
You’ve probably heard the expression “Ponzi scheme”. Most people have.
And most people equate it with some sort of financial malpractice. But it’s worth digging into the concept a little more deeply so you can recognise one a long way off and take steps to avoid them.
It’s easy to get sucked into a Ponzi-type scheme without realising it. Plenty of smart, intelligent, wealthy people fall victims to them – indeed those are exactly the sort of people a Ponzi scheme needs to attract for it to work.
The problem is that, in general, Ponzi schemes are not promoted as at attempt at large-scale fraud. Most people would run a million miles from that. So the promoters have to be much more subtle.
In today’s article I’ll show you how to spot them and, hopefully, how to avoid them.
Origins
To the surprise of many people, Ponzi schemes are named after a real person – Charles Ponzi, specifically – whose scheme was active in the US during the late 1910s and early 1920s.
We don’t call them Ponzi schemes because Charles Ponzi invented the concept – the concept itself is pretty much as old as time.
But his name ended up being attached to this particular variety of financial fraud because of the scale of his fraud (he cost investors an estimated $20 million in the early !920s – worth 10x or more in today’s money) at a time when the growth of mass media meant the story of his crimes were published to a wide audience.
The mechanics of a Ponzi scheme are relatively simple – although there are a couple of important twists to make it effective at scale.
All promoters do is promise a high return to investors which they pay out of the money new investors subscribe to join the scheme.
To keep this example simple, imagine an investor puts $100 in a scheme which promised a 10% return.
Here, the job of a Ponzi scheme operator is to attract a new investor with another $100, give $10 to the original investor as the promised return on their investment, and pocket the other $90.
Now, the reality is slightly more complicated than that, but at its heart, that’s how a Ponzi scheme works.
Provided you can attract enough new investors, such that you are able to keep paying out the $10 returns to all the prior rounds of investors, everyone is happy. For a while.
As I’m sure will be obvious, there comes a point where fewer new investors can be attracted, relative to the number of people already in the fund, which means there inevitably comes a point when the scheme collapses under its own weight.
While Ponzi scheme operators have 10 new investors for every existing investor, it’s easy enough to pay out the $10s to existing investors and become wealthy on the back of the share of the new investors’ money they keep for themselves.
When those proportions flip and they have one new investor for every 10 existing investors, all of the new $100 investment goes straight back out for cover 10 lots of $10 payments to investors in the earlier rounds.
And if the flow of new investors drops even further, that’s usually the point where the police get called in.
But while a Ponzi scheme in in full flow, the promoter has so much cash they don’t know what to do with it, although buying mansions, fast cars, and having a string of mistresses are all popular options for getting rid of some of it.
And – not that I’m recommending this as an investment strategy – some perfectly innocent, legitimate investors can do quite well out of being in a Ponzi scheme. If you’re an early investor who gets out in mid-scam, before it becomes apparent that the promoter has run off to a country with no extradition treaty, you’ve had a few years of exceptional investment returns plus all your money back.
Whilst a subtle part of the scheme, people getting their money back in the early-to-mid cycle part of a Ponzi scheme is quite an important part of making it seem like a legitimate investment. Without that, the scheme collapses a lot sooner.
And in the early-to-mid cycle, that’s easy enough to do, given the flood of new investors. If a new investor brings $100, and a previous-round investor wants their $100 back, you just give it to them. Provided the proportion of people wanting their money back is low, it’s much better to pay them back and regard that as a cost of doing business, because doing so confers a degree of legitimacy which, in turn, allows you to power ahead and double, triple or 10x the amount of money flowing in.
The two key components
While the mechanics of a Ponzi scheme are, at least conceptually, pretty simple, that’s not usually the hard part of the process (at least for people without a moral compass).
For a really good Ponzi scheme, two distinct elements need to be present:
1-A credible, and legitimate, business idea
Especially in the early days – later on, the momentum of new investors who are hooked on the higher-than-market-rate returns makes this less relevant – you need a business idea that is…or at least appears to be…both credible and legitimate.
Most people won’t knowingly do anything fraudulent or illegal. So Ponzi scheme promoters dress their schemes up with a cloak of legitimacy.
Charles Ponzi’s scheme, for example, was a simple-enough arbitrage play. Without over-complicating the explanation here, the scheme relied on goods being priced differently in two different countries, and shipping them from one to the other to bank a profit.
By way of example, imagine a cabbage in Belgium is worth 10 Euros, but for some reason in the US it’s worth $20 (or about 17 Euros). Provided you can ship cabbages from Belgium to the US for perhaps a Euro or two, you’ve got something that sounds like a decent business. And perfectly legal.
Charles Ponzi’s scheme actually involved postal vouchers, but the principle is much the same.
