The Analysis and a Choice
of HYIP Programs
While
choosing a HYIP program you should follow the following rules.
Rule Number 1
Never
put all your money into one small hyip program, regardless of how
good it looks, or how great you have been told the program is,
especially if the only means of communication with them is via
anonymous email. These programs if they have a website will usually
have a free website from Homestead, Tri-pod, Geo-Cities, etc. This
goes for almost all of the frauds, but can also apply to very
professional looking websites that give you virtually no contact
point information. If you intend to invest a large sum, then you
should always make sure that the program in question offers some
sort of capital security. In this case, you should also try to
arrange a tete-a-tete meeting with the principals. If you have an up
line sponsor, ask them if they have this information.
Rule Number 2
Carry
out as much due diligence as possible on that particular hyip
program. If you are coming in with $1 million, you will be able to
satisfy yourself about legitimacy with irrefutable proof, because
you will be dealing directly with the principals. Usually an
investor with $100,000 can secure a program utilizing a sole
signatory account, through an offshore trading structure, and be
privy to more info, but this situation is not always the norm. As
for the rest of you? Forget it.
There are no public registries, no BBB listings, no bankers or
brokers who will confirm anything. For the small investor, this
business is based on trust and personal relationships: you know me,
I know 'A', 'A' knows 'B', who works with manager 'C', who knows the
trade facilitator 'D, etc. You can only do the best you can with the
information that is available on that program. Do not contact any
regulatory authorities to see if any complaints have been made, as
this may simply result in an otherwise sound program being shut
down. Use the forums that are listed in the appendices to gather as
much info as you can and make an educated decision. What you are
looking for is impartial advice, which unfortunately is hard to find
on the HYIP forums, although the Speculator Pro website is
completely impartial, so make good use of it.
Rule Number 3
Once
again do not put all your eggs in one basket when it comes to the
smaller Internet based HYIP's. You should diversify by placing a
portion of your investment capital into many different programs so
if one venture goes sour you still have the others intact to produce
income. Many small programs will close down. Funding two to three
small hyip programs with large amounts is suicide. Focus on the
overall plan, not on a program or two, unless you have found a
single large hyip program that offers a good return coupled with
capital security. Build your smaller hyip program list up to no less
then ten, it may take time, but this is the correct way to go about
investing in small Internet HYIP's. If you want to achieve a lot of
success, get your mind off the investments you are in, and get
focused on your plan. Your ultimate goal is to eventually fund 15-20
paying programs, as soon as some pay out you can widen your program
list. Concentrate on the plan not the programs.
Rule Number 4
With
the smaller programs, you should aim to recoup your seed money from
any one venture as soon as possible. Take your seed money back when
you reach 2-1 or 3-1. Remain invested with their money and not yours
from that point on. Too many small programs start out fine, we get
comfortable with them and start putting extra money in before the
returns from the last cycle come back, and then they fail. Do not
reinvest more money before you have been paid back, no matter how
long it takes. A good rule to follow is to take your original
capital back as soon as possible and only keep reinvesting half of
the payout proceeds on each cycle.
Rule Number 5
Do not
let large amounts accumulate in small programs; take smaller profits
often. Even from the most stable smaller programs, take funds back
often. Taking small amounts of profit along the way versus letting a
larger amount accumulate before a program goes sour will allow you
to see a profit instead of missing out on what you thought you had.
Rule Number 6
Do not
jump into new programs right away. Truth is many hyip investment
programs never make it through launch. Why would you waste your time
promoting a program that had a month or two to go before you could
ever sign someone up for it, assuming of course that the program
even remains on schedule.
If it is good this week, it will be good next week or three months
from now. Let the program establish a payout history with good
customer service before investing money with them. With some
exceptions, we do not join new programs right off the bat. If they
are still around in another month and everyone who is participating
is happy with the program, then it's time to take another look at
it.
Rule Number 7
Do not jump the gun and start
screaming swindle if a program experiences some problems early on.
Allow some time for the administrative end to catch up with the
trading and sign-ups, as enrolments escalate. Most programs with
small administrative teams have no concept of how many people can
enter a program in the early stages. It does not take long to get in
a real pickle admin wise.
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