SEC, Police Join Forces to Crush Ponzi Schemes in Nigeria
Nigeria’s capital market regulator, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), is taking a major step to combat Ponzi schemes and investment fraud by moving to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Nigeria Police Force .
What Is Happening?
• The SEC plans to formally partner with the Police Cyber Security Unit
• The goal is to strengthen detection, investigation, arrest, and prosecution of Ponzi operators
• This collaboration aims to secure Nigeria’s cyberspace and protect investors from financial scams
️ Why This Matters
According to SEC Director-General, Dr. Emomotimi Agama, Ponzi schemes are not just financial crimes—they are a social menace:
• Widows losing life savings
• Youths trapped by fake crypto and forex promises
• Retirees defrauded by “guaranteed” high returns
“The fight against financial crime is a fight for the soul of our economy.”
He emphasized that scammers often promise outrageous returns like 200% in 30 days, disguising fraud with fancy terms like crypto, forex, and AI trading bots .
Closing the Enforcement Gap
• SEC can identify illegal schemes and regulatory breaches
• Police have the power to investigate, arrest, and prosecute
• Fraudsters have been exploiting the gap between identification and enforcement
• This MoU is designed to close that gap permanently
Police Respond
The Inspector-General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun, welcomed the collaboration and assured full support:
• Stronger partnership with SEC
• ️ Better enforcement of capital market laws
• Improved economic recovery and investor confidence
He also congratulated the SEC on achieving over ₦100 trillion market capitalization, noting that strong regulation is key to sustainable growth .
What This Means for Investors
• ❌ Harder environment for Ponzi schemes to operate
• ✅ Better protection for retail investors
• ⚠️ Increased scrutiny of “too-good-to-be-true” investment offers
• More arrests and prosecutions expected
Investor Reminder
If an investment promises:
• Guaranteed returns
• Very high profits in very short time
• No clear business model or registration
Run. Don’t walk.
Nigeria’s capital market regulator, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), is taking a major step to combat Ponzi schemes and investment fraud by moving to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Nigeria Police Force .
What Is Happening?
• The SEC plans to formally partner with the Police Cyber Security Unit
• The goal is to strengthen detection, investigation, arrest, and prosecution of Ponzi operators
• This collaboration aims to secure Nigeria’s cyberspace and protect investors from financial scams
️ Why This Matters
According to SEC Director-General, Dr. Emomotimi Agama, Ponzi schemes are not just financial crimes—they are a social menace:
• Widows losing life savings
• Youths trapped by fake crypto and forex promises
• Retirees defrauded by “guaranteed” high returns
“The fight against financial crime is a fight for the soul of our economy.”
He emphasized that scammers often promise outrageous returns like 200% in 30 days, disguising fraud with fancy terms like crypto, forex, and AI trading bots .
Closing the Enforcement Gap
• SEC can identify illegal schemes and regulatory breaches
• Police have the power to investigate, arrest, and prosecute
• Fraudsters have been exploiting the gap between identification and enforcement
• This MoU is designed to close that gap permanently
Police Respond
The Inspector-General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun, welcomed the collaboration and assured full support:
• Stronger partnership with SEC
• ️ Better enforcement of capital market laws
• Improved economic recovery and investor confidence
He also congratulated the SEC on achieving over ₦100 trillion market capitalization, noting that strong regulation is key to sustainable growth .
What This Means for Investors
• ❌ Harder environment for Ponzi schemes to operate
• ✅ Better protection for retail investors
• ⚠️ Increased scrutiny of “too-good-to-be-true” investment offers
• More arrests and prosecutions expected
Investor Reminder
If an investment promises:
• Guaranteed returns
• Very high profits in very short time
• No clear business model or registration
Run. Don’t walk.