Lately, many people have been requesting a review of BG Wealth Sharing.
On social media and various Telegram groups, a lot of users are claiming that they are earning big time.
The hype is so loud that people are starting to ask: "If everyone is making money and no one is losing, doesn't that make it legit?"
I’m here to tell you: The answer is a definitive NO.
Based on my technical analysis of the DSJ Exchange (the platform they use) and the marketing materials of BG Wealth Sharing, we are looking at a highly sophisticated Ponzi Pyramid Scheme.
This isn’t just a random guess; the code behind DSJ is a direct "reskin" of the Riscoin scam that I previously exposed.
They just changed the name and the "skin," but the engine of fraud remains the same.
The "Too Good to Be True" Claims
According to the claims of BG Wealth Sharing and its aggressive promoters, the platform is an all-in-one financial solution that promises miracles. Here is what they want you to believe:
Impossible ROI: They claim a monthly return of at least 60%, and in some cases, it can go from 10% up to 100%.
Capital Doubling: They promise you can double your capital in just 40 days.
100% Success Rate: They boldly claim that all their trades are successful.
Zero Risk: Promoters insist there is "guaranteed profit" and that you can "withdraw anytime."
Let’s be real, even the most elite traders in Wall Street or the most advanced AI trading bots cannot guarantee a 100% success rate.
In legitimate trading, losses are part of the game.
If a company tells you there is no risk, that is the biggest red flag of all.
Red Flags: The "Pagkakakitaan" (Ways to Earn)
They lure people in by offering various ways to "earn" passive income, but each one is designed to keep your money locked until it’s too late.
1. Fake Trading Signal and Fake Trading Process
The Trading Process: On this platform, members do not trade based on their own market analysis. Instead, they follow a very specific and unusual process:
You are required to open the DSJ Exchange, navigate to the Futures section, and click the tab labeled "Invited Me." From there, you must exit the app and open Bonchat (an external messaging app) to retrieve a "Signal Code" provided by the admin within the group.
After obtaining the code, the user returns to DSJ Exchange to enter it, and the system begins to trade "automatically." The result? The trade is always a guaranteed win.
The Reality: On legitimate trading platforms like Binance, Bybit, or OKX, no such process exists. Trading is executed through Market or Limit orders based on the live price action of the global market. There is no "Signal Code" that you input into an "Invited Me" tab to trigger an automatic victory.
The truth is, this entire process is a scripted simulation. The "Signal Code" retrieved from Bonchat is not a market command; it is a "trigger code" for the website’s backend.
When you enter this code, you are simply signaling the platform to play a pre-programmed animation showing a successful trade.
This is a visual trick designed to make members believe they have found a "secret formula" for earning, but in reality, everything is controlled by the admin.
No actual trading occurs on the global market; it is merely a digital performance used to gain your trust and entice you into depositing larger sums of money.
2. Simulated Futures & Perpetual Trading
They encourage users to trade futures on the DSJ Exchange. They even have "experts" or "signals" to follow.
The Reality: The trading you see is simulated. You aren't buying or selling on a global market. You are playing a "game" where the admin decides if you win or lose.
3. "Wealth Sharing" Hosting
They have a feature called "Hosting" where you "entrust" your funds to their AI to trade for you.
The Reality: This is the core of the bait. By "hosting" your funds, you are giving up control. They use this time to cycle your money to pay off older members (Ponzi logic) while showing you fake profits.
4. The Recruitment/Team Level System (The Ponzi Engine)
The biggest way to earn "big" according to them is by building a team. You get commissions from the deposits of your recruits (downlines), and you can go up in "Team Levels."
The Reality: This is a classic pyramid structure. Legitimate exchanges make money from trading fees, not from the investment capital of your friends.
Visual & Operational Red Flags
Red Flag: Logo Dropping & Stolen Legitimacy
In their marketing posters, they prominently display the logos of Binance, Coinbase, OKX, and Huobi. They claim to be "partners" with these giants.
Legit Comparison: Legitimate partnerships are always announced by both parties. You will never find a press release from Binance or Coinbase mentioning BG Wealth Sharing or DSJ Exchange. Using these logos is a common tactic to borrow the trust of established brands.
Red Flag: Stock Photo "Experts"
They show a "Team of Experts" in their promotional banners.
Legit Comparison: Real fund managers and CEOs of financial institutions have verifiable LinkedIn profiles and public histories. The "experts" in BG Wealth Sharing are just stock photos or random people hired to look professional.
Technical Red Flags: Evidence from the Source Code
I have analyzed the Javascript files of the DSJ Exchange. Here is the technical proof that the system is rigged.
