others who buy packages or slots.

3. Fake Trading Platform

The company claims to trade forex, crypto, stocks, commodities, or derivatives and promises fixed profits. The trading may be fake, unlicensed, or manipulated.

4. Cryptocurrency Scam

The scheme may involve tokens, mining, staking, liquidity pools, NFTs, arbitrage, wallets, or exchanges. Some are fake; others are real technology used for fraudulent fundraising.

5. Lending Pool Scam

Investors are told their money will be lent to borrowers at high interest, and they will receive fixed monthly returns. If the company is not authorized to solicit investments, this is dangerous.

6. Agricultural Investment Scam

Investors buy “piglets,” “chickens,” “goats,” “cows,” “rice farms,” “fish ponds,” or “greenhouse slots” and are promised guaranteed harvest profits. Many such schemes are unregistered investment contracts.

7. Real Estate Pooling Scam

Investors pool money for land, condominiums, rental units, subdivisions, or flipping projects with promised returns. Real estate activity does not exempt the offer from securities regulation.

8. Franchise Investment Scam

A company sells franchise-like packages but the investor does not actually operate a business. Instead, the company promises passive profit. This may be an investment contract.

9. Online Tasking Scam

Participants pay to join and earn by clicking, liking, reviewing, or completing tasks. Early small payouts are used to lure larger deposits.

10. Fake Cooperative Investment

A cooperative structure is used to solicit funds from the public. Real cooperatives have rules and member-based purposes; they are not a blanket license for public investment solicitation.

11. Casino, Junket, or Gaming Financing Scam

Investors are told their money will finance casino players or online gaming operations with guaranteed returns. These are highly suspicious and may involve illegal activity.

12. Religious or Community-Based Investment Scam

Promoters use church groups, community leaders, family networks, or local organizations to build trust. The emotional trust makes victims less likely to verify legality.


XI. “SEC Registered” Versus “Authorized to Solicit Investments”

This distinction is critical.

SEC registered corporation means the entity exists as a corporation.

Authorized to solicit investments means the entity has the necessary registration, permit, or license to offer securities or investment products to the public.

A company may be SEC registered but still illegal if it solicits investments without authority.

Ask for:

Certificate of incorporation;

Articles of incorporation;

Secondary license;

Registration statement for securities;

Permit to sell;

Approved prospectus or offering document;

License of salesperson or broker, if applicable.

If the company only shows the first document, verification is incomplete.


XII. DTI Registration Is Not Investment Authority

A sole proprietorship may register a business name with DTI. This does not permit public investment solicitation.

A person may say, “DTI registered po kami.” That is not enough. DTI registration does not authorize selling securities, investment contracts, crypto investments, pooled funds, or public profit-sharing schemes.


XIII. Mayor’s Permit Is Not Investment Authority

A mayor’s permit allows a business to operate locally in a city or municipality. It does not authorize investment solicitation.

A scam may have an office and mayor’s permit but still be illegal as an investment-taking scheme.


XIV. BIR Registration Is Not Investment Authority

BIR registration means the entity is registered for tax purposes. It does not mean the investment is legal.

Scammers may issue receipts to appear legitimate. A receipt does not cure illegal solicitation.


XV. CDA Registration Is Not Public Investment Authority

A cooperative registered with the CDA is not automatically allowed to solicit investments from the general public.

Questions to ask:

Are you a legitimate member?

Was membership properly approved?

Is the investment allowed under cooperative rules?

Are returns from actual cooperative operations?

Is the cooperative soliciting from non-members?

Are promised returns unusually high?

Is recruitment emphasized?

A cooperative label should not stop verification.


XVI. BSP Registration and Financial Products

If a company claims to be a digital bank, e-wallet, remittance company, money changer, crypto exchange, virtual asset provider, or payment platform, check whether it has BSP authority.

Warning signs include:

Offering deposit-like products without bank license;

Calling investments “savings” but promising high returns;

Accepting public funds like a bank;

Claiming crypto returns are guaranteed;

Using “wallet balances” as investment accounts;

Operating remittance or exchange services without authority.

A company cannot act like a bank without proper authority.


XVII. Insurance and Pre-Need Products

If the product is sold as insurance, education plan, memorial plan, pension plan, health plan, annuity, or guaranteed protection with investment features, check whether the company and agent are licensed by the Insurance Commission.

Ask:

Is the company licensed?

Is the agent licensed?

Is the product approved?

Is there a policy contract or plan contract?

What are the risks and exclusions?

Are returns guaranteed or projected?

Do not buy insurance-like investment products from unlicensed sellers.


XVIII. Cryptocurrency Investments

Cryptocurrency is often used in scams because it sounds modern and difficult to understand. The use of crypto does not remove the need to comply with Philippine law.

Red flags include:

Guaranteed crypto profits;

Secret trading bot;

AI arbitrage;

Mining packages;

Staking with fixed high returns;

Referral rewards;

Unregistered token sale;

Pressure to buy before listing;

Claims that regulation does not apply because it is “decentralized”;

Payment to personal wallets;

No audited proof of reserves;

No clear legal entity.

Crypto may be real technology, but many crypto investment schemes are fraudulent or unauthorized.


XIX. Forex Trading Schemes

Foreign exchange trading is risky. A company asking the public to invest in forex trading with guaranteed returns should be treated with suspicion.

Questions to ask:

Is the company licensed to manage funds?

Is it authorized to solicit investments?

Are investors trading themselves, or is the company trading for them?

Are returns guaranteed?

Where are funds held?

Is there an audited record?

Can the investor withdraw anytime?

Are there hidden fees?

If the promoter says, “We trade for you and guarantee profit,” verify thoroughly and be highly cautious.


XX. Stock Trading and Managed Accounts

Only properly licensed persons and entities may perform regulated securities activities. A person who pools money to trade stocks for others or manages investment accounts may need licensing and authority.

A social media personality or trader with screenshots of profits is not automatically licensed to manage public funds.


