April 20, 2024

The Securities and Exchange Commission has revoked the certificate of incorporation of Chiyuto Creative Wealth Documentation Facilitation Services for operating an unauthorized investment program resembling a Ponzi scheme.
In its order of revocation issued on Feb. 15, the SEC Enforcement and Investor Protection Department (EIPD) also imposed penalties totaling P9 million against Chiyuto and its single stockholder Patrocenio Calvez Chiyuto, Jr. for administrative violations of the Securities Regulation Code.
Chiyuto was also permanently disqualified from being a director of other corporations.
The EIPD issued the order after finding that Chiyuto has been offering and selling securities to the public through a double-your-money roulette game without the necessary license from SEC. This is considered an ultra vires act, prohibited under Section 44 of the Revised Corporation Code of the Philippines.
Chiyuto’s activities further constitute serious misrepresentation as to what it can do to the great prejudice of or damage to the general public, which is a ground for the revocation of a corporation’s certificate of registration under Presidential Decree 902-A, according to the EIPD.
The SEC warned the public against placing their money in Chiyuto, initially through an advisory on Aug. 18, 2020 and an investor alert on its official Facebook page on Oct. 23, 2020.
The commission subsequently issued a cease and desist order against Chiyuto on Feb. 1 and a show cause letter on Feb. 2 for Chiyuto to explain why its registration as a one-person corporation (OPC) should not be revoked.
Chiyuto, which initially registered as a sole proprietorship with the Department of Trade and Industry and later on as an OPC with the SEC, has offered investments to the public with promised returns of 100 percent in one day, 30 days, or 45 days.
Under the scheme, an investor places as low as P1 to as much as P1 million, after which Chiyuto will spin the roulette to select the payout schedule. The investor is then issued a promissory note with the corresponding return and day when the guaranteed earnings could be claimed.
Chiyuto also offered a five percent referral commission and held raffles with brand new cars and motorcycles as prizes to attract more investors.
Chiyuto’s scheme involves securities, particularly an investment contract, whereby a person invests his money in a common enterprise and is led to expect profits primarily from the efforts of others.
As a form of security, investment contracts must be registered with the SEC before they can be sold or offered within the Philippines, pursuant to Section 8 of SRC.
Records of the commission, however, showed Chiyuto has neither registered any securities nor applied for the necessary license to offer such securities for sale.
“To make matters worse, the scheme being offered by Chiyuto bears the tell-tale signs of a Ponzi scheme where the profits or payouts taken from the incoming investors or additional ‘pay-ins’ shall be paid to existing or earlier members-investors,” the EIPD noted in the revocation order.
Ponzi schemes rely on the contributions of more investors to pay off the returns of earlier-stage members, rather than from the actual sale of products or services from a legitimate business.
“That Chiyuto could not present any specific business plan or cite a profitable enterprise to finance his money-making scheme clearly shows that the investment scheme which he and his companies foisted on the unsuspecting public was fraudulent,” the EIPD said.
The EIPD added Chiyuto’s paid-up capital amounted to “only a paltry P250,000” despite reports that its business transactions reached hundreds of millions. – Press release