This code proves that the "Real Account" and the "Demo Account" use the exact same logic.
In a legitimate platform, a real account must be connected to an external liquidity provider or a clearinghouse. Here, the "Real" status is just a label in the UI.
Legitimate exchanges like Binance or Bybit have separate testnets and mainnets. Their real accounts have transaction hashes that can be verified on the blockchain or through public trade ledgers.
This is found in the C2C (Customer to Customer) or P2P module. It gives the website Admin the power to manually "Cancel" a transaction from the backend. This is how they "freeze" your funds. They can take your payment and then mark the order as "Cancelled by Backend" so you lose your money.
Legitimate P2P platforms use Smart Contract Escrow. The admin cannot just "cancel" a transaction at will; they only act as a mediator when there is a dispute with actual proof from both sides.
RED FLAG: Manipulated Price Data (Private WebSockets)
The Code:
JavaScript
socketPerpetual: ... "/ws/app/perpetual"
The platform uses a private WebSocket endpoint for perpetual trading. This means the prices you see on the chart are internal. The admin can "spike" or "drop" the price on the DSJ chart to sadyang i-liquidate (purposely liquidate) your position, even if the price of Bitcoin didn't move in the real world.
Legit exchanges use Public API Feeds and an Index Price (average price from multiple major exchanges like Coinbase, Kraken, etc.) to ensure the price cannot be manipulated by the platform owner.
The code includes a "Distribution Service" designed for tracking "Team Levels" and "Subordinates" (downlines). This confirms that the platform is a pyramid scheme. It is programmed to redistribute money from the "Lower" levels to the "Upper" levels.
Legitimate exchanges have Affiliate Programs that pay a small percentage of the trading fees, never the investment capital of the person you invited.
RED FLAG: Fake AI "Hosting" Switch
The Code:
JavaScript
hosting: "Hosting Switch" / "호스팅"
The "AI Hosting" that they claim is a professional trading bot is actually just a simple "ON/OFF" toggle switch in the UI. There is no trading algorithm behind it. It is just a visual representation to make you think your money is working, while in reality, it’s just sitting in the scammer’s wallet.
Real trading bots like Pionex or 3Commas give you full access to API keys and transparent trade histories that you can verify on the actual exchange ledger.
The code contains a "Credit Score" variable. This is used as a trap. When you try to withdraw, the platform will suddenly say your "Credit Score" is too low. They will then demand that you deposit more money to "fix" your score and unlock your withdrawal. This is a classic extortion tactic.
On legit sites, withdrawals are automated. As long as you have the balance and passed KYC, you can withdraw. There is no such thing as a "Credit Score" required to withdraw your own money.
RED FLAG: Disposable & Rotating Domains
The Code:
JavaScript
var o=-1==location.host.indexOf("pcchain.wxpass.net")?location.host:"xchain.wxtome.link";
The platform is designed to switch between disposable domains like .net and .link. They use domains like wxpass.net and wxtome.link which are commonly used in "churn-and-burn" scam operations so they can easily move to a new link once the current one gets reported or blocked.
Legitimate platforms stay on their official .com domains for years. They do not rotate through cheap, generic domain extensions.
The logic of BG Wealth Sharing is simple: It is a Ponzi Pyramid Scheme.
There is no actual trading happening on the DSJ Exchange. The "profits" you see are just numbers on a screen. The money being paid out to early members is just the money deposited by the new members.
No Revenue from Trading: Everything is simulated.
Total Admin Control: They can cancel your orders and manipulate the charts.
Extortion Logic: They use "Credit Scores" to force you to deposit more before you can (supposedly) withdraw.
Reskin Scam: It is the exact same code as Riscoin, which has already been proven a scam.
My Advice: Iwasan niyo ang platform na ito. Don't be blinded by the "payout" screenshots in Telegram. The people earning now are just using your money, and very soon, the "Wealth Sharing" will stop, the website will disappear, and everyone will lose their hard-earned money.
Promoting this platform is not helping your friends; it is leading them into a financial bitag (trap). Keep your money in your pocket or use regulated, globally recognized exchanges if you want to trade.
BG Wealth Sharing and DSJ Exchange are 100% FAKE.
Stay smart, stay safe, and always look for the red flags!
What's your experience with BG Wealth Sharing? Let me know in the comments below!
Hi, I’m Neil Yanto, a content creator, entrepreneur, and the founder of an AI Search Engine built to protect people from scams and help them discover legitimate opportunities online.
The core purpose of my AI Search Engine is to review platforms, websites, and apps in real time, analyzing red flags, transparency, business models, and use...
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