For the scheme to work at scale, the mechanics of the supposed business opportunity have to be credible and legitimate, as Charles Ponzi’s were initially.
2-The dream
The other key component is the dream. You have to sell investors a dream – and that dream is typically above-market-rate returns with no risk and no downside.
Scheme promoters get extra bonus points if the dream is infinitely scalable. That way, they can position the opportunity as letting a prospective investor in on the ground floor of something that will grow, pretty much without limits, making the investor rich beyond their wildest dreams.
“Look, I’m letting you in on the ground floor here, but when this goes global, your $100 will turn into $1million overnight!”
The dream is important because that provides the motivation to investors so they hand over their cash. Everyone knows they can leave their money in their bank account where it’s pretty safe and they’ll earn a couple of percent a year in interest.
But there’s no dream in that.
Sure, many people will shop around for the best interest rate on their savings, but there are very few people who would describe finding a way to get an extra 0.05%pa on their savings as a dream.
Turning $100 into $1million risk-free and with no downside, though? That’s the sort of dream that opens up a spigot of investor cash.
More than that – it’s the sort of dream where everyone will tell their friends, many of whom will send the promoter their $100s as well.
That’s why, sadly, when Ponzi schemes collapse, as they inevitably all will, they often destroy families and relationships because people don’t easily forgive a well-intentioned, and perfectly innocent, friend’s recommendation to invest in a scheme which ultimately results in all their life savings disappearing into the pockets of a fraudster.
However, a credible and legitimate business idea, ideally which sells a dream, is at the heart of every Ponzi scheme.
Then it’s just promotion
With those elements in place, the only thing that holds a scheme operator back is attracting more and more investors.
So a lot of effort goes into the promotion of the scheme. Not necessarily in selling you the scheme itself – that’s a bit too obvious.
The selling tends to concentrate on the dream. The Ponzi scheme just becomes an easy, obvious way for people to manifest that dream.
That’s one reason why Ponzi scheme operators tend to buy large, impressive houses and fancy cars to boost their business savvy and legitimacy: “Look, I got rich through my cabbage importing scheme, so there’s no reason you can’t do the same.”
Part of it, though, is being able to convince potential investors that the cabbage market, in our example, here can only go up. So even if you’re already running a $100million fund (or, at least, claim to be), investors need to believe it could become a $1billion fund.
At each stage, you need to sell the dream of the next stage otherwise your flow of funds dries up – no sane investor is going to think you’ll be offering above-market returns on a fund that’s worth $100million today, but is going to shrink to $80million in the next 12 months.
So never-ending growth, into the indefinite future, is a key part of the sell.
For the people running our fictional cabbage-arbitrage opportunity, that’s why they start paying medical researchers to run studies proving the health benefits of eating more cabbage. Get someone who works at Harvard to tell the world that eating more cabbage minimises the risks of an early death and cabbage sales are going to spike.
Start promoting recipes for cabbage soup and cabbage muffins through a few celebrity chefs and you’ll get the media buzz going nicely.
Get the researcher on all the major chat shows and you’ll spark a stampede for cabbages at every supermarket in the country, allowing you to prepare a graph for the next round of investors which shows the growth in cabbage consumption going exponential.
Project growth at that rate forward a couple of years and you’re letting people in on a multi-billion-dollar opportunity to arbitrage Belgian cabbage prices by giving you their $100. Given the growth rate, it’s inevitable that your $100 will turn into $1million, entirely risk-free.
After all, just look how steep that line is on the cabbage consumption growth chart!
Over-promising and under-delivering
Sooner or later, Ponzi schemes collapse because they over-promise and under-deliver.
In the end, it’s always because the rate of new money coming in falls to a level where scheme promoters can’t cover the interest payments due, plus the occasional redemption to give an air of legitimacy.
That’s how it collapses, in a mechanical sense, but usually something has happened first to slow up the source of new money.
Taking our fictitious example, I have no idea how many cabbages Belgium could grow in a year, but there obviously come a point where the entire country is nothing but one huge cabbage farm, at which point your supply of 10 Euro Belgian cabbages inevitably dries up.
It also gets to a point where people have tried all the cabbage soup recipes from celebrity chefs and, notwithstanding the supposed health benefits, get tired of eating cabbage three times a day. So cabbage sales in the stores tail off.
In the case of Charles Ponzi himself, some basic arithmetic undid him.
Charles Barron (whose name is still immortalised in the Barron’s financial publishing empire) calculated that, for Ponzi’s scheme to work, there would need to be approximately 6000x the number of postal coupons in the world than were actually in circulation.
Eventually all Ponzi schemes collapse under the weight of their own promises. They all pass a point of no return where the end is mathematically inevitable, so it’s just a matter of time before everyone finds out.
