Let’s cut the romance novel fluff. You got messaged by someone who ‘just wants to connect.’ They’re kind, attentive, and — surprise — they happen to use Fujimoto Capital to earn ‘steady, low-risk’ crypto returns. They show you screenshots of $372 profit in one day on a $31,000 deposit. You think: ‘This is real. This person is real. This platform must be real.’
Here Is Where Your Money Actually Goes
It goes straight into a wallet controlled by Fujimoto Capital’s operators — not into Bitcoin, not into DeFi protocols, not into anything that generates yield. It sits. Cold. Static. Waiting.
Then they credit your dashboard with ‘earnings’: $372. That number didn’t come from trading. It came from the $31,000 deposit made by the person *before* you — or more likely, the three people before you. Your ‘profit’ is someone else’s principal.
This isn’t investing. It’s redistribution. And when new deposits slow down — as they always do — the math collapses.
The Math Doesn’t Lie — Here’s Proof
Fujimoto Capital promises 1.2% daily returns. Sounds harmless? Let’s compound it for just 30 days:
$10,000 × (1.012)³⁰ = $14,305
That’s a 43% gain in one month.
Now compound it for one year: $10,000 × (1.012)³⁶⁵ ≈ $768,000.
Yes — over 7,500% annual return. For comparison: the S&P 500 averages ~10% per year. Berkshire Hathaway averaged ~20% under Buffett. Even the most aggressive hedge funds rarely crack 30% — and never sustain it for years.
If Fujimoto Capital delivered this consistently, it would outperform every fund, bank, and sovereign wealth fund on Earth — using no strategy, no infrastructure, no transparency, and zero audited on-chain activity. That’s not alpha. That’s arithmetic fraud.

Why Withdrawals Freeze (and Never Unfreeze)
You’ll get paid — at first. Small withdrawals go through. Why? Because there’s still fresh money coming in. But try to pull out your full balance after 3 weeks. Or ask for a $5,000 payout when only $2,000 in new deposits hit that day. Suddenly: ‘KYC verification pending,’ ‘system maintenance,’ ‘compliance review.’
That’s not a glitch. That’s the bucket running dry.
Your $10,000 deposit wasn’t invested. It was used to pay the ‘returns’ of the five people who deposited before you — and to skim 15–25% off the top as ‘platform fees’ (which vanish into untraceable wallets). By the time you realize something’s wrong, 60–80% of the total pool is already gone — laundered through mixers or converted to privacy coins.
Warren Buffett Was Right — And You’re Ignoring Him
‘Rule No. 1: Never lose money. Rule No. 2: Never forget Rule No. 1.’ — Warren Buffett
You didn’t lose money because the market moved against you. You lost it because the system was designed to take it — quietly, patiently, and with the emotional cover of a ‘caring’ love interest who just *happens* to know the ‘secret’ platform.
There are no secret platforms. There are only secret exit scams.
Fujimoto Capital has no working smart contracts. No verifiable treasury. No licensed custodian. No SEC or FCA registration. Just a Telegram link, a fake dashboard, and a story written like a shōnen manga subplot — all leading to the same ending: your bank account empties while theirs fills.
I’ve watched friends lose $8,400. $12,900. One person wired their entire life savings — $87,000 — after three weeks of nightly voice calls and ‘shared dreams’ about financial freedom. All gone. Not frozen. Not delayed. Gone.
Don’t wait for the ‘love interest’ to suggest the next ‘limited-time opportunity.’ Don’t click the link. Don’t send the money. Your principal isn’t being invested — it’s being recycled, skimmed, and erased.
If you’ve already sent money: stop sending more. Document everything. Report to your bank *today*. And tell someone — not online, not anonymously — a real person who can help you act.
Expose scammer



















