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Charles Ponzi

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Ponzi scheme organizers often solicit new investors by promising to invest funds in opportunities claimed to generate high returns with little or no risk. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Charles Ponzi


1
Charles Ponzi
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(No Transcript)
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Facts about Charles Ponzi
  • flamboyant con man whose scam followed a
    particularly spectacular course
  • Mr. Ponzi began telling New York investors in
    December 1919 that investments in foreign postage
    coupons could yield 50 percent returns in 45
    days.

4
  • By redeeming coupons bought cheaply overseas for
    much higher amounts in the United States, he
    could double their money in three months, he
    claimed.
  • Mr. Ponzi was a fast-talking immigrant and
    college dropout

5
  • His scheme rested on the eagerness of ordinary
    working people to benefit from the wealth they
    saw being generated around them as the economy
    recovered from World War I.
  • As the fever spread, millions of dollars were
    coming in every week, most of it from ordinary
    working-class people investing as little as 10
    at a time. It's estimated that nearly
    three-quarters of the Boston Police Department
    invested in "Ponzi notes," as they became known.

6
  • With successive waves of people entrusting him
    with their cash, Ponzi needed only enough money
    to pay off those people redeeming their coupons.
    Of course, with the prospect of increasing their
    savings exponentially every couple of months, few
    ever redeemed anything.

7
  • Mr. Ponzi was convicted of mail fraud in 1920 and
    served time in federal and state prisons before
    he was deported to Italy in 1934, never having
    become a citizen. He died penniless in Rio de
    Janeiro in 1949 and was buried in a paupers
    cemetery there.

8
Definition
  • A Ponzi scheme is an investment fraud that
    involves the payment of purported returns to
    existing investors from funds contributed by new
    investors. Ponzi scheme organizers often solicit
    new investors by promising to invest funds in
    opportunities claimed to generate high returns
    with little or no risk.

9
Other Notorious Ponzi Schemes
10
Biblical Bilker
  • In Florida, the Greater Ministries International
    church used Bible-speak to cheat its flock out of
    500 million. Starting in the early 1990s, the
    church, led by gun-toting minister Gerald Payne,
    offered worshippers investments in gold coins.
    Payne then created an investment plan that would
    "double the 'blessings' that

11
  • people invested" by funneling money towards the
    church's fake precious metals investments.
    According to the Anti-Defamation League, Payne
    said that God had modernized the multiplication
    of the loaves and fishes and asked him to share
    the secret. 500 million later, the Feds caught
    Payne, but most investors never got their money
    back.

12
Retiree Robber
  • Mexican resort owner Michael Eugene Kelly schemed
    retirees and senior citizens out of 428 million.
    He offered them timeshare investments in Cancun
    hotels that he called "Universal Leases.

13
  • The timeshares came with rental agreements
    promising investors a nice fixed rate of return.
    Most of his victims used their retirement
    savings, thinking they would get solid, low-risk
    returns.
  • The SEC says that "more than 136 million of the
    funds invested (came) from IRA accounts." Kelly,
    bought himself a private jet, racetrack, and four
    yachts.

14
What exactly is the SEC?
  • What do the letter stand for?
  • Where is it located?
  • What is its job?

15
Letters
  • SEC
  • Securities and Exchange Commission

16
Location
  • SEC Locations The SEC employs approximately
    3,500 staff in Washington, DC and in 11 regional
    offices
  • New York
  • Boston
  • Philadelphia
  • Miami
  • Atlanta
  • Chicago

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Job
  • to protect investors, maintain fair, orderly, and
    efficient markets, and facilitate capital
    formation
  • main areas of enforcement activity are
  • Insider trading
  • Accounting fraud
  • False or misleading investment information

18
Ladies only
  • In 1880, Boston native Sarah Howe promised women
    8 interest on a 'Ladies Deposit." She said it
    was only for women, selling the fact that their
    money would be safe with her. She took the money
    and ran.
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