Let’s cut the fluff. The project is called Yes. Not ‘Yes Capital’, not ‘Yes AI Labs’ — just Yes. And it’s a scam. A polished, Telegram-friendly, spreadsheet-powered theft operation disguised as a quantitative trading platform.
They promise 10% daily returns. Yes — ten percent. Every. Single. Day.
Do the math with me — no jargon, no smoke. If you deposit $500 and earn 10% daily, compounded, here’s what happens:
After 7 days: $500 × (1.10)7 = $974
After 30 days: $500 × (1.10)30 = $8,724
After 90 days: $500 × (1.10)90 = $3,262,897
That’s over three million dollars from a $500 investment in three months. Not ‘maybe’. Not ‘if markets cooperate’. Guaranteed. According to their own claims.
Here’s the problem: No such strategy exists — not in reality, not in theory, not even in a hedge fund’s wet dream.
Real-world quant funds — the ones with Nobel laureates, ex-NASA engineers, and custom FPGA clusters — target annual returns of 20–66%. Renaissance Technologies’ Medallion Fund — widely considered the most successful algorithmic trading system ever built — returned ~66% per year before fees, and that was with $10B+ in capital, decades of R&D, and latency measured in nanoseconds. They charge 5% management + 44% performance fees — and they don’t accept retail investors at all.
If Yes had a real 10% daily bot, its creators wouldn’t be begging for $500 deposits in Telegram groups. They’d be raising $2B from sovereign wealth funds. They’d have lawyers, compliance officers, and SEC filings thicker than phone books. Instead? They have a generic whitepaper, a wallet address, and a ‘live dashboard’ that updates only when new deposits arrive.
This isn’t alpha generation. It’s arithmetic theater.
Every ‘profit’ shown on their dashboard is fake — generated in Excel, mirrored on-chain via pre-coordinated transfers, or simply typed into a frontend. There is no live execution. No exchange API keys. No order logs. Just a story — dressed up with terms like ‘cross-exchange arbitrage’, ‘quantum volatility smoothing’, and ‘AI-driven delta-neutral hedging’. Buzzwords are cheap. Real trading infrastructure is not.
And let’s talk about risk — or rather, the complete absence of it in their pitch. They claim ‘near-zero drawdown’, ‘fully automated’, ‘no emotional trading’. But markets don’t work that way. Even the most robust strategies suffer 10–30% drawdowns. A system that never loses is either lying — or it’s not trading at all.

Ray Dalio put it plainly: ‘The biggest mistake investors make is to believe that what happened in the recent past is likely to persist.’ In this case, the ‘recent past’ is a string of fake screenshots. And people keep believing — because hope is louder than math.
But the real kicker? The investor’s chief problem — and even his worst enemy — is likely to be himself. — Benjamin Graham. We ignore red flags because we want it to be true. We skip due diligence because the dashboard looks slick. We convince ourselves ‘this time it’s different’ — even though every single ‘this time’ ends the same way: empty wallets and broken promises.
Here’s how Yes actually works:
• You send USDT to their wallet.
• They credit your account with ‘profits’ — numbers pulled from thin air.
• You try to withdraw — suddenly there are ‘KYC limits’, ‘network fees’, ‘maintenance mode’, or — most commonly — silence.
• Meanwhile, your money is already gone. Mixed, laundered, or sitting in an OTC dealer’s account before vanishing into privacy coins.
No code. No audits. No third-party verification. Just a name that sounds warm and affirming — Yes — while quietly saying ‘no’ to accountability, transparency, and basic financial sanity.
If you’ve sent money to Yes: stop. Do not send more. Document everything. Report it to your local financial authority — even if you think it’s hopeless. Every report adds pressure. Every shared warning saves someone else’s rent money.
You didn’t get fooled because you’re dumb. You got fooled because Yes weaponized optimism — and buried the math under layers of jargon and dopamine-colored charts.
Don’t trust the dashboard. Trust the exponent. Trust the impossibility. Trust that if it sounds too good to be true, it isn’t just false — it’s predatory.
So ask yourself right now: What’s *really* generating those 10% daily returns?
Answer: nothing. And that’s the only number that matters.
Expose scammer

