XXI. AI Trading Bot Schemes

Many scams now claim to use artificial intelligence. They promise automated trading profits from forex, crypto, stocks, or commodities.

Red flags include:

No audited performance;

No independent verification;

Guaranteed daily returns;

Referral-based compensation;

No regulatory authority;

Vague technology explanation;

Fake dashboards;

Withdrawals dependent on new deposits;

Excuses about system upgrades.

“AI” is not a legal exemption from securities regulation or fraud laws.


XXII. Real Estate Investment Schemes

Real estate may be legitimate, but real estate pooling can still be an investment contract.

Be cautious if a company asks the public to invest in:

Condo flipping;

Rental pooling;

Land banking;

Subdivision development;

Airbnb units;

Farm lots;

Memorial lots;

Warehouse units;

Co-ownership shares;

Title-less property projects;

Guaranteed buyback schemes.

Check land title, permits, developer license, authority to sell, securities registration, corporate authority, and actual ownership.


XXIII. Franchise Investment Schemes

A real franchise usually gives the franchisee the right to operate a business using a brand, system, and support. But some schemes sell “franchise packages” where the investor does nothing and simply receives passive profit.

If the company operates everything and the buyer only waits for returns, the arrangement may be an investment contract.

Ask:

Will I actually operate a branch?

Who owns inventory?

Who hires employees?

Who controls revenue?

Is profit guaranteed?

Is the franchise registered or documented?

Is this actually a securities offering disguised as a franchise?


XXIV. Lending and Financing Pools

Some companies offer investors fixed returns by claiming they lend money to borrowers. This is risky because the company may be operating as an unauthorized investment-taking entity.

A lending company may be authorized to lend, but that does not necessarily mean it may solicit investments from the public to fund loans.

Ask:

Is it authorized to lend?

Is it authorized to solicit investment funds?

Are the notes or investment contracts registered?

What happens if borrowers default?

Are returns guaranteed?

Are investor funds segregated?

Are there audited financial statements?


XXV. Agricultural and Livestock Packages

Agricultural scams are popular because they appear concrete. Promoters show farms, animals, crops, or processing facilities.

But even if a farm exists, the investment may still be unlawful if the company sells investment contracts without authority.

Red flags:

Guaranteed harvest returns;

Buyback promise;

No crop risk;

No disease risk;

No weather risk;

No actual control by investor;

Referral commissions;

Overly high return compared to farm economics;

No audited farm income;

No SEC authority to sell investment packages.

Real farms have risks. Guaranteed high returns in agriculture are suspicious.


XXVI. Investment Through Group Chats

Scams often use group chats to create urgency and social proof. Group admins post payout screenshots, testimonials, leaderboards, and “withdrawal proof.”

Be cautious of:

Group pressure;

Admins deleting negative comments;

Members shaming doubters;

Claims of “payout proof” without audited records;

Instructions to send money to recruiters;

No official documents;

Announcements of sudden deadline;

Requests to reinvest to unlock withdrawals.

Group excitement is not proof of legitimacy.


XXVII. Celebrity or Influencer Endorsements

An endorsement does not prove legality. Celebrities, influencers, vloggers, pastors, local officials, or community leaders may be paid, misled, or unaware of regulatory requirements.

Before investing, verify legal authority independently.


XXVIII. Government Employee or Police/Military Involvement

Some scams use government employees, police officers, soldiers, teachers, or local officials as promoters to build trust.

Their position does not make the investment legal. In fact, public officers promoting unauthorized investments may expose themselves to administrative or criminal consequences.


XXIX. Use of Religious or Family Trust

Scammers often target churches, family clans, OFW groups, teachers, retirees, military personnel, and small communities because trust spreads quickly.

Be careful when the pitch is:

“Help our church community grow funds.”

“Everyone in our barangay joined.”

“Your cousin already earned.”

“Pastor approved this.”

“Our group is blessed.”

“Do not doubt.”

Faith and family trust should not replace legal verification.


XXX. Verifying the Promoter or Agent

Ask the person recruiting you:

Are you licensed to sell this investment?

Are you an employee, agent, broker, or independent recruiter?

What is your authority?

Are you receiving commission?

Can you provide official company ID?

Are you listed with the company?

Can the company confirm your authority directly?

A person who earns referral commissions may be part of the solicitation activity and may be liable if the scheme is illegal.


XXXI. Understanding the Contract

Before investing, read the entire contract. Be cautious if the contract says something different from the sales pitch.

Common conflicts:

Promoter says returns are guaranteed, but contract says no guarantee.

Promoter says withdrawal anytime, but contract says lock-in.

Promoter says investment, but contract says donation or membership.

Promoter says capital is protected, but contract says company has no liability.

Promoter says SEC approved, but contract says investor assumes regulatory risk.

The written contract may be used against you later, so read it carefully.


XXXII. Risk Disclosure

Legitimate investments disclose risks. If the company claims there are no risks, it is likely misleading.

Real risks may include:

Market risk;

Credit risk;

Business risk;

Liquidity risk;

Currency risk;

Operational risk;

Regulatory risk;

Technology risk;

Fraud risk;

Management risk;

Force majeure;

Loss of capital.

An investment that hides risk is not being honest.


XXXIII. Audited Financial Statements

A legitimate investment company should be able to provide financial information appropriate to the offering. Audited financial statements help show whether the business actually earns money.

Be suspicious if:

No financial statements are available;

Only screenshots are shown;

Income is based on testimonials;

Audits are fake;

Auditor cannot be verified;

Numbers do not match promised returns;

The business is new but promises huge profits;

Payouts exceed realistic earnings.


XXXIV. Source of Payouts

Always ask: Where does the money for payouts come from?

Possible answers:

Actual business profits;

Trading gains;

Interest from borrowers;

Rental income;

Product sales;

New investor money.

If payouts depend on new investors, the scheme is likely unsustainable.

A company should prove real business profits, not just claim them.


