On December 3, 2025, Jeremy Roma, the mastermind behind the repeatedly collapsed Daisy Global Ponzi scheme, unveiled its fifth reboot, partnering once more with EndoTech co-founders Anna Becker and Dmitry Gooshchin, per. Initially teased in June 2025 as an “AI agents chatbot,” the reboot has morphed into a classic AI-assisted trading bot ruse, promising passive returns through a centrally controlled system Roma’s marketing calls, including a December 1 session with Becker, Eduard Khemchan, and Ilya Martin, hype EndoTech’s valuation at a fantastical $10 billion, up from a $2 billion claim in June, per. This iteration follows failures like BioLimitless and Blockchain Sports, targeting existing victims with a minimum 1,000 USDT investment plus a 5% annual license fee, plus 20% on returns.

Daisy’s fifth reboot employs the tired “lulz can’t touch our money!” model, where investors connect wallets via API to a third-party brokerage or exchange, creating the false sense of security that funds remain inaccessible to scammers. In reality, exit-scams occur through rigged trades or bot blow-up, per. Becker touts unverified data from the AI system, analysing assets, news, and indicators, but no audited reports exist, as neither EndoTech (Israel-based) nor Daisy is registered with any financial regulators. Roma falsely claims Daisy investors hold equity in EndoTech, promising a dividend. X posts from @CryptoScamAlert label it a “recycled grift,” noting the lack of transparency.
EndoTech, central to multiple MLM investment frauds, was Daisy’s original tech partner in 2020, promising 487% APY via Daisy AI, per. It ties to Daisy Forex (late 2022) and iGenius, owned by Investview, which settled SEC fraud charges in 2025, per. Roma, a former Investview executive, has a track record of reboots, including Daisy 2.0 (2024), BioLimitless, and Blockchain Sports, per. Belgium issued an EndoTech fraud warning in May 2021, while iGenius drew scrutiny from Canada and Poland, per. Daisy warnings from British Columbia and Alberta highlight the scheme’s global reach, with $1.1B+ in victim losses, mostly U.S. residents.

The reboot preys on desperate prior victims, using smart contracts for payouts while charging 20% on returns, per. With no verifiable trading history or regulatory oversight, it’s a high-risk pyramid scheme, per. Bitcoin (BTC) ($91,119) and Ethereum (ETH) ($3,112) remain stable, per CoinMarketCap, but such grifts erode trust in AI crypto tools. Investors should verify via sec.gov and avoid unregistered schemes. Diversify into USDC or ETH with stop-losses below BTC’s $80,000, per TradingView. Follow @TheBlock__ on X for updates. Daisy’s fifth reboot, like predecessors, is poised for collapse, urging extreme caution in 2025’s volatile market.
