Let’s cut the fluff. There is no such thing as a working, publicly sold crypto trading bot that delivers 0.7% daily — let alone one you can join via a Telegram link with $500 and zero KYC.
That number isn’t just optimistic. It’s mathematically suicidal for anyone who believes it.
Do the math — then walk away
0.7% every single day compounds to 104% annual return — before fees, slippage, or drawdowns. That’s doubling your money every ~10 months. Sounds great — until you realize real-world quant funds don’t operate like this.
Renaissance Technologies’ Medallion Fund — arguably the most successful algorithmic trading strategy ever built — returned ~66% annually *net of fees* over its peak decades. And it ran on custom hardware, employed hundreds of PhDs in physics and math, spent $100M+ on data infrastructure, and was closed to everyone except employees.
Two Sigma? Citadel? They’re running at 20–35% annual returns — with billion-dollar balance sheets, co-located servers next to exchange matching engines, and latency measured in *microseconds*. Not ‘I clicked a link and got a dashboard showing green numbers.’
So ask yourself: if a ‘bot’ really could pull off 0.7% daily — why would its creators sell access for $500? Why wouldn’t they raise $2 billion from pension funds, charge 2% + 20%, and quietly print money behind closed doors?
They wouldn’t. Because it doesn’t exist.
What’s actually happening behind the dashboard
The ‘AI arbitrage bot’ you’re shown? It’s a frontend shell — maybe a React app pulling numbers from a hardcoded JSON file or a spreadsheet updated manually by someone in Bali with a coffee and a burner laptop.
Your deposit goes to a wallet controlled by the operators. Your ‘profits’? Just entries in their database — reversible, editable, and never withdrawable beyond the first ‘test payout’ (designed to hook you). Try withdrawing $2,000 in ‘gains’ after 30 days — you’ll hit ‘KYC verification pending’, ‘network congestion’, or ‘maintenance mode’. Or silence.

And here’s where Warren Buffett’s words land like a hammer: ‘Rule No. 1: Never lose money. Rule No. 2: Never forget Rule No. 1.’ This isn’t about missing out — it’s about violating the only rule that matters. Every dollar you send to ‘0.7% Daily Crypto’ is already lost. You just haven’t processed the grief yet.
The lie wears a lab coat
They’ll name-drop ‘quant strategies’, ‘cross-exchange arbitrage’, ‘machine learning models trained on 12TB of order book data’. Sounds legit — until you ask: Where’s the live, verifiable, third-party audited PnL? Where’s the open-source backtester? Where’s the delay between trade signal and execution — because real arbitrage requires sub-10ms latency, not ‘we’ll send you a screenshot at 9:15am’.
No code. No audit. No transparency. Just a promise — and a wallet address.
Ray Dalio nailed it: ‘The biggest mistake investors make is to believe that what happened in the recent past is likely to persist.’ Those first three ‘profit’ screenshots? They’re not evidence — they’re bait. Past performance isn’t predictive. It’s fabricated.
Let’s do one more calculation — the brutal kind:
You invest $500. At 0.7% daily, compounded, in 90 days you’d ‘have’ $942. In 180 days: $1,770. In 365 days: $6,300. Sounds life-changing — until you remember: none of those numbers reflect reality. They reflect a fantasy spreadsheet. Real crypto markets have volatility >70% annualized. A strategy claiming near-zero risk while delivering >100% return is either lying, incompetent, or both.
This isn’t investing. It’s donationware — disguised as tech, sold as alpha, and delivered as theft.
If you’ve sent money to ‘0.7% Daily Crypto’, stop adding funds. Take screenshots. Report the wallet address to Chainabuse. Then forgive yourself — this scam preys on hope, not ignorance. But now you know: there is no bot. There is no edge. There is only a countdown until the group goes dark and the wallet empties.
Don’t wait for proof. You already have it — in the math, the silence, and the fact that real quants don’t DM you on Telegram.
Expose scammer



