XXXV. Payout Screenshots Are Not Proof

Scammers use payout screenshots to lure investors. These may be real early payouts, fake edits, internal transfers, or money from new investors.

Payout proof does not prove legitimacy. Ponzi schemes pay at first.


XXXVI. “Guaranteed Capital” Claims

A company may claim that capital is guaranteed. Ask:

Who guarantees it?

Is there a bank guarantee?

Is there insurance?

Is the guarantee in writing?

Does the guarantor have assets?

Is the guarantee legally enforceable?

Can the company pay everyone at once?

If the guarantee is merely a promise by the promoter, it is weak.


XXXVII. “No Loss Because We Have Assets” Claim

Some companies claim they own land, vehicles, buildings, crypto reserves, inventory, or receivables. Ask for proof.

Even if assets exist:

Are they owned by the company?

Are they mortgaged?

Are they enough to cover investors?

Are they liquid?

Are they legally available to investors?

Are titles clean?

Are they overvalued?

Are they already pledged to creditors?

Assets do not automatically make an investment safe.


XXXVIII. “We Are Not Under SEC Because This Is Private” Claim

Some promoters say SEC registration is unnecessary because the offer is “private.” A truly private transaction is different from public solicitation.

If they advertise on Facebook, group chats, seminars, websites, or through multiple recruiters to many people, it may be public solicitation.

Calling it “private” does not make it private.


XXXIX. “Partnership” Label

Some schemes call investors “partners.” But if the investor does not actually manage the business and only expects profit from the company’s work, it may still be an investment contract.

A real partnership usually involves mutual agency, shared control, shared risk, and legal obligations. Many “partnership investments” are simply unregistered securities.


XL. “Loan Agreement” Label

Promoters may disguise investments as loans to the company with fixed interest. Notes or debt instruments offered to the public may be securities.

Ask:

Is the company authorized to borrow from the public?

Are notes registered?

Is there a permit to sell?

Is the interest realistic?

Is the company solvent?

Are there collateral documents?

Is the same loan offered to many people?

A “loan” label does not automatically avoid securities laws.


XLI. “Donation” or “Blessing” Label

Some schemes use donations, blessings, gifting circles, or community help language. Participants give money expecting larger returns from later participants.

This is usually a red flag. A donation is not supposed to guarantee profit.


XLII. “Educational Package” Label

Some schemes sell expensive educational packages, trading courses, e-books, or seminars, but the real attraction is earning through recruitment or passive returns.

If the product is merely a front for recruitment or investment, the scheme may be illegal.


XLIII. “Membership Fee” Label

A membership fee may be legitimate if it pays for actual membership benefits. But if members pay primarily to earn investment returns or recruitment income, it may be a disguised investment scheme.


XLIV. “Co-Ownership” Label

Co-ownership schemes claim that investors own part of a business, farm, machine, real estate project, or asset. Ask:

Is ownership documented?

Is the asset specifically identified?

Is title transferred?

Can you inspect it?

Can you sell your share?

Who manages it?

Are profits guaranteed?

Is the offering registered?

Without real ownership rights, “co-ownership” may be just marketing.


XLV. “Buy and Sell” Schemes

Some companies ask investors to fund inventory buying and selling. They promise fixed profit after a short period.

Ask:

What products are bought?

Where are invoices?

Who are buyers?

Where is inventory stored?

What happens if goods do not sell?

Why is profit guaranteed?

Is the company authorized to solicit funds?

A buy-and-sell explanation is often used to mask a Ponzi scheme.


XLVI. “Arbitrage” Schemes

Arbitrage schemes claim to profit from price differences in crypto, forex, commodities, tickets, products, or online platforms. They often promise daily returns.

Real arbitrage opportunities are usually small, competitive, and not guaranteed. Public offers of high guaranteed arbitrage profits are suspicious.


XLVII. “Confidential Strategy” Excuse

A company may refuse to disclose its strategy, claiming it is a trade secret. While some business details may be confidential, investors are still entitled to understand the investment, risks, use of funds, and legal authority.

“Trust us” is not due diligence.


XLVIII. “Pending License” Excuse

A company may say its license is “on process.” If authority is required, it should not solicit investments before approval.

Pending application is not permission.


XLIX. “We Have Lawyers” Excuse

A company may say lawyers prepared its documents. That does not prove legality. Lawyers may have drafted general contracts, or the company may be misusing legal documents.

Ask for regulatory approval, not just lawyer involvement.


L. “We Pay Taxes” Excuse

Paying taxes does not make an illegal investment legal. A scam may pay some taxes or issue receipts to look legitimate.

Tax registration is not investment authority.


LI. “We Have an Office” Excuse

A physical office does not prove legitimacy. Many scams rent offices temporarily to gain trust. They may disappear when payouts fail.

Check licenses, not just location.


LII. “We Have Been Paying for Years” Excuse

A Ponzi scheme may pay for months or years before collapsing. Past payouts do not guarantee legitimacy.

The question is whether the company has lawful authority and real sustainable business profits.


LIII. “Only Negative People Call It a Scam” Excuse

Legitimate companies welcome verification. Scams discourage questions and shame doubters.

If asking for legal documents makes promoters angry, avoid the scheme.


LIV. Documents to Request Before Investing

Ask for:

SEC certificate of incorporation;

Articles of incorporation;

Bylaws;

General information sheet;

Secondary license, if applicable;

Permit to sell securities, if applicable;

Registration statement or prospectus, if applicable;

Audited financial statements;

Official business address;

Board resolution authorizing offering;

Name and authority of representatives;

Risk disclosure statement;

Investment agreement;

Official receipts;

BIR registration;

Business permit;

Regulatory licenses from BSP, Insurance Commission, CDA, or other agency, if applicable;

Proof of ownership of claimed assets;

Contracts supporting revenue claims;

Independent audit or valuation where relevant.

If the company refuses, do not invest.


