The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has ordered Forsage and Forsage Philippines to stop soliciting investments from the public through a crowdfunding platform based on the Ethereum blockchain technology.
In an order issued September 17, the SEC directed Forsage to cease and desist from selling and offering securities in the form of investment contracts and to cease its internet presence until they secured a permit.
The SEC also ordered Forsage to refrain from transacting any business involving funds in its depository banks, and from transferring, disposing all related assets to ensure the preservation of the assets of the investors.
The order covers Forsage and its operators, representatives, salesmen and agents, including Rich Alex Apuntar, Vhellpoe Forlares Garves, Yuka Kuroyanagi, Christopher Doroliat, Iam Kim, Jairra Fab Teoxon, Mark Nicole Escabarte Valeria, Myra Cris Sapar, Romnick Melañez, and Vel Cabalza.
“[T]he investment practices of Forsage, if not restrained, will operate as a fraud on investors or to the investing public as it utilizes a ‘Ponzi scheme’,” the SEC order read.
“In many Ponzi schemes, the perpetrators focus on attracting new money to make promised payments to earlier-stage investors to create the false appearance that investors are profiting from a legitimate business. It is not an investment strategy but a gullibility scheme, which works only as long as there is an ever increasing number of new investors joining the scheme.”
The SEC issued the order after finding that Forsage has solicited investments from the public under a scheme promoted through its website and social networking sites as a crowdfunding platform with a smart contract based on the Ethereum (ETH) blockchain technology.
Under the scheme, Forsage offers 2 commission programs or cycle tiers, the Forsage X3 and Forsage X4, that promise payouts to investors. The programs require a minimum investment of 0.05 ETH, equivalent to about P600, and allow a maximum investment of 51.2 ETH, equivalent to about P600,000.
The Forsage X3 and X4 programs have 12 income slots each that an investor may activate, with each slot having endless referral incomes, indicating boundless income potential for investors. It also promises income through “spillovers,” which are overflows or surplus of referrals gathered by a passive member’s sponsor or downline.
The scheme involves the sale of securities to the public in the form of investment contracts, in which a person invests his money in a common enterprise and is led to expect profits primarily from the efforts of others.
All securities are prohibited for sale or distribution within the Philippines without a registration statement approved by the SEC.
Forsage is not registered as a corporation or partnership with the SEC, nor has it been issued a secondary license to operate as a broker dealer of securities or issuer of any securities or of mutual funds.
Forsage is not qualified to operate as a crowdfunding entity in the country as it must be duly organized under Philippine laws or must be a Filipino natural person, according to SEC.
It is also not registered with the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, which requires all entities engaged in virtual currencies in the country to obtain a Certificate of Registration to operate as a remittance and transfer company. SEC said Forsage continued to solicit investments from the public, and even attempted to discredit the agency by spreading false information that they are outside the commission’s jurisdiction.
The SEC said Forsage’s claim that it is decentralized and is not subject to any government restriction and control is baseless.
“A profit making venture such as Forsage which utilizes smart contracts in selling or offering securities in the nature of investment contracts is required to be registered with the Commission which regulates public offering or sale of securities within the Philippines,” the SEC order read.
1 comment
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