Do you know what 0.5% daily compounded actually means?
Let’s Run the Numbers — No Hype, Just Math
If Sidai Capital promises even a modest-seeming 0.5% return every single day, here’s what happens to $1,000:
$1,000 × (1.005)365 = $6,168.
That’s a 517% annual return — not per year, but from one year of daily compounding. For context: Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway has averaged just under 20% per year over 57 years. The S&P 500 averages ~10%. Even Renaissance Technologies — arguably the most successful quant fund ever — rarely clears 30% net after fees.
Now imagine Sidai Capital claims 1% daily. That same $1,000 becomes $37,783 in 365 days. A 3,678% gain. Not ‘possible’ — it’s mathematically absurd at scale. Why? Because if Sidai Capital could reliably generate that return, its operators wouldn’t be begging for your $100 deposit. They’d invest $1 million, wait 5 years, and control more capital than the GDP of Nepal ($44 billion). Instead, they’re asking you to wire money to ‘Sidai company mai fund transfer garne ho’ — with zero public registration, no audited financials, no legal entity disclosure, and zero regulatory oversight.
No License. No Ledger. No Accountability.
There is no Securities Board of Nepal (SEBON) license for Sidai Capital. No registered address. No director names. No tax ID. No balance sheet. Just a vague reference to a ‘distillery company’ — as if alcohol production somehow translates to algorithmic crypto yield. Distilleries earn margins in the single digits. They don’t compound 0.5% daily. They don’t run Telegram bots. They don’t ask you to ‘not disclose company name publicly’. Real businesses want transparency. Scammers hide behind silence.

And let’s be brutally clear: the phrase ‘Sidai company mai fund transfer garne ho so it is not scam’ isn’t reassurance — it’s a red flag wrapped in broken English. Legitimate firms don’t justify legitimacy by saying ‘we move funds internally’. They show bank statements. They publish compliance reports. They answer questions — not dodge them with Nepali-English hybrid phrasing designed to confuse and comfort simultaneously.
Ray Dalio Was Right — And You’re Falling for It
The biggest mistake investors make is to believe that what happened in the recent past is likely to persist. — Ray Dalio
You saw someone post ‘I got paid!’ — maybe even with a screenshot of a wallet balance. Great. But screenshots cost $0 to fake. And one payout doesn’t prove sustainability — it proves *marketing*. Early ‘wins’ are bait. The math catches up fast. When 97% of deposits stop getting paid — as always happens in these schemes — there’s no customer support line. No dispute resolution. Just radio silence and a dead Telegram group.
This Is Not Investing. It Is Extraction.
Real investing involves risk, yes — but also disclosure, diversification, and time-tested mechanisms. Sidai Capital offers none of those. It offers only velocity: your money moves in fast, and never moves out. The ‘distillery’ cover story? A smokescreen. The ‘promoter similar to sagar’ reference? A social proof trap — name-dropping to trigger trust without verification. There is no Sagar-approved platform that pays daily crypto returns without KYC, licensing, or traceable infrastructure.
Here’s the final number you need to remember: 0%. That’s the long-term expected return on any unregulated, unnamed, unlicensed ‘opportunity’ promising daily yields — whether it hides behind distilleries, dating apps, or ‘Sidai’ branding. Not 5%, not 20%, not even -10%. Zero. Because when the server shuts down and the wallet drains, your claim vanishes with it. No court will enforce an agreement with a ghost company.
So before you send that first rupee — pause. Open a calculator. Type in ‘1.005^365’. Then ask yourself: if this were real, why would they need you?
Expose scammer

















