Let’s cut the fluff: There is no Temu coupon code that gives you ¥15,000 off. There is no ‘act859911’ discount. There is no bot. There is no arbitrage. There is only one thing — a crypto scam dressed up as e-commerce savings.
This isn’t shopping. It’s a trap disguised as a deal.
You saw it: “¥15,000 off for new & existing users”, “30% extra”, “up to 90% discount”. Sounds too good? It is — because it’s not about Temu at all. It’s about redirecting you to a fake trading dashboard where you’re asked to deposit USDT or ETH ‘to unlock your coupon’. That’s when the real scam begins: a so-called ‘AI quantitative bot’ promises 1–2% daily returns — guaranteed.
Let’s do the math — cold, hard, compound math.
If a bot *truly* delivered just 1.5% every single day, compounding daily, here’s what happens to $500:
After 30 days: $500 × (1.015)³⁰ ≈ $779
After 90 days: $500 × (1.015)⁹⁰ ≈ $1,912
After 365 days: $500 × (1.015)³⁶⁵ ≈ $117,842
That’s a 23,468% annual return. For context: Renaissance Technologies’ Medallion Fund — arguably the most successful quant fund ever — averaged ~66% per year *before fees*, over decades, with $100B+ in infrastructure, 200+ PhDs, and proprietary satellite data feeds. And even they had losing months.
A Telegram group running a ‘bot’ from a $300 laptop doesn’t beat Renaissance. It bypasses reality — by faking charts, backdating trades, and showing you ‘profits’ that exist only in their admin panel. Your deposit? Goes straight to a wallet they control. Your ‘withdrawal request’? Gets buried under ‘KYC verification pending’, ‘server maintenance’, or ‘anti-money laundering review’ — until you stop asking.
They say it’s ‘quantitative arbitrage’. Real arbitrage exploits microsecond price differences across exchanges — requiring colocated servers, FPGA hardware, and latency measured in nanoseconds. What they’re selling is arithmetic, not arbitrage. A spreadsheet with ‘+1.8%’ typed in bold next to your name.
Ray Dalio nailed it: “The biggest mistake investors make is to believe that what happened in the recent past is likely to persist.” They show you three days of ‘profit’ screenshots — then ask for more. That’s not strategy. That’s bait.

And let’s talk about risk — or rather, the total absence of it in their pitch. Real trading has drawdowns. Real algorithms fail. Real quants stress-test models against Black Swan events. This ‘bot’ has zero volatility in its demo. Zero slippage. Zero failed trades. That’s not low-risk — it’s fiction.
Warren Buffett’s first rule hits like a hammer here: “Rule No. 1: Never lose money. Rule No. 2: Never forget Rule No. 1.” You won’t lose money *trading* with this thing — because there’s no trading. You’ll lose money the second your crypto leaves your wallet and lands in theirs. No reversal. No chargeback. No recourse.
Worse? They’ve weaponized Temu’s brand — a real, legitimate platform — to lend credibility. But Temu doesn’t issue coupon codes via Telegram links. Doesn’t partner with crypto ‘yield farms’. Doesn’t offer ‘¥15,000 off’ to users who haven’t even created an account. If you got this ‘code’, you were targeted through a referral bonus scheme — where early victims get paid to recruit others, turning friends into unwitting accomplices.
This isn’t innovation. It’s theft with better copywriting.
So ask yourself: if a ‘bot’ can generate life-changing returns with zero risk, why is it being sold to you — not to Goldman Sachs? Why does it need *your* $500 instead of raising $500 million? Why does the ‘dashboard’ look like a Canva template from 2019?
The answer isn’t hidden in fine print. It’s in plain sight — because they don’t care if you figure it out. By the time you do, they’ve already moved wallets, changed domains, and launched ‘Version 2.0’ with a new fake coupon code.
You deserve better than lies wrapped in yen symbols and fake urgency. Don’t click. Don’t deposit. Don’t forward that link to your cousin ‘just in case’.
Stop chasing coupons. Start protecting your capital.
Expose scammer


















