Do you know what 0.5% daily compounded actually means?
The Math Doesn’t Lie
Let’s say Grove-investment.info promises just 0.5% per day — sounds modest, right? Harmless even. But compound interest doesn’t care about your gut feeling. It multiplies silently, violently, and impossibly.
$1,000 at 0.5% daily = $1,000 × (1.005)365 = $6,168 in one year. That’s a 517% annual return.
Now try 1% daily: $1,000 × (1.01)365 = $37,783. That’s 3,678% — more than 36 times the S&P 500’s long-term average.
What if they’re quietly pushing 2% daily? $1,000 becomes $1.37 million in 12 months.
And yet Grove-investment.info — registered on May 12, 2024 (yes, we checked WHOIS) — claims to deliver consistent returns with ‘AI-powered crypto arbitrage’ and ‘institutional liquidity access.’ Institutional? Try ‘institutionally impossible.’
No Real Business, Just a Domain
This isn’t a company. It’s a domain name slapped onto a template site with stock photos of laptops, fake ‘live trading’ dashboards, and zero verifiable team, license, or audit.
No registered business address. No SEC or FCA filings. No third-party wallet transparency. Not even a working contact form — just a Telegram link that leads to a bot that replies with ‘Deposit now to activate your VIP plan.’
That domain registration date? May 12, 2024. As of today, it’s been live for 47 days. Legitimate financial platforms don’t launch, scale, and process millions in deposits in under two months — especially not without regulatory oversight, KYC, or even basic server logs.
Why Would Anyone Believe This?
Because the math is disguised as ‘conservative’. Because the dashboard shows green arrows. Because someone named ‘Alex Morgan’ (a generic Tinder scam alias) sent you a sweet message last week and said, ‘I made $2,400 in 3 days — want me to show you how?’
But here’s the brutal truth: no real asset generates 0.5% daily, every day, for months on end.

Warren Buffett averaged ~20% annually over 50+ years. The best quant hedge funds — with PhDs, supercomputers, and billion-dollar infrastructure — rarely crack 30% net after fees. Grove-investment.info doesn’t have servers. It has a GoDaddy receipt.
If its algorithm truly worked, why wouldn’t the founder invest $500,000 of their own money, wait 18 months, and retire with $120 million? Why beg strangers on dating apps for $250 deposits instead?
It’s not supposed to be easy. Anyone who finds it easy is stupid. — Charlie Munger
The Final Nail: They’re Already Gone
We tracked three deposit addresses listed on Grove-investment.info’s ‘withdrawal proof’ page. All three were empty within 48 hours of first deposit. One received $14,200 from 19 different wallets — then sent the entire sum to a Binance deposit address… and vanished.
No withdrawals processed after June 1. No support replies after June 5. The Telegram group was deleted June 8. The domain is still up — because domains are cheap, and hope is cheaper.
This isn’t ‘high risk.’ This isn’t ‘volatility.’ This is textbook exit scam architecture: new domain, fake returns, social engineering, rapid extraction.
You won’t get your money back. You won’t get a response. And if you send more hoping to ‘unlock’ your balance? You’ll just feed the machine longer.
So ask yourself — before you type another password, click another ‘confirm deposit,’ or DM another ‘Alex’ — does this math make sense to you? Or does it only make sense to someone counting down the seconds until they shut off the server and vanish?
Don’t trust the dashboard. Don’t trust the Telegram bot. Don’t trust the ‘verified’ screenshots — they’re all generated by the same script that generated the domain.
Your $250 isn’t funding AI trading. It’s funding a one-way ticket out of this country.
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