
New Zealand’s Financial Markets Authority (FMA) has formally added BG Wealth Sharing Group (January 15, 2026) and DSJ Exchange (DSJEX) (around April 17, 2025) to its public list of “click a button” app Ponzi schemes, per official FMA consumer alerts.
The FMA describes these schemes as classic MLM “click a button” apps operated by Chinese scammers: users pay to “click” or perform simple tasks inside an app, supposedly earning rewards, but payouts rely entirely on recruiting new participants — textbook Ponzi mechanics.
No official website is cited for BG Wealth Sharing in the January 2026 warning, but the group was previously active on bg662.com (abandoned around January 19, 2026).
DSJ Exchange (DSJEX) is the attached fake crypto exchange used to give the appearance of legitimacy. The FMA lists 21 domains associated with DSJEX, most of which are either abandoned, expired, or flagged for fraud by CloudFlare:
One currently active domain is dsj079.com (private registration last updated January 22, 2026).
All domains are controlled by the same operators and form part of the single Ponzi operation.

Besides New Zealand, BG Wealth Sharing and DSJ Exchange have received official fraud warnings from:
This multi-jurisdictional crackdown reflects the scheme’s aggressive cross-border recruitment targeting vulnerable retail investors.
As of July 2025, SimilarWeb data (pre-domain churn) showed heavy traffic from:
Recruitment in Australia and France has collapsed, while new victims are now being funneled from Cote d’Ivoire, Hungary, and other emerging markets.
BG Wealth Sharing / DSJ Exchange is a textbook Chinese-operated MLM “click a button” Ponzi with a fake exchange facade. The scheme relies on constant domain rotation and geographic churn to stay ahead of regulators.
Anyone still participating or considering participation should immediately stop and document all interactions/funds for potential recovery or reporting.
Regulatory bodies in New Zealand, Australia, UK, Canada, and Tonga have already flagged the operation — more jurisdictions are likely to follow.
