Cryptocurrency

Complaints made in US, S’pore against local firm that promised quick returns on crypto investments


SINGAPORE – A Singapore-registered firm is under investigation after allegedly failing to pay investors who have pumped money into its cryptocurrency investment schemes.

Reports have been filed against InvesableAI with the Singapore police, and with the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). 

Incorporated in the Republic on June 19, 2023, InvesableAI is believed to have promised investors quick returns on cryptocurrency investments that banked on the use of artificial intelligence technology.

Its founders claimed to have sought a licence from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) and, on the firm’s now-defunct website, said it was a trustworthy business because “we are a registered company”, with a separate webpage showing its address in Singapore.

It is a “live” company or a business that is still in operation, according to Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (Acra) records.

Checks by The Straits Times on the details of InvesableAI’s Acra records revealed several discrepancies, including in the company’s registered address, the nationality and address of a foreign director, and the identity of a Singaporean director.

In response to queries, an Acra spokesperson said: “Acra is unable to comment due to ongoing investigations.”

Meanwhile, the FBI and SEC said they could neither confirm nor deny that they were investigating the matter.

Several of the reports lodged with the FBI and SEC, and seen by ST, show that more than 4,000 people have invested money in InvesableAI.

The total sum allegedly sunk into the business by all investors is unclear, but a smaller group of about 150 investors have counted losses of at least US$1.5 million (S$2 million).

One of the investors, a 46-year-old woman, said she trusted the firm because it promised transparency and accessibility for investments in alternative currencies.

The woman, an American, pumped more than US$15,000 into InvesableAI on July 13, 2023, but about two months later, the firm informed her and other investors that withdrawals would be paused “temporarily”.

In a Sept 17 e-mail to investors seen by ST, the firm said there was extreme volatility in the cryptocurrency market, and asked for 40 days to recover losses.

It also offered refunds within a week to those who wanted them.

The e-mail was signed by Mr Lee Dalton, who is identified on the firm’s website as its founder and chief executive.

Six months later, investors said they have yet to get their money back.

The American woman, who holds a Master of Business Administration degree and lives in California, said: “I wish I had known how to do trades on my own, instead of depending on others. It was a bad decision… but InvesableAI seemed to hit all the marks when it came to its legitimacy.

“It being based in Singapore was assuring because of the stringent guidelines that are required there.”

ST spoke to several others in a group totalling about 150 investors – including the American woman – who have banded together to tally their losses.

The group has also compiled a spreadsheet that details the outstanding sums due to more than 60 of them.

Transaction records of more than a dozen investors showed that some managed to make withdrawals ranging from US$25 to almost US$25,000 until September 2023.

However, it is unclear if any of the investors have gotten back their original investments, which ranged from US$500 to more than US$50,000, according to the spreadsheet and transaction records seen by ST.

An archived version of InvesableAI’s now-defunct website lists the minimum investment at US$500, with packages that promise returns of up to 160 per cent of the principal amount in 20 days for a US$10,000 investment.

Claiming to have more than 14,000 members, the firm also had a referral programme where investors could earn higher interest rates on certain deposits if they roped in others successfully.

When ST visited the Woodlands address listed in InvesableAI’s Acra records on March 12, a firm that deals in water treatment and engineering design was found to be occupying the space instead.

When contacted, a representative of the water treatment firm said he was unaware of the existence of InvesableAI, and that the space had not been leased out to other firms.

The water treatment firm’s Acra file showed it has been occupying the Woodlands space since February 2022, before InvesableAI was registered.



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