For Ponzi scheme promoters, that’s usually a good time to start researching which countries don’t have extradition treaties with wherever they are, because it’ll either be one of those countries, or jail, that they end up from that point onwards.
The middle eight
The concept of a “middle eight” in songwriting applies just as much to Ponzi schemes.
In songwriting, it’s a change of pace or tempo, signalling a change of scene in some way. It might be where the songwriter slips in a guitar solo or a key change, for example.
In Ponzi schemes it’s a make-or-break moment which appears to threaten the scheme, but which the promoter somehow navigates their way through, managing to continue the scheme – generally with renewed vigour and an even greater inward flow of funds than before that moment of challenge.
In our fictional example, maybe a cargo ship full of Belgian cabbages sinks in mid-Atlantic meaning $millions-worth of sales ending up at the bottom of the ocean.
Every mega-successful Ponzi scheme requires a challenge to be overcome. it’s an essential part of the traditional “hero’s journey” story structure.
Ironically, overcoming that challenge can fire up future investors even more because the events can be spun to claim than a challenge which was overcome demonstrates the solidity and reliability of the scheme itself. It’s a little psychological trick but, for most people, a scheme which has overcome a challenge and survived seems more solid and trustworthy than one which has only ever been selling unicorns and rainbows.
For Charles Ponzi, one of the newspaper articles Charles Barron wrote led to a run on his fund. Ponzi paid out $2million over the course of a few days to investors demanding their money back.
But here’s the key.
Charles Ponzi engaged with the crowd demanding their money back outside his offices. He was polite and civil and sought to reassure investors that everything was fine. Even though some journalist claimed Ponzi’s scheme couldn’t possibly work, he’d got it all wrong. Your money is safe with me, he claimed.
Not everyone believed him, of course. They withdrew their cash anyway.
But due to his skill at working the crowd, re-selling the dream of unimaginable wealth for those who stuck with him, and his willingness to pay out the people who still insisted on refunds as a way of demonstrating how solid his finances were, many of the initially-angry crowd ended up leaving their money in Ponzi’s fund after all.
While this episode was the beginning of the end for Charles Ponzi, he weathered the challenge and made enough people believe in his scheme for him to keep it alive a little while longer.
No matter the precise nature of the scheme, the over-promising and under-delivering piece is at the heart of the eventual collapse of a Ponzi scheme.
But a little wobble at some point in the growth curve, a challenge which is overcome, can become part of the narrative which powers the scheme to the point growth goes vertical.
The denouement
The end usually isn’t pretty.
Leaving aside the police leading people away in handcuffs, the collapse of so many people’s hopes and dreams are the cruellest outcomes for people who often didn’t know better, and whose only crime was to trust people who weren’t worthy of their trust.
The number of times innocent people were lied to, with a straight face, and relieved of every last penny they had, is the tragedy of all Ponzi schemes.
The victims become bystanders in a media circus where hundreds of minutes of television are broadcast and thousands of column inches are written. A media circus which makes the victims feel stupid, angry, misled.
Why did they not spot the signs? How come the smart money got out and they were left holding the baby? If only they’d listened to their sister-in-law who said the whole scheme was fake and would never work!
Except, at the time, the people who lost out were swept along by the enthusiasm of the promoter.
Their apparent bona fides – often demonstrated by paying back early investors to crystallise their $million gains. The seeming legitimacy of their business model. The apparent “vertical growth for ever” possibilities.
The untold riches which awaited the faithful if only they stayed invested in the fund through its occasional little difficulties, and ignored the naysayers who weren’t part of the cult. After all, those people were incapable of seeing the unique genius of the scheme’s promoter.
But, in the end, Ponzi scheme promoters can’t hold back the tide.
Even if they are slick salespeople who can convince investors to stay on-board through occasional bumps in the road, eventually, to use our fictional example, they can’t persuade enough people to eat enough cabbage to keep their scheme on the road. It always comes to a nasty end.
Your best hope is never to drink the Kool-Aid that everyone else is drinking, even when people are telling you it’s inevitable that the whole world will eat nothing but Belgian cabbage five years from now.
Even if researchers from every prestigious university in the world concur that a cabbage-only diet is inevitably the best way forward for mankind, given that it promotes brain function and brings improved health to all.
And even if the scheme’s promoters can line up dozens of people who switched to a cabbage-only diet and can testify to its magical properties. They are likely either to be in on the con, or to be gullible enough to believe almost anything the promoter tells them.
As a business leader, you need to see through the charlatanism and avoid getting swept along by promises of magical, risk-free results.
While that’s not always easy, given all the hype, at least you’ll have a business left at the end of it.