LV. Documents That Are Not Enough

The following are not enough by themselves:

SEC certificate of incorporation;

DTI certificate;

Mayor’s permit;

BIR certificate;

Barangay clearance;

Business logo;

Website;

Office lease;

Facebook page;

Testimonials;

Screenshots of payouts;

Vlogger endorsement;

Group chat announcements;

Notarized contract;

Official receipt;

Company ID of recruiter;

Photos with politicians;

Photos of assets;

Unverified financial projections.

These may support existence, but not authority to solicit investments.


LVI. How to Analyze Promised Returns

Ask whether the promised return makes economic sense.

For example, if a company promises 10% monthly, that is roughly 120% yearly before compounding. Ask:

What legal business consistently earns that much?

Why would the company share such high returns with strangers?

Why not borrow from banks at lower rates?

Why are they recruiting small investors?

Why are returns fixed if business profits fluctuate?

Why is there no risk disclosure?

High guaranteed returns are usually the clearest danger sign.


LVII. Why Scams Pay Early Investors

Early payouts are marketing expenses. Scammers pay early investors to create testimonials, social proof, and recruitment momentum.

Early investors may genuinely believe the scheme is legitimate because they got paid. But their payout may come from money of later investors.

This is why “my friend already earned” is not enough proof.


LVIII. Role of Recruiters

Recruiters can be friends, relatives, co-workers, influencers, churchmates, teachers, public officers, or community leaders. Some are victims themselves. Others knowingly profit from commissions.

A recruiter who solicits investments for an unauthorized scheme may face liability, especially if they made false promises, received commissions, or continued recruiting despite warnings.


LIX. Liability of Officers and Directors

Officers, directors, incorporators, managers, and controlling persons of an illegal investment scheme may face civil, administrative, and criminal liability depending on their participation.

They cannot always hide behind the corporation if they personally participated in fraud or illegal solicitation.


LX. Liability of Influencers and Endorsers

Influencers and endorsers may face legal risk if they actively promote an illegal investment, make false claims, or encourage the public to invest without proper disclosures.

A paid endorsement should not be treated as proof of safety.


LXI. Liability of Investors Who Recruit Others

An investor who becomes a recruiter may expose themselves to liability. Even if they started as a victim, recruiting others and earning commissions can make them part of the scheme.

Before inviting others, verify legality. Do not promote an investment you do not understand.


LXII. What to Do Before Investing

Before investing:

Check SEC authority;

Check if the product is registered;

Verify licenses with the proper agency;

Read the contract;

Understand the business model;

Ask for audited financials;

Check if returns are realistic;

Avoid pressure tactics;

Do not rely on screenshots;

Do not pay to personal accounts;

Consult a lawyer or financial professional;

Invest only money you can afford to lose;

Do not borrow money to invest;

Do not recruit others until legality is verified.


LXIII. Questions to Ask the Company

Ask:

Are you authorized to solicit investments from the public?

What exact license allows this offering?

Is this security registered?

Do you have a permit to sell?

Who regulates this product?

What are the risks?

Can I lose money?

Where will my money go?

What is the source of returns?

Are returns guaranteed?

Who audits your financial statements?

Can I see the audited reports?

What happens if the business loses money?

How do I withdraw?

Are there fees?

Who are the officers?

Are promoters licensed?

What happens if regulators issue an advisory?

If answers are vague or evasive, do not invest.


LXIV. Questions to Ask Yourself

Ask:

Do I understand the investment?

Am I being pressured?

Am I relying only on trust?

Are returns too good to be true?

Is recruitment necessary to earn?

Am I paying to a personal account?

Can the company prove authority?

Can the company survive if new investors stop joining?

Would I still invest if no referral bonus existed?

Am I prepared to lose this money?

Am I borrowing money to invest?

If the answer raises discomfort, walk away.


LXV. Verifying Online Investment Platforms

For an online platform, check:

Legal operator;

Country of registration;

Philippine authority to offer to Filipinos;

Physical address;

Customer support;

Terms and conditions;

Risk disclosures;

Withdrawal rules;

Regulatory licenses;

Payment channels;

User reviews;

Complaints;

App permissions;

Data privacy policy;

Whether the platform is impersonating a legitimate company.

A foreign platform is not automatically legitimate. It may be harder to sue or recover funds if it disappears.


LXVI. Foreign Investment Companies Soliciting Filipinos

Foreign companies that solicit investments from Filipinos may still need Philippine compliance depending on the nature of the offering and manner of solicitation.

Be cautious if:

The company has no Philippine office;

Funds go to foreign wallets;

There is no local regulator;

Withdrawals depend on foreign support;

The promoter says Philippine law does not apply;

The website can disappear anytime;

The company is registered in a secrecy jurisdiction;

The business address is a virtual office;

The license is from an obscure foreign entity.

Foreign registration is not a substitute for Philippine compliance when Filipinos are being solicited.


LXVII. Offshore Brokers and Trading Apps

Some offshore trading apps accept Filipino users. They may not be licensed in the Philippines. If disputes arise, Philippine regulators may have limited ability to help.

Risks include:

Withdrawal refusal;

Price manipulation;

Fake trading;

Account freezing;

Unregulated leverage;

No investor protection;

Foreign litigation costs;

Identity theft;

Data misuse.

Use extreme caution.


LXVIII. Initial Coin Offerings and Token Sales

Token sales may be securities offerings depending on structure. A token is not exempt merely because it is called utility token, governance token, NFT, or digital asset.

Ask:

What rights does the token give?

Is profit expected from promoter efforts?

Is there a public sale?

Is there a whitepaper?

Is the issuer identified?

Are funds pooled?

Is there regulatory approval?

Can tokens be withdrawn or traded?

Is liquidity real or fake?

Many token projects fail or are fraudulent.


LXIX. Staking and Yield Programs

Crypto staking or yield programs may promise returns for locking assets. Be cautious if returns are fixed, high, and paid by a centralized operator.

Ask whether the yield comes from real blockchain rewards, lending, trading, or new deposits. Verify custody risk and withdrawal restrictions.


