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| Serious companies, i.e. those offering genuine services/products, will pay dividends or allow capital appreciation with share value. Of course, scams won't. They'll take as much as they can and vanish or dodge legally. | |
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The below is no dividend.
Who will buy your share when you want to get out, at what price and how much will you have to pay in fees and commissions for that? Nobody keeps the ... company ... from offering 20% of fair value only and make unfair use of the fact that nobody else is willing to buy (and throw good money after bad because everybody else realised it'll be lost as well).
Ok, maybe I'm too harsh, but it's definitely very very high risk. You don't even know who's pulling the strings. What's the company's name and its address? Who's behind it, how much is their capital? For how long did they exist, and which other projects have they successfully realised, and of course profitably for the investors, what was their return?
An "Impressum" (basically: this is who we are) has been mandatory for e-commerce companies in Switzerland for about a decade. Where is theirs, what's their company ID? What does the company registry say ("HandelsRegister"), and what is FINMA's opinion and data on them? (FINMA is the regulating body for at least their investment branch, though they may be too small and fly under FINMA's radar)
The closer I look the more I think they've invented the Swiss Emmentaler cheese (the cheese is famous for having more holes than actual cheese).