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AB S12 Is Not a Trading Bot — It’s a Spreadsheet and a Wallet Address-Expose scammer
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AB S12 Is Not a Trading Bot — It’s a Spreadsheet and a Wallet Address

Let’s cut the theater. AB S12 isn’t running an AI arbitrage bot. It’s running a fake liquidity pool — which means there is no liquidity, no bot, and no strategy. Just a wallet address and a Telegram group feeding people fantasy P&L screenshots.

They say it delivers ‘1–2% daily returns’ — guaranteed. Let’s do the math, because math doesn’t lie — and it sure as hell doesn’t care about your hopes.

If you invest $500 at 1.5% per day, compounded daily, here’s what happens:

After 30 days: $500 × (1.015)30 = $782
After 90 days: $500 × (1.015)90 = $1,926
After 365 days: $500 × (1.015)365 = $114,327

That’s not ‘high returns.’ That’s 114,000% annualized. For context: Renaissance Technologies’ Medallion Fund — widely considered the most successful quant fund ever — averaged ~66% net annual returns before fees, over decades, with a $10B+ infrastructure, hundreds of PhDs, and custom-built microwave networks to shave microseconds off trade latency.

AB S12 has none of that. No servers. No backtesting logs. No slippage reports. No exchange API keys visible on-chain. Just a Telegram channel, a ‘dashboard’ that refreshes every 12 hours (like clockwork — because it’s manually updated), and a wallet address that only receives, never sends.

This isn’t underperformance. This is misrepresentation — full stop.

Real quantitative trading is brutal. It’s iterative. It’s loss-heavy in testing. It’s regulated, audited, and buried in compliance paperwork. It doesn’t run on ‘seasons’ like a reality TV show. And it absolutely, positively does not market itself to retail investors with promises of ‘guaranteed daily gains.’

Ray Dalio put it perfectly: ‘The biggest mistake investors make is to believe that what happened in the recent past is likely to persist.’ AB S12 shows you three weeks of green candles — then asks you to ignore every red flag in finance history. That’s not optimism. That’s surrendering your due diligence.

And let’s talk about the ‘liquidity pool’ label — the favorite camouflage of these scams. A real liquidity pool has verifiable reserves on-chain, constant arbitrage activity, measurable impermanent loss, and open-source smart contracts. AB S12’s ‘pool’ has zero on-chain liquidity. No Uniswap or Raydium pair. No contract verification. Just a screenshot of a balance that changes only when someone deposits — and never moves otherwise.

scam warning

That’s not liquidity. That’s a ledger entry in someone’s private spreadsheet.

Which brings us to Mark Twain: ‘A banker is a fellow who lends you his umbrella when the sun is shining and wants it back the minute it begins to rain.’ AB S12 doesn’t even pretend to be a banker. It hands you a plastic umbrella printed with ‘AI BOT ACTIVE’ — and vanishes the second you ask for a withdrawal, a contract address, or a single trade receipt.

No one at Renaissance logs into Telegram to explain why Medallion didn’t hit its target last Tuesday. No quant team at Citadel posts ‘S12 is coming!’ like it’s a Netflix drop. These are not product launches. They’re exit ramps — disguised as onboarding flows.

You don’t need a finance degree to spot this. You just need to ask two questions:

1. If this bot is so profitable, why isn’t it raising capital from pension funds — instead of begging for $500 deposits?

2. If it’s running live trades, where are the on-chain transaction hashes? Where’s the wallet’s outbound activity? Why does the deposit address have 47 incoming transfers… and exactly zero outgoing ones?

The silence is the answer.

AB S12 isn’t broken. It’s built exactly as intended — to take money, not move markets.

So if you’re holding tokens, watching the dashboard, waiting for ‘S12 to go live’ — stop. Log out. Pull your wallet extension. Check Etherscan or Solscan for that deposit address. Look for outbound transactions. If there are none, you already know what kind of ‘season’ you’re in.

This isn’t season 12. It’s the final episode — and you’re not the investor. You’re the plot twist.

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