Let me tell you exactly where your money goes when you hand it over to GGBL Capital.
Your $1,000 Deposit Never Leaves Their Wallet
You log in. You see the slick dashboard. You get a DM from someone who’s ‘been trading GGBL Capital for 8 months’ — they’re warm, supportive, and just happen to share your taste in music and travel. They send you a screenshot of their ‘$4,273 profit’ last week. You deposit $1,000.
That $1,000? It lands in a private crypto wallet controlled by the operators — not in any exchange, not in any ETF, not in any real financial instrument. GGBL Capital doesn’t hold GGBL ETFs. It doesn’t hold anything. It holds your cash.
Then — bam — you get a ‘return’: $12. That’s 1.2% in 24 hours. Feels real. Feels exciting. But that $12 didn’t come from yield, interest, or alpha. It came from the $1,000 deposited by the person who signed up five minutes before you.
The Math Doesn’t Lie — And It’s Brutal
They advertise ‘consistent 1.2% daily returns’. Let’s do the math — not the fantasy, the actual compound math:
1.2% per day × 365 days = 657% annual return.
But compound it properly: $1,000 × (1.012)365 = $79,342.
No legitimate asset — not bonds, not leveraged ETFs, not Bitcoin at its wildest bull run — delivers that. Not even close. The ASX-listed GGBL ETF (Global Government Bond Leveraged) yields ~3.8% annually — before fees and decay. Leveraged ETFs lose value over time due to volatility drag. They don’t generate 1.2% daily. That number is pure fiction — designed to trigger greed, override logic, and shut down your brain’s fraud-detection system.
This Is Not Trading. It’s Redistribution.
Every ‘profit’ you see is just a line item in their spreadsheet — a transfer from one victim’s deposit to another’s account balance. There are no charts being analyzed. No algorithms running. No brokers executing. Just a wallet address and a script that updates numbers on a fake dashboard.

When you ask to withdraw? They add ‘verification delays’, ‘compliance holds’, or ‘minimum balance requirements’. Why? Because the money isn’t there. It’s already been sent to earlier investors — or siphoned off by the founders via layered crypto mixers and offshore exchanges.
And when new deposits slow? The bucket empties. Fast. That’s when the site goes dark. The Telegram group gets deleted. The ‘trading partner’ stops replying. Your $1,000? Gone. Your $5,000 follow-up deposit? Also gone. Your referral bonus from three friends? Also gone — because those friends’ money was used to pay your first ‘returns’.
Benjamin Graham Knew This Would Happen
‘The investor’s chief problem — and even his worst enemy — is likely to be himself.’ — Benjamin Graham.
He wrote that in 1949. He wasn’t warning about blockchain or Telegram bots. He was warning about you — your hope, your loneliness, your desire to believe the person who listens, remembers your birthday, and sends voice notes saying ‘I believe in you.’ That’s the crack they widen. That’s how they get your wallet address. That’s how they get your trust — and then your principal.
GGBL Capital isn’t named after the ETF. It’s named to sound official. To borrow legitimacy. To make you think, ‘Oh, they must be using real instruments.’ They’re not. They’re using you.
If you’ve sent money: stop sending more. Do not ‘double down’ to ‘recover losses’. That’s how people lose $50k. Freeze your crypto wallets. Revoke API keys. Report the wallet addresses to Chainalysis or CryptoScamDB. And talk — out loud — to someone who isn’t trying to sell you a return.
Your money didn’t vanish. It was taken. Intentionally. Systematically. And the only person who profited was the one who built the lie.
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