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The LedgerFortune Crypto

Is OneCoin the Biggest Financial Fraud in History?

By
David Z. Morris
David Z. Morris
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By
David Z. Morris
David Z. Morris
Down Arrow Button Icon
November 6, 2019, 9:13 AM ET

This is the web version of The Ledger, Fortune’s fintech and cryptocurrency newsletter. Click here to subscribe.

This week saw the release of the final episode of Jamie Bartlett’s fantastic BBC podcast series The Missing Cryptoqueen, which I’ve referenced in this newsletter several times already. In it, Bartlett and his team try to track down the missing Dr. Ruja Ignatova, apparent mastermind of the cryptocurrency-themed pyramid scheme OneCoin.

Though the U.S. government previously estimated OneCoin’s take at $4 billion, Bartlett’s sources claim the worldwide take was as much as $15.8 billion as of early 2018 – and OneCoin is still operating. In the final summation, it seems entirely plausible that OneCoin will have stolen more than the $19.4 billion lost by Bernie Madoff’s victims, making it the largest financial scam ever.

The throughline of Bartlett’s podcast is his quest to find Ruja, who appears to be on the lam – but I won’t spoil how that resolves. And anyway, the more important part of the final episode may be Bartlett’s invaluable on-the-ground reporting on OneCoin’s impact in Uganda. OneCoin’s viral, commission-driven structure helped it worm its way into many vulnerable, tech-naive communities, also including working-class England and South Asia. Bartlett shows us the devastating fallout – families torn apart, goats and houses sold to buy into a scam, and even churches seemingly suborned to corruption.

At least some of those responsible may yet face justice. In New York, the trial of accused accessory Mark Scott is currently underway, and Ruja’s brother, Konstantin Ignatov, took the stand yesterday as a cooperating witness. (Independent reporter Matthew Russel Lee has been covering the trial on Twitter.)

But this isn’t about one crime. The Missing Cryptoqueen delivers a damning message about how techno-outopianism, especially in finance, can actually harm the people it’s intended to help. OneCoin succeeded mostly by pointing to the massive success of Bitcoin, and specifically leveraged the Bitcoin community’s continuing promises to “bank the unbanked.”

In places like Uganda, decentralized digital currency does have real promise. But OneCoin moved faster than the good guys and used that narrative to fuel a short con. The havoc wreaked around the world is bad enough, but the damage done to the idea of innovation itself could be worse.

Update 12/11/19 – This piece has been updated with more precise information about how much money OneCoin may have taken from victims.

David Z. Morris

@davidzmorris

David.Morris@fortune.com

THE LEDGER'S LATEST

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Looking for Growth, Spain's Santander Acquires Stake in Fintech Startup - Jennifer Baljko

A.I. vs. The Wolves of Wall Street - Jonathan Vanian

DECENTRALIZED NEWS

To the Moon…

Goldman Sachs leads $50 million investment in Deserve, which issues credit using machine learning and alternative metrics. "Neobanks" like MoneyLion are out to kill the corner branch. Crypto exchange Binance will open a Beijing office.Kava launches to offer decentralized lending using the Cosmos blockchain ecosystem.

Rekt…

The governor of Hungary's central bank says the Euro was "a mistake."Robinhood traders discovered a glitch that gave them "infinite leverage." A former German DJ claims to be a "co-founder" of Bitcoin, to much scorn. The Bitmex crypto exchange exposed user emails in an embarrassing security breach. Cities can't find much use for blockchain.

FOMO NO MO'

“I’ve never seen violence in them. This is why I can call it my favorite case. It’s difficult not to root for them.”

Icelandic reporter Alla Ámundadóttir, in a new Vanity Fair feature about a crypto-crime that's frankly much more fun than OneCoin. The story follows five rogueish but seemingly good-natured men who set out to carry out an Ocean's 11-style heist . . . of bitcoin mining equipment.

MEMES AND MUMBLES

allaire tweet

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire in a Twitter thread pushing back against a new draft study. The study, summarized by the Wall Street Journal, claims that a single manipulator was responsible for half of the rise in Bitcoin's price in the 2017-2018 bubble. Many cryptocurrency analysts have derided the findings as deeply flawed, including at least one who has no personal stake in Bitcoin's price.

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About the Author
By David Z. Morris
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