SEC Charges Crypto Fund Founders in Nearly $2B Fraud

The regulator alleges the now-defunct HyperFund was a ‘pyramid and a Ponzi scheme.’



The founders of a purported blockchain technology conglomerate have been charged by the Securities and Exchange Commission and law enforcement with running a pyramid and Ponzi scheme that bilked investors worldwide of nearly $2 billion.

According to the SEC’s complaint, Xue Lee, also known as Sam Lee, and Brenda Chunga, who went under the sobriquet Bitcoin Beautee, promoted “membership” packages for HyperFund, which promised “exorbitant passive returns, supposedly derived in part from HyperFund’s crypto asset mining operations.”

For example, the SEC alleged, HyperFund promised investors returns of 0.5% to 1% per day, with the prospect of tripling their initial investment within 600 days. HyperFund also implemented a pyramid scheme-like referral system to reward existing members for recruiting new investors, according to the SEC’s allegations.

“HyperFund, however, was a pyramid and Ponzi scheme,” the SEC complaint states. “HyperFund had no real source of revenue other than funds received from investors, and defendants had no basis for the promised returns.”

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Chunga was allegedly one of HyperFund’s top promoters and the face of its U.S. presence, recruiting investors through online seminars and videos that focused on investors’ purported ability to make money via daily passive rewards and through so-called “accelerated” rewards if they wrangled others to join. Chunga allegedly received more than $3.7 million from the platform and directly from investors, which she used to fund “extravagant personal expenses” and help recruit others by showing off what she made from the HyperFund, the SEC said.

Because HyperFund’s membership packages were offered and sold as investment contracts, they are considered securities under federal securities laws, according to the SEC. However, the membership packages were offered and sold without registration and without qualifying for any exemption from registration.

“As alleged in our complaint, Lee and Chunga attracted investors with the allure of profits from crypto asset mining, but the only thing that HyperFund mined was its investors’ pockets,” Gurbir Grewal, director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement, said in a statement. “This case illustrates yet again how noncompliance in the crypto space facilitates schemes where promoters capitalize on the promise of easy money, without providing the detailed investor protection disclosures required by the registration provisions of the federal securities laws.”

Lee and Chunga were charged with violating the registration and anti-fraud provisions of federal securities laws. The SEC is seeking permanent injunctive relief, conduct-based injunctions preventing the two from participating in multi-level marketing or crypto asset offerings, disgorgement of ill-gotten gains, prejudgment interest and civil penalties.

Chunga agreed to settle the charges and to be permanently enjoined from future violations of the charged provisions and certain other activity and to pay disgorgement and civil penalties to be determined at a later date by the court. The settlement is subject to court approval, while the charges against Lee will be litigated.

In a parallel action, the office of the U.S. attorney for the District of Maryland charged Lee and Chunga with conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud. 

Chunga pleaded guilty to both charges and admitted she personally received at least $3 million in fraud proceeds from her participation in the alleged fraud. She will be required to pay restitution in the full amount of the victims’ losses, which the parties agree is at least $3 million, but could be significantly higher, according to the U.S. attorney’s office. Chunga also faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

If convicted, Lee faces a maximum sentence of five years in federal prison for each count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud.

“The defendants are charged with defrauding investors to the tune of $1.89 billion,” Acting Assistant Attorney General Nicole Argentieri, of the Department of Justice’s Criminal Division, said in a statement. “With our partners in Homeland Security Investigations and IRS Criminal Investigation, we are committed to uncovering sophisticated frauds involving cryptocurrency and digital assets and bringing those who perpetrate them to justice.”

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New Zealand Super Fund Nears $43B in Assets

The funds assets sit at NZ$69.66 billion. 



The New Zealand Superannuation Fund reached NZ$69.66 billion ($45.43 billion) in assets at the end of 2023, the fund
announced. The super returned 16.03% pretax for the year, well above the Treasury bill benchmark of 5.16%, the figure which represents government contributions to the fund. 

“The value we create over and above the return on government debt is a very important measurement of our success, so it is satisfying to be able to report that our investment activities have outperformed the Treasury Bill benchmark by [NZ]$6.44 billion during the past year and by more than [NZ]$44 billion during the lifetime of the fund to date,” said Paula Steed, acting CEO of the NZ Super Fund, in a statement. 

Steed attributed the funds’ strong returns to the global stock market recovery. Since inception in 2003, the NZ Super Fund has returned an annualized 9.79%. Annualized returns for the past five, 10 and 20 years are 10.24%, 10.11% and 9.82%, respectively. In the last quarter of 2023, the fund returned 7.39%.  

“In the short term, returns will vary and sometimes quite significantly,” Steed’s statement continued. “However, what matters to us is performance over time, and over the lifetime of the Fund to date, the Guardians’ active management strategies have earned the Fund almost [NZ]$16 billion more than investing in a passive, index-linked portfolio such as the Reference Portfolio would have yielded.”

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The NZ Super Fund is a superannuation scheme which invests government contributions and their returns to make pension payments to all New Zealanders older than 65.  

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