LXX. Mining Investments

Crypto mining investments may claim that your money buys mining machines or hash power. Ask:

Where are the machines?

Who owns them?

Can you inspect them?

What is the electricity cost?

What is the actual mining output?

What happens if mining becomes unprofitable?

Are returns guaranteed?

Is the offering registered?

Fake mining schemes are common.


LXXI. Investment Clubs

Friends or co-workers may form an investment club. A small private club may be lawful if properly structured and not publicly soliciting. But if the group grows, recruits the public, pools funds, and relies on managers, regulatory issues may arise.

Investment clubs should have clear agreements, accounting, risk disclosures, and legal advice.


LXXII. Family Investment Pools

Family members sometimes pool money for business or investments. Even among relatives, disputes can arise.

Document:

Contributions;

Ownership shares;

Management authority;

Profit distribution;

Loss sharing;

Exit rules;

Accounting;

Tax treatment.

Do not rely only on verbal promises.


LXXIII. Investment in a Friend’s Business

Investing in a friend’s business is not automatically illegal, but it is risky.

Ask:

Are you buying shares?

Are you lending money?

Are you becoming a partner?

Is there collateral?

Is the business registered?

Is the person authorized to take your money?

What happens if business fails?

Is the promised return realistic?

Put everything in writing.


LXXIV. Private Lending to a Business

If you lend money to a business, it may be a private loan. But if the business solicits many lenders from the public with fixed returns, it may become a securities issue.

For personal loans, document:

Principal;

Interest;

Payment schedule;

Collateral;

Default terms;

Promissory note;

Security agreement;

Post-dated checks, if any;

Borrower identity.

Understand that lending to a business carries default risk.


LXXV. Post-Dated Checks as “Security”

Some investment companies issue post-dated checks to make investors feel safe. Checks do not guarantee payment if the account has no funds.

Bouncing checks may create legal remedies, but they do not ensure recovery.

Do not invest merely because checks are issued.


LXXVI. Collateral Claims

Some companies claim investments are secured by land, vehicles, equipment, jewelry, or receivables.

Ask:

Is there a written security agreement?

Is it notarized?

Is it registered where required?

Is the collateral already encumbered?

Is the value enough?

Who holds the title?

Can it legally secure many investors?

Is foreclosure practical?

A vague collateral promise is weak.


LXXVII. Notarized Contract Misconception

A notarized contract does not make an illegal investment legal. Notarization only affects the form and evidentiary status of the document. It does not prove SEC authority, business profitability, or regulatory approval.


LXXVIII. Official Receipts Misconception

An official receipt proves payment was received. It does not prove the investment is lawful, safe, or authorized.


LXXIX. Company ID Misconception

A recruiter’s company ID does not prove they are licensed to solicit investments. It may only show association with the company.


LXXX. Website Misconception

A professional website can be created quickly. It does not prove legitimacy. Scammers can copy logos, certificates, licenses, and office photos.

Verify through official regulators and independent records.


LXXXI. App Store Misconception

An app being available on an app store does not mean the investment is legal. App stores do not replace financial regulators.


LXXXII. Testimonials Misconception

Testimonials may be paid, fake, selective, or from early investors paid with later investors’ money. They are not legal proof.


LXXXIII. “Registered Abroad” Misconception

Foreign registration may only mean the company exists abroad. It does not automatically authorize public solicitation in the Philippines.


LXXXIV. “Blockchain Verified” Misconception

Blockchain transactions may show that money moved. They do not prove that the business is legitimate, profitable, or regulated.


LXXXV. “Audited Smart Contract” Misconception

A smart contract audit may check code vulnerabilities. It does not prove that the investment is lawful, economically sound, or not fraudulent.


LXXXVI. What If You Already Invested?

If you already invested in a suspicious company:

Stop adding money.

Stop recruiting others.

Preserve all evidence.

Request withdrawal in writing.

Ask for official statement of account.

Save contracts, receipts, screenshots, chats, videos, bank transfers, wallet addresses, and names of recruiters.

Check regulatory status.

File complaints if necessary.

Warn close family privately if they are about to invest.

Do not threaten or harass promoters.

Consult a lawyer if the amount is significant.

Do not sign waivers without advice.


LXXXVII. Evidence to Preserve

Keep:

Investment contract;

Receipts;

Bank deposit slips;

E-wallet transfers;

Crypto transaction IDs;

Wallet addresses;

Promotional materials;

Screenshots of promised returns;

Group chat messages;

Recruiter messages;

Voice notes;

Videos of seminars;

Names of officers;

Names of recruiters;

Company certificates shown;

Website screenshots;

App screenshots;

Withdrawal requests;

Failed withdrawal messages;

Proof of payouts received;

Proof of referrals;

IDs or calling cards of promoters;

Office address photos;

Timeline of events.

Evidence is crucial when filing complaints or claims.


LXXXVIII. Requesting Withdrawal

A withdrawal request should be clear and written.

State:

Amount invested;

Date invested;

Account or package number;

Amount due;

Request for return of capital and earnings, if due;

Deadline for response;

Payment channel;

Request for written explanation if denied.

Do not rely only on verbal promises.


LXXXIX. Common Excuses When a Scheme Is Collapsing

Scams often delay withdrawals with excuses such as:

System maintenance;

Bank problem;

Wallet upgrade;

SEC compliance update;

Hacking incident;

Tax clearance;

Audit period;

New payout schedule;

Need to reinvest first;

Need to recruit more;

Withdrawal queue;

Frozen company funds;

Holiday delays;

Management restructuring;

New app migration;

Server overload;

Anti-money laundering review.

Some excuses may be real in legitimate companies, but repeated vague delays are a serious warning.


XC. If the Company Offers Conversion Instead of Cash

When schemes collapse, they may offer:

New tokens;

Shares;

Store credits;

Vouchers;

Real estate credits;

Product packages;

Longer lock-in;

Promissory notes;

Discounted settlement;

Transfer to new company.

Do not accept without legal advice if it waives your claims or locks you into another scheme.


