XM Future Music: The “Listen-and-Earn” App That Vanished With Nigerians’ Money
In this report
1. What happened2. Timeline: how XM unfolded3. The machine: how the Ponzi worked4. Six red flags hiding in plain sight5. The digital trail6. Voices of the victims7. Same machine, new costume8. A message to the diaspora9. The 60-second scam test10. Editor’s note11. NNFA fact-check report12. Editorial SEO pack13. Sources
What happened
In the second week of May 2026, the online platform XM Future Music Group stopped paying out. Users reported that withdrawals halted within a single day; support groups were muted or deleted, and the website became inaccessible. On Friday, 16 May 2026, the company’s office in the Apa area of Badagry, Lagos, closed without notice — and aggrieved investors were filmed carting away generators, chairs, fans and televisions.
XM had sold itself as a way to earn simply by listening to music and completing online tasks, promising up to 100% returns in 30 days. On 8 May 2026, days before withdrawals stopped, the Securities and Exchange Commission issued a public notice warning Nigerians against unregistered online investment schemes promoted on social media. That notice was general: it did not name XM Future Music. Reported losses run into the billions of naira; no audited total or victim count has been confirmed. Victims described borrowing from microfinance lenders, selling property, and — in one account — a student who paid in his school fees expecting a windfall.
Timeline: how XM unfolded
The machine: how the Ponzi worked
Behind the playlists was the same engine every scheme runs. XM produced nothing; it only moved newcomers’ deposits to earlier members until the inflow dried up.
Six red flags hiding in plain sight
XM tripped every wire the SEC and EFCC warn about. If an “opportunity” shows even two or three, walk away.
The digital trail
NNFA reviewed the public record of the collapse across Nigerian press. A sample of what is out there:
Voices of the victims
The accounts below are drawn from Nigerian press reporting on the collapse. Several victims asked not to be named; NNFA reproduces the details as reported and has not independently identified the individuals.
As reported: some victims borrowed from microfinance lenders, others sold property, and a student paid in his school fees to “upgrade” his package — all expecting big returns that never came.— Paraphrased from Punch and ThePointNG reporting
The scenes at the Apa office — investors carrying off furniture and equipment as they realised the money was gone (ThePointNG, Legit.ng) — captured the anger of thousands who had been told, on WhatsApp and TikTok, that this was their way out.
Same machine, new costume
Mutual aid, then AI crypto trading, then “earn by listening,” then “earn by reading.” The disguise changes; the engine does not.
| Scheme | Year | The costume | Est. losses | Fate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MMM Nigeria | 2016 | “Mutual aid,” 30% a month | ≈₦18bn | Froze accounts & collapsed, Dec 2016 ↗ |
| CBEX | 2025 | “AI crypto trading,” 100% in 30 days | ≈₦1.3tn | Crashed Apr 2025; EFCC probe ↗ |
| XM Future Music | 2026 | “Listen to music & earn” | Billions | Crashed May 2026; Badagry office looted ↗ |
| NRC (National Reading Culture) | 2026 | “Read & earn” | Billions feared | Crashed 7 Jul 2026 ↗ |
Figures compiled from the SEC, the EFCC and the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU). See Sources, and our companion report on the NRC crash and Nigeria’s Ponzi epidemic.
A message to the diaspora
Schemes like XM travel through the people you trust. Nigeria is among the world’s largest remittance recipients — roughly US$20 billion a year — and some of it is quietly funnelled by relatives into “opportunities” promising daily or monthly riches. If someone at home asks you to send money for a platform like this, treat it as the red flag it is and verify it with the SEC before a single naira moves.
The 60-second scam test
Before you — or Mama — click, check these six things. Save it. Forward it on WhatsApp.
- Deposit-to-earn? A Ponzi in overalls. Paying in to “earn” is the tell.
- Fixed high returns? 100% in 30 days is impossible for a real business — and unlawful to promise.
- Check the registration — a foreign “HQ” and a regulator “certificate” you can’t verify are fakes.
- Can you name the founders? No verifiable directors or SEC licence — then run.
- Recruitment rewards? Your “profit” is really your friends’ losses.
- Already trapped? Stop depositing now, save your evidence, and report to the EFCC.
Editor’s note
Loss totals and victim numbers for XM Future Music are early estimates from press reports, not audited figures — we describe them as “billions.” The Colorado registration is the promoters’ own unverified claim, which the SEC flagged as false as to supervision. Victim accounts are reproduced from named Nigerian outlets and not independently confirmed by NNFA. This feature is an educational, consumer-protection guide — not financial or legal advice. Spotted an error? Write to editor@naijanewsfeeds.com and we will correct it.
NNFA fact-check report
Verified Sourced to the SEC & multiple outlets
- XM Future Music ran a “listen-to-earn” model promising up to 100% in 30 days; packages ₦21,600–₦93m; a “work deposit” was required after a trial.
- The SEC issued a public notice on 8 May 2026 warning against unregistered online investment schemes promoted on social media. It named no scheme: XM Future Music does not appear in it, and it makes no finding about any claim of SEC supervision.
- Withdrawals froze in mid-May; the Apa, Badagry office closed on Friday 16 May 2026 and was looted by investors.
- Promoters circulated a US (Colorado) registration and a fake “certificate of identity verification.”
- Context: SEC puts total Nigerian Ponzi losses at ≈₦316bn; CBEX (2025) ≈₦1.3tn (NFIU); ISA 2025 = ≥₦20m fine / 10-year term for promoters.
Hedged / approximate Reported but not independently confirmed
- Total XM losses (“billions”) and the number of victims — press estimates, no audited figure.
- The exact day withdrawals stopped (~13–14 May) — from user reports.
- The Colorado / foreign registration and the “certificate of identity verification” — promoters’ claims, as reported by the press. The SEC has published no finding on XM Future Music.
- Nigeria’s ≈US$20bn annual remittances — World Bank figures put inflows at $19.5bn (2023) and $22.1bn (2024), so ≈$20bn is a round, year-dependent approximation.
- The CBEX ≈₦1.3tn ($840m) figure — attributed to the NFIU and reported by Al Jazeera; on-chain analysis by Techpoint Africa puts traceable deposits far lower. Treat it as an official estimate, not a settled total.
- Individual victim accounts — reproduced from outlets; several sources asked not to be named.
Corrections Post-publication changes
- None at the time of publication. Corrections will be logged here — email editor@naijanewsfeeds.com.
Editorial SEO pack
XM Future Music Scam Explained: How the “Listen-and-Earn” Ponzi Crashed
XM Future Music, the “listen-to-earn” app promising 100% in 30 days, collapsed in May 2026 and its Badagry office was looted. How it worked, the red flags, and how to verify and report a scheme.
XM Future Music · listen and earn scam · XM Ponzi Nigeria · Badagry Ponzi scheme · SEC warning · how to spot a Ponzi scheme
Business & Economy · Special Report
Sources
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This consumer-protection feature is not financial advice. Verify any investment independently before parting with money.
