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Is D9, an Investment Fraud or not? Watch out!!!


Investment Fraud is defined by the Cambridge dictionary as the illegal activity of providing false information to someone so that they will invest in something.

You may or may not have heard of the various schemes promising heaven on earth returns to investors. One of those that has picked my attention in the recent past is D9. Rumored to be registered in Brazil and Hong Kong, it seems to have taken the gullible folks in Uganda by storm. Matters have been worsened by endorsement from men of the robes like Pastor Mark Kigozi of Real Life Church.

In this article, I will not dwell on how D9 works since I have no intention of being their salesman. However, I want to share with you the reader warning signs of an Investment Fraud. I hope by the time you’re done reading, you’ll be in a better position to tell whether D9 is a fraud or not.

Investment frauds are typified by all or some of the following characteristics;

  1. The guarantee of consistently good returns. Business investments are no fairy tale. A business opportunity may offer you wild returns in one year and total losses in another. NO legitimate business in the world will always guarantee you consistently good returns. Even drug dealers make losses occasionally when their consignments are tracked down and confiscated by the authorities.
  2. Unclear investment products or services. If you cannot point a finger at something straight and obvious that generates revenue for the business, just know there is a problem. I recall TelexFree that used to promise people money for simply logging in daily and placing adverts into a web system. The company apparently claimed it made money through the sale of calling cards. Today, the scam founders are facing litigation in the USA as millions bleed as a result of their lost savings.
  3. Unclear company information. A legitimate business usually is very straight up with information pertaining to its history, track record, business operations, tax filings among others. A decent amount of this information tends to be easily accessible on the company website. In the event that you cant readily get such information, step back and think twice.
  4. Pushy sales brokers. Anytime you are confronted by overly aggressive sales brokers who want you to make a decision instantly, let your sixth sense kick in. Why should you not be given an opportunity to go back home, consult or even think through the proposition?
  5. Unexpected phone calls or messages. You might all of a sudden be contacted by a long lost colleague who then urges you to meet up in order to discuss some hot business opportunity. Think twice. I once was sent a message by a young man I had interacted with over 6 months earlier. He insisted that I meet him in a certain office and I duly obliged. Upon reaching, I found a herd of people seated being taken through the motions of how to join a certain pyramid scheme whose name I have forgotten. My stay didn’t last more than ten minutes. Ever since then, I never respond to his calls and messages when he gets in touch.
  6. The promise of high returns in a short period. An investment offer that promises you crazy returns (usually many times above market rates) needs checking. In most cases, compare this offer of returns with the alleged product or service on offer.
  7. Low Risk, No Risk or Guarantee. Once you are presented with an opportunity that has any of these three hallmarks, it helps to open your eyes wider. Like I said earlier, there is NEVER a 100% guarantee in any legitimate business.
  8. The temptation of being part of an exclusive investment organisation. Whenever there is a promise of exclusivity, chances of a fraud scheme being engineered are rife. Even when you may make some money as an early adopter, that will not negate the fact that you are part of a scam whose pack of cards will fall sooner than later.
  9. The investment offer is based overseas. Most scams are usually offered from remote locations. There are countries that are notorious for hosting these scams and Brazil is one of those. They carefully craft their operations to ensure that they evade jurisdictions with serious financial systems to detect fraud. This also allows the founders to eventually walk away scotfree when the pack of cards crumbles (notice I used the term when and not if).
  10. They approach you in form of seminars and sales people representing schemes. Have you been called for a seminar or presentation in a hotel or large office of sorts? Have you been flooded by a team of marketers who promise you only the very best if you part with your hard earned or sometimes borrowed money? Offering guarantees? Insisting that you sign up before the seminar ends? Well …..
  11. They prey on your membership of a certain group. Winning trust is one of the key tactics of fraud promoters. This is the reason they strategically target groupings of people like church membership, sports fraternities, professional bodies etc. It is no wonder that people like Pastor Mark Kigozi are thriving with this D9 arrangement. Having a large fellowship of believers who outrightly believe in every word he mentions (fully convinced that it is the Holy Spirit at work), renders the success rate in such a congregation much higher.
  12. Diverting attention. When an investment scheme focuses more on gifts that success offers eg promoting a high life, good cars, opulence among others then only part of the story is being told.