XCI. If the Company Asks You to Sign a Waiver

A waiver may prevent or weaken future claims. Read carefully.

Be cautious if the waiver says:

You release all claims;

You admit investment was risky;

You agree not to file complaints;

You accept tokens instead of cash;

You waive principal;

You agree to confidentiality;

You acknowledge full settlement despite no payment.

Do not sign under pressure.


XCII. If Recruiter Is a Friend or Relative

This is emotionally difficult. Preserve evidence calmly. Ask for documents and refund in writing.

Remember:

Your friend may be a victim too.

Your friend may also be a paid recruiter.

Family relationship does not erase liability.

Settlement is possible, but document it.

Do not delay too long if money is significant.


XCIII. If You Recruited Others

If you recruited others into a suspicious scheme:

Stop recruiting immediately.

Do not delete evidence.

Tell people you are verifying.

Avoid making further promises.

Do not collect more money.

Consider legal advice.

Cooperate with authorities if needed.

Try to help preserve records.

Continuing to recruit after warning signs may increase your legal risk.


XCIV. Filing a Complaint With the SEC

A complaint may be filed if the company solicited investments without authority, sold unregistered securities, operated a Ponzi or pyramid scheme, or made fraudulent investment representations.

Prepare:

Company name;

Names of officers and recruiters;

Address;

Website and social media links;

Contracts;

Receipts;

Proof of solicitation;

Screenshots of promised returns;

Proof of payment;

Withdrawal problems;

List of victims if available;

Timeline;

SEC documents shown by company.

A clear, evidence-based complaint is stronger than a general accusation.


XCV. Filing a Criminal Complaint

Possible criminal issues may include estafa, syndicated estafa, securities law violations, fraud, falsification, cybercrime, money laundering-related offenses, or other crimes depending on facts.

A criminal complaint may be filed with law enforcement, prosecutor’s office, or appropriate agency.

Evidence should show:

False representations;

Money paid;

Reliance on promises;

Failure to return funds;

Unauthorized solicitation;

Deceit from the start, where applicable;

Participation of officers or recruiters;

Pattern affecting multiple victims.

Legal advice is recommended for significant losses.


XCVI. Filing a Civil Case

A civil case may seek:

Return of money;

Damages;

Accounting;

Rescission;

Annulment of contract;

Recovery from officers or recruiters where justified;

Injunction;

Attachment, where legally available;

Other remedies.

Civil cases may be useful where the goal is recovery rather than punishment.


XCVII. Small Claims

If the amount falls within small claims limits and the claim is for money, small claims may be an option against a person or entity that owes repayment.

However, complex investment fraud involving many victims, securities violations, or multiple defendants may require ordinary civil or criminal proceedings.


XCVIII. Class or Group Complaints

Victims may organize and file coordinated complaints. This can help show pattern, scale, and common fraudulent representations.

However, each investor should still preserve individual proof of payment and communications.

Group action should be organized carefully to avoid misinformation, internal conflict, or unauthorized legal practice.


XCIX. Attachment and Asset Preservation

In some cases, victims may seek legal remedies to preserve assets before they disappear. This requires court action and legal grounds.

Possible concerns:

Promoters transferring property;

Closing bank accounts;

Moving crypto assets;

Selling vehicles;

Leaving the country;

Changing company name;

Dissolving corporation.

Act quickly if there is risk of asset dissipation.


C. Complaints Against Bank or E-Wallet Accounts

If payments were sent through banks or e-wallets, report suspicious transactions promptly to the financial institution.

Provide:

Transaction reference;

Recipient account name;

Amount;

Date;

Proof of scam;

Police or regulator report, if available.

The bank or e-wallet may not automatically refund, but early reporting can help investigation and possible account review.


CI. Cryptocurrency Tracing

If funds were sent by crypto, preserve wallet addresses and transaction hashes. Crypto transactions may be traceable on-chain, but recovery is difficult if funds move through mixers, foreign exchanges, or private wallets.

Report quickly to exchanges if known. Legal process may be required to freeze accounts.


CII. Money Laundering Concerns

Large investment scams may involve money laundering. Authorities may investigate bank accounts, shell companies, property purchases, crypto wallets, and nominee accounts.

Victims should provide transaction evidence.


CIII. If the Promoter Leaves the Philippines

If promoters flee abroad, recovery becomes harder. Possible remedies may involve immigration alerts, international cooperation, criminal complaints, extradition in serious cases, or foreign legal action.

Early filing is important.


CIV. If the Company Changes Name

Scams often rebrand. They may say the old company is merging, upgrading, or migrating to a new platform.

Preserve evidence linking the old and new names:

Same officers;

Same recruiters;

Same addresses;

Same bank accounts;

Same website domain;

Same group chats;

Same promises;

Same investors.


CV. If the Company Claims Bankruptcy

A company in financial distress may claim it cannot pay. Determine whether it is a real business failure or fraud.

Ask:

Where did investor money go?

Are there audited accounts?

Are assets available?

Were officers paid?

Were funds diverted?

Were new investors recruited despite insolvency?

Are there liquidation proceedings?

Victims may need to file claims in appropriate proceedings.


CVI. If the Company Offers Settlement

A settlement may be practical if recovery is uncertain. But before accepting:

Confirm payment source;

Avoid waiving claims before payment;

Use written settlement agreement;

Set deadlines;

Include default clause;

Do not accept worthless tokens unless you agree knowingly;

Consider partial payment while reserving rights if appropriate;

Consult counsel for large amounts.


CVII. If You Received Profits Before Collapse

If you received payouts, legal issues may arise. In some proceedings, payouts may be examined to determine net loss or possible clawback, especially if paid from other investors’ money.

Keep records of both investments and withdrawals.

Do not hide payouts when filing a complaint.


CVIII. Tax Issues for Investors

Investment income may have tax implications. If the scheme collapses, losses may also have tax considerations depending on the nature of the investment and taxpayer status.

Do not assume tax consequences without advice.


