Let’s cut the fluff. This isn’t about ‘suspicious returns’ or ‘red flags’. This is about where your money actually goes — and why it will never come back.
How It Starts (With a DM)
You get a message from someone who seems… real. They share photos, life updates, maybe even voice notes. They’re kind. Patient. Interested. They mention they’ve been using AlphaYield Capital — a sleek web platform with live trading dashboards, ‘verified’ profit screenshots, and a ‘limited-time onboarding bonus’.
They don’t push crypto jargon. They push trust. And then — gently — they show you your first $273 ‘profit’ after depositing $1,000. You didn’t lift a finger. You just clicked ‘auto-trade’. That’s the hook.
Where That $273 Really Comes From
AlphaYield Capital promises 1.2% daily returns. Let’s do the math — not the fantasy, the arithmetic:
1.2% per day × 365 days = 438% annual return. But compound it properly: $1,000 × (1.012)365 = $79,342.
No hedge fund. No quant team. No exchange arbitrage. Nothing in finance — not even Warren Buffett’s best year — delivers that. So how do they pay it? Simple: they take money from new deposits to pay ‘profits’ to earlier ones. That’s not trading. That’s redistribution — with a romance-scene soundtrack.
Day 1: 10 people deposit $1,000 each → $10,000 pool.
Day 3: 5 of them see ‘$60 profit’ and withdraw $1,060 → $5,300 paid out.
That leaves $4,700 — but now 3 more people deposit $1,000 each. Pool jumps to $7,700.
The ‘profit’ wasn’t earned. It was borrowed — from the next person in line.
The Collapse Is Built Into the Code
At 1.2% daily, every dollar you deposit must be replaced by new investor money within 87 days — or the system runs dry. Here’s why:
If you invest $1,000 today, AlphaYield has already promised you $1,012 tomorrow, $1,024 the next day, and so on. By Day 87, your balance shows $2,822 — but only $1,000 of that is real capital. The rest is IOUs backed by future deposits.
So when recruitment slows — when friends stop referring, when Telegram groups go quiet, when ‘maintenance mode’ hits — the math breaks. Fast.

One week of flat inflows + 10 withdrawal requests over $5,000 = instant shortfall. That’s when support stops replying. When ‘KYC verification’ suddenly requires three notarized documents. When your dashboard shows ‘pending settlement’ for 17 days — then 32 — then forever.
Who Is the Patsy?
You’ll scroll through their ‘success stories’ — a woman in Dubai, a teacher in Ohio, both ‘withdrawing weekly’. Look closer. Their ‘proof’ videos are all the same background. Same timestamp font. Same login flow. None show actual bank transfers — only internal wallet balances.
And here’s what Warren Buffett said — not as advice, but as autopsy:
“If you’ve been in the game 30 minutes and you don’t know who the patsy is, you’re the patsy.”
You weren’t scammed because you were gullible. You were scammed because the model *requires* you to be the last one in. Not the first. Not the tenth. The last. Because without your $1,000, the person before you doesn’t get their $1,060. And the person before them? They already cashed out — and vanished.
AlphaYield Capital has no SEC filing. No registered entity in Delaware or the Caymans. No audit. No API integration with Binance or Kraken. Just a domain registered 47 days ago, hosted on a bulletproof server in Riga, Latvia — and a support email that auto-replies: ‘Our team is reviewing your request.’
This isn’t broken. It’s working exactly as designed.
If you’ve sent money: stop sending more. Screenshot everything. File a report with your local financial crime unit — not because you’ll get your cash back (you won’t), but because every report makes it harder for them to open the next shell company, the next Telegram bot, the next ‘love interest’ account.
You didn’t lose money to a glitch. You lost it to arithmetic — and to people who counted on you not doing the math.
Expose scammer


