I firmly believe that if your investment opportunity checks out with at least three of the issues I have shared here, then it’s time to rethink. Seriously!!!

I know poverty or the lack of money is making many of us gullible to the nearest offer of hope to become the next millionaire but do not forget that true wealth comes from working diligently.

King Solomon had the following to say about wealth:

Proverbs 12:11– “Whoever works his land will have plenty of bread, but he who follows worthless pursuits lacks sense.”

We all have land that God has given us. That land comes in the form of skills, talent among others. He wants us to utilise it as opposed to running around like headless chicken looking for the next big thing that someone else is introducing.

Proverbs 21:5- “The plans of the diligent lead surely to abundance, but everyone who is hasty comes only to poverty.”

A diligent person is one who works hard, is careful and thorough. Surely, does this scripture rhyme with those get rich quick 100% guarantee schemes? Youmay not be a Bible believer but one thing you cannot deny is the wisdom its scripture offers us.

Finally, DO NOT BE DECEIVED by spiritual leaders, apparently wealthy admirers of yours, family members or anyone that tries to get you into subscribing to something that has all the hallmarks of a scam. Keep that money of yours. It could be put to better use.

I hope I’ve saved someone.

James Wire is a Small Business and Technology Consultant based in Kampala, Uganda.

Follow @wirejames on Twitter

Email lunghabo [at] gmail [dot] com

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Why Nakumatt struggles as Capital Shoppers and others thrive


While browsing the Twittersphere, I came across a thread in which the issue of Nakumatt Supermarket’s limping performance in Uganda was being discussed viz a viz local Ugandan Supermarkets.

Ms. Nancy Kacungira loudly wondered what the likes of Capital Shoppers are doing right to stay in business to which the renowned economic affairs analyst Dr. Ramathan Ggoobi duly responded by stating, “Alot. Location, good supply chain management (high fill rate), and damn, I’ll say it …. loyal ‘sectarian’ clientele.”gobbi_tweet

The last part of his submission is what I didn’t find worthwhile. So, as a supplier of supermarkets, I went ahead to respond as follows, “They pay us well and promptly. Including Quality (Supermarket). I find the assertion of “sectarian clientele” as lame reasoning by @rggoobi.”wire_response

Its eight years since I started supplying supermarkets with products and this has given me some time to appreciate the business. A supermarket is no different from a warehouse where suppliers bring their products for onward sale to customers. The only difference is that Supermarkets have to invest in a few things that make the shopping experience of a customer conducive. Their key issues of concern are usually branding, location, management systems, market identification and interior décor.

The success of a supermarket is hinged on three core factors as indicated in the illustration below.Supermarket_Success

When Uchumi joined the Ugandan supermarket space over ten years ago, they heralded a new era that saw them take supermarket branding to a new level all together. The supermarket enjoyed market leadership overnight, largely a result of the corporate buzz created whenever anything new is launched as well as the significant presence of Kenyan professionals in Kampala. Nakumatt followed suit years later and it too caught the attention of the Ugandan market by launching 24 hour shopping services. Within a short while, it had grown and surpassed Uchumi as well as other leading local supermarkets like Quality and Capital Shoppers.

During all this time, the local supermarkets must have been learning serious lessons from these foreign entrants. Nakumatt, Uchumi and Tuskys, all Kenyan supermarkets by origin had the money, systems, branding and rode on the wave of a significant presence of Kenyans in Uganda to kickstart their business. They also won over many Ugandan shoppers and a simple way to tell that is by studying various suppliers’ delivery schedules that largely rotated around these supermarkets.

So, the factors Dr. Ramathan Ggoobi attributed the success of Capital Shoppers to like Location were definitely considered by the likes of Nakumatt. Take a look at Nakumatt’s branches at Oasis Mall, Bukoto, Entebbe, Mbarara, Bugolobi (although they goofed up by placing another branch at Village Mall in the same vicinity). Consider Uchumi’s branches that existed at Garden City, Nateete, Freedom City, Kabalagala and Gulu. They were well thought out and always outcompeted neighbouring supermarkets. But somehow, they went bust. Uchumi is now spoken of in the past tense having fled with Billions of Shillings owed to local suppliers. Nakumatt is in intensive care unit, trying so hard to stay alive and relevant. How did they get to this?