CIX. OFWs as Targets

OFWs are frequent targets because they have remittances, savings, and family networks. Scammers promise passive income so OFWs can return home.

OFWs should verify before sending money and should be cautious of:

Investments promoted by relatives;

Group chats for OFWs;

Foreign bank transfers;

Crypto payments;

Promises of monthly support;

“Retirement investment” pitches;

No written contract.


CX. Retirees as Targets

Retirees may lose life savings to scams promising stable passive income. Retirees should avoid high-risk, unverified, or unlicensed schemes.

A legitimate retirement investment should prioritize capital preservation, liquidity, and regulated products.


CXI. Teachers, Soldiers, Police, and Government Employees

Scammers often target groups with stable salaries and loan access. Victims may borrow from salary loans to invest.

Borrowing to invest in an unverified scheme is extremely dangerous. If the investment collapses, the loan remains.


CXII. Small Business Owners

Business owners may invest excess cash in schemes promising higher returns than their own business. They should perform due diligence and not risk operating capital in unverified investments.


CXIII. Students and Young Workers

Young investors may be attracted by crypto, online trading, and influencer-led schemes. They should learn basic verification and avoid investing money needed for tuition, rent, or essentials.


CXIV. How to Protect Family Members

If a family member is about to invest:

Do not merely say “scam yan.”

Ask them to request SEC authority.

Ask them to explain source of returns.

Ask them if they can lose money.

Ask them to show the contract.

Show the difference between business registration and investment authority.

Encourage them to invest a small amount only if they insist, but preferably not at all until verified.

Avoid family fights by focusing on documents.


CXV. How to Talk to a Recruiter

Ask calmly:

Can you show proof that the company is authorized to solicit investments from the public?

Is the investment product registered with the SEC?

Are you licensed to sell it?

What is the source of returns?

Where are audited financial statements?

Can I take the contract to a lawyer before investing?

A legitimate recruiter should not object.


CXVI. If the Recruiter Says You Are Being Negative

A professional investment promoter should welcome due diligence. Shaming questions is a manipulation tactic.

Your money is at risk. You have the right to verify.


CXVII. If the Company Uses Confidentiality to Stop Complaints

Some companies tell investors not to post, complain, or report because it will “hurt the business” and delay payouts. This may be a tactic to buy time.

Investors have the right to seek legal advice and report suspected illegal activity.


CXVIII. If the Company Threatens Investors

If the company threatens investors for asking questions, preserve messages. Threats may support legal complaints.

Do not respond with threats. Keep evidence professional.


CXIX. If the Company Claims It Will Sue for Defamation

Investors should avoid reckless public accusations without evidence. But truthful complaints to regulators, law enforcement, or courts are different from malicious defamation.

Use precise language:

“I invested this amount.”

“They promised this return.”

“They have not paid.”

“I am requesting verification of authority.”

“The SEC should investigate.”

Avoid unsupported insults or exaggerated claims.


CXX. Public Posting by Victims

Posting online may warn others but can also create legal risk, panic, or evidence issues. Before posting:

Preserve evidence;

Avoid false statements;

Do not reveal private data of other victims;

Do not threaten;

Do not publish unverified allegations;

Consider filing official complaints first.


CXXI. Legitimate Investment Examples

Legitimate investments may include properly regulated products such as:

Bank deposits;

Government securities;

Registered corporate securities;

Listed stocks through licensed brokers;

Mutual funds;

UITFs;

Insurance products with investment components from licensed companies;

Pre-need products from licensed providers;

Cooperative investments limited to legitimate members under cooperative rules;

Crowdfunding offerings through authorized platforms;

Other regulated products.

Even legitimate investments carry risk. Legitimacy does not guarantee profit.


CXXII. Difference Between Legitimate Risk and Scam

A legitimate investment may lose money due to market or business risk despite honest disclosures and proper licensing.

A scam involves deception, unauthorized solicitation, fake promises, concealed risks, false documents, or misuse of funds.

Loss alone does not prove scam. But guaranteed returns, unauthorized offering, and recruitment-based payouts are strong danger signs.


CXXIII. Investment Suitability

Even if an investment is legitimate, it may not be suitable for everyone.

Consider:

Risk tolerance;

Age;

Income;

Emergency fund;

Debt level;

Investment horizon;

Liquidity needs;

Financial knowledge;

Family obligations.

Do not put emergency funds, tuition, medical funds, or borrowed money into risky investments.


CXXIV. Diversification

Do not place all savings in one investment. Scammers often push “all in” behavior. A sound investment plan spreads risk.


CXXV. Emergency Fund First

Before investing, maintain emergency savings. If an investment requires locking money that you need for rent, food, tuition, or medicine, it is not suitable.


CXXVI. Borrowing to Invest

Borrowing money to invest is risky. Borrowing for a high-return unverified scheme is extremely dangerous.

If the investment fails, you still owe the loan.


CXXVII. Pressure Tactics

Scammers use urgency:

“Last day today.”

“Only 10 slots left.”

“Price increases tomorrow.”

“Your upline is waiting.”

“Do not miss this blessing.”

“Successful people take risks.”

A legitimate investment opportunity should allow time for review.


CXXVIII. Due Diligence Checklist

Before investing, verify:

Exact company name;

SEC registration;

Secondary license;

Authority to solicit investments;

Registration of the specific securities or investment product;

License of salesperson or broker;

Business model;

Source of returns;

Risk disclosure;

Audited financial statements;

Official payment account;

Written contract;

Withdrawal terms;

Fees;

Regulatory advisories;

Complaint history;

Physical office;

Identity of officers;

Independent legal or financial review.

If any major item is missing, do not invest.


CXXIX. Warning Checklist

Do not invest if:

Returns are guaranteed and high;

Recruitment is emphasized;

Only business registration is shown;

Payment goes to personal accounts;

Promoter refuses written documents;

Company discourages legal advice;

Payouts depend on new members;

The scheme is explained with buzzwords but no proof;

Withdrawals are delayed;

You are pressured to decide immediately;

You cannot understand how money is made;

The product is not registered;

The company lacks authority to solicit.