I will rule out the economy because the same economy is where you find other thriving supermarkets like Capital Shoppers, Quality Supermarket, Mega Standard, Ssombe Supermarket, City Shoppers Supermarket, Senana, Cynibell among others. The customers are still existent considering that they are the very ones patronising the currently well performing supermarkets.

In my view and as a supplier, the one aspect of the business that these supermarkets did ignore and are now paying heavily for is the Supply Side (read as Stock in the diagram shared earlier). This is in tandem with Dr. Ggoobi’s point on good supply chain management.

A supermarket’s shelves are what they are because of the goods that suppliers diligently avail for sale. Without these goods being supplied, they remain empty and useless to any consumer. Most supermarket suppliers never get credit from their raw material suppliers prior to producing products for the supermarket. However, when it comes to supplying the supermarket, they are required to do so on credit. The credit terms range from a few weeks to two months. Consider that often times, the supermarket pushes the supplier to offer significant discounts which are hardly passed on to consumers. In essence, the supermarket receives an interest free loan since after sale, they can still re-use the supplier’s money on other activities of their choice.

Suppliers are usually resilient and able to patiently wait until the due dates promised for payment. Sometimes, the due date is not honored by some supermarkets and suppliers have to make multiple attempts and trips to get paid. This is where the likes of Uchumi, Nakumatt and Tuskys went wrong. They knew that being “large” and “credible” players in the market, the suppliers were at their mercy. Wrong!!! This perception might have been true for a while but as word spread through the networks of suppliers about their financial dishonesty, one by one, we begun pulling out of making supplies. Eventually, the shelves begun starving of our products and customers started noticing. This proved one thing, suppliers are as important as the consumers.

Another aspect is the shoppers’ psychology. The reason a good number of urban dwelling Ugandans abandoned the small shops in preference for Supermarkets was the ability to find everything they needed in one place and at a competitive price. This expectation can only be met when the supply chain is very fluid. So, by letting down their suppliers, these supermarkets once again exposed themselves and could hardly meet this expectation. End result? Customers begun gravitating towards alternative supermarkets that fulfilled this need. Take the case of a battered Uchumi, in its last days at Garden City mall, Capital Shoppers opened up a branch right below Uchumi’s premises and within no time, it was attracting a much bigger crowd. A relative of mine once intimated to me that he was fed up of going to that Uchumi branch due to the lack of a wide range of goods for sale. He felt so relieved when Capital Shoppers opened up. This too further cements the supply chain factor.

Now, back to the insinuation by Dr. Ggoobi that Capital Shoppers is thriving because of a “loyal ‘secterian’ clientele.If indeed this is worth noting as a reason, does it also imply that Nakumatt’s failures are attributed to the sudden absence or exit of a loyal sectarian (Kenyan) clientele? It is an open secret that Kenyans loved patronising Uchumi, Nakumatt and Tuskys. These very Kenyans are still around and their numbers have probably grown. Why is it that these three supermarkets have either closed or are limping in this market?

I do shop a lot at Capital Shoppers and Quality Supermarket but have not seen any sectarian tendencies in their clientele. I would be hard pressed to point out that the majority of shoppers “appear” to come from one region of the country.

Lets face it, the Kenyan supermarkets came in with a lot of SWAG and knew they would steamroll the local market in a bullish manner. While they appeared to be scoring early successes in this regard, their local counterparts used that time to re-invent themselves and learn a few things from the competition. The founders of Capital Shoppers and Quality Supermarket are very hardworking modest living Ugandans who started off in very humble ways. Their continued success even during this trying time of the economy can be largely attributed to the respect they accord their suppliers as well as being able to continuously learn and unlearn.

James Wire is a Small Business and Technology Consultant based in Kampala, Uganda

Follow @wirejames on Twitter.

Email lunghabo [at] gmail [dot] com

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