CXXX. Sample Verification Message

You may send:

Before I invest, please provide the company’s exact registered name, SEC registration number, secondary license or authority to solicit investments, registration or permit for this specific investment product, official risk disclosure, audited financial statements, official payment account, and proof that the person offering this investment is authorized or licensed to do so. I will review these documents before making any payment.

A legitimate company should be able to respond professionally.


CXXXI. Sample Withdrawal Demand

I invested ₱[amount] on [date] under [account/package/agreement]. I am requesting withdrawal and return of my funds according to the terms represented to me. Please process payment to [account details] or provide a written explanation within [reasonable period]. I also request a statement of account showing my investment, earnings, deductions, and balance.


CXXXII. Sample Complaint Summary

I invested ₱[amount] with [company/person] after being promised [return]. The offer was made through [Facebook/group chat/seminar/recruiter]. I paid through [bank/e-wallet/crypto] to [account]. The company represented that it was legitimate by showing [documents], but I was not shown authority to solicit investments from the public. Withdrawals have been delayed/refused since [date]. Attached are contracts, receipts, screenshots, promotional materials, and messages from the recruiter.


CXXXIII. Practical Recovery Expectations

Recovery from investment scams is often difficult. Money may already be spent, transferred, hidden, or moved abroad. Early action improves chances.

Do not believe “recovery agents” who ask for upfront fees to retrieve scam money. Recovery scams target victims a second time.


CXXXIV. Recovery Scam Warning

After losing money, victims may be contacted by people claiming they can recover funds through hacking, crypto tracing, government contacts, or special legal channels.

Red flags:

Upfront fee;

Guaranteed recovery;

No law firm identity;

Fake government connections;

Payment in crypto;

Pressure to act fast;

No written engagement;

Claims to hack wallets.

Be careful not to be scammed again.


CXXXV. Preventing Community Harm

If you suspect a scheme is illegal, avoid recruiting others. Warn close contacts privately and encourage verification.

A person who continues recruiting despite suspicion may worsen losses and increase liability.


CXXXVI. Frequently Asked Questions

1. Is SEC registration enough?

No. SEC corporate registration only proves the corporation exists. It does not automatically authorize public investment solicitation.

2. What authority should an investment company have?

It depends on the product, but it may need SEC registration of securities, permit to sell, secondary license, or authority from BSP, Insurance Commission, CDA, or another regulator.

3. Is a notarized investment contract proof of legitimacy?

No. Notarization does not legalize unauthorized investment solicitation.

4. Is a mayor’s permit enough?

No. A mayor’s permit is not investment authority.

5. Is BIR registration enough?

No. BIR registration is for tax purposes, not investment approval.

6. Can a company legally guarantee high returns?

High guaranteed returns are a major red flag. Real investments carry risk. Claims of guaranteed high returns should be verified very carefully.

7. What if my friends already earned?

Early payouts do not prove legitimacy. Ponzi schemes pay early investors to attract more money.

8. What if the company has a real business?

A real business can still illegally solicit investments. The investment offering itself must be authorized.

9. What if the company says license is pending?

Pending license is not approval. It should not solicit investments before required authority is granted.

10. What if the company is foreign?

Foreign registration does not automatically authorize solicitation in the Philippines. Recovery may also be harder.

11. Is crypto investment exempt from regulation?

No. Crypto-related schemes may still be subject to securities, anti-fraud, banking, or other laws depending on structure.

12. Can I file a complaint if I already invested?

Yes. Preserve evidence and consider complaints with regulators, law enforcement, prosecutors, or courts depending on facts.

13. Can recruiters be liable?

Yes, especially if they solicited investments, made false promises, earned commissions, or continued recruiting despite warning signs.

14. Should I keep recruiting to recover my money?

No. Recruiting others into a suspicious scheme may expose you to liability and harm more victims.

15. What is the safest rule?

Do not invest unless the company can prove both its legal existence and its authority to offer the specific investment product to the public.


CXXXVII. Key Takeaways

Business registration is not the same as investment authority.

SEC incorporation alone does not allow public investment solicitation.

The specific investment product must be authorized or registered where required.

High guaranteed returns are a major warning sign.

Recruitment-based earnings suggest pyramid or Ponzi risk.

Payment to personal accounts is suspicious.

Payout screenshots are not proof of legitimacy.

A real office, receipt, website, or notarized contract does not prove legality.

Foreign, crypto, AI, farm, lending, real estate, and franchise labels do not remove regulatory requirements.

Investors should verify with the proper regulator before paying.

If already invested, stop adding money, preserve evidence, request withdrawal in writing, and consider filing complaints.

Do not recruit others into an unverified scheme.


CXXXVIII. Conclusion

Verifying whether an investment company is legitimate in the Philippines requires more than checking whether it has a business name, SEC certificate, mayor’s permit, BIR registration, website, office, or testimonials. The essential question is whether the company is legally authorized to offer the specific investment product to the public.

Many illegal schemes hide behind legitimate-looking documents. A corporation may exist, pay taxes, rent an office, and issue receipts, yet still be illegally soliciting investments. The law looks at substance: if people are asked to contribute money with expectation of profit from the efforts of others, the arrangement may be a security or investment contract requiring proper registration and authority.

The strongest warning signs are high guaranteed returns, recruitment commissions, pressure to invest quickly, vague business explanations, personal payment accounts, lack of audited financials, and inability to show regulatory authority. Investors should verify before paying, read contracts carefully, understand risks, and avoid investing borrowed or essential money.

If a person has already invested in a suspicious scheme, the priority is to stop adding funds, preserve evidence, request withdrawal in writing, avoid recruiting others, and consider complaints with the appropriate authorities. In investment matters, prevention is far easier than recovery. A legitimate investment can withstand questions; a scam usually depends on trust, urgency, and silence.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.