The MLM Recycle: Former Lyconet Giants Now Recruiting for TAGMarkets
From Lyconet to myWorld, eCredits and TAG Markets – why the same sales networks keep mobilizing communities for the next big promise
Anyone who has followed the history of Lyconet, myWorld, eCredits, Safir, Zeniq, or XERA over the years is likely to experience a strong sense of déjà vu when hearing the name TAG Markets. Once again, familiar sales personalities from the same networks appear on stage and present their communities with the next big opportunity. Once again, the narrative revolves around financial freedom, extraordinary chances, modern technology, and the promise of being early enough this time. The products have changed, the names have been replaced, and the buzzwords modernized – yet the personnel remains largely the same.
Insurance protection, Mauritius license and “major brokers” – many claims, little evidence
Additional questions are raised by a call promoted by Teresa Berger and moderated by Nicolas Krause. According to available recordings, it was claimed that members were “insured up to 1 million US dollars.” However, this statement does not appear to align with previously known information regarding the Lloyd’s insurance policy nor with statements from the involved insurance broker.
Equally problematic is the repeatedly emphasized regulatory status in Mauritius. While T.M. Financials Ltd does hold a license there, this does not constitute authorization to operate within the European financial market. For this reason, several European regulators have already issued warnings in relation to TAG Markets.
The alleged cooperation with some of the world’s largest brokerage firms also raises questions. In order to verify these claims, we contacted 15 major international brokers directly requesting clarification. As of the publication deadline, no confirming responses had been received.
Even the presentation format of recent calls is notable. A welcome slide features a blue, hedgehog-like video game character, alongside the name “AITech” and slogans such as “Together. Knowledge. Growth. Freedom.” and promises like “Grow together,” “Understand strategy,” and “Seize opportunities.”

The communication raises several questions: What exactly is the function of these codes? Who controls or manages them? Why does a supposedly transparent trading and copy trading model require such constructs at all? And why does access not appear to follow standard regulated platform procedures?
It also appears that the original number of held eCredits no longer plays any meaningful role. How exactly the technical and economic link between near-worthless eCredits and the so-called “amplified accounts” is supposed to function remains unclear.
Old networks, new packaging
What is particularly striking is not the product itself, but the people behind it. For years, the same sales networks have been mobilized for cashback systems, cryptocurrencies, token projects, metaverse concepts, mining schemes, or trading platforms. Today the promise is called TAG Markets, Copy X, or Amplified Accounts.
Yet the central message remains unchanged: those who previously suffered losses should not give up, but instead give the next opportunity a chance. For many former eCredits investors, this narrative may feel familiar. They have repeatedly been told that the real breakthrough is just around the corner, and that earlier setbacks were merely a stepping stone toward eventual success.

Between motivation and marketing
The slides themselves contain no concrete information regarding regulation, risk structures, trading strategies, or the source of the allegedly provided liquidity. Instead, emotional terms such as “growth,” “freedom,” and “opportunity” dominate the messaging.
From a marketing perspective, this is understandable. Such narratives tend to appeal less to analytical reasoning and more to hope and expectation. However, it also reflects a well-known pattern in multi-level marketing: first a community is built, then success stories are circulated, and only afterwards is the actual product explained.
The unanswered key questions
Regardless of whether TAG Markets, Copy X, or the so-called Amplified Accounts ultimately prove sustainable, the key questions remain:
Why do the most vocal advocates of this model once again come from the same networks that previously promoted eCredits, Lyconet, myWorld, Safir, Zeniq, or XERA? And why are figures such as Werner Kaiser, Marina Graf, Markus Käfer, Nicolas Krause, and Teresa Berger now all publicly supporting this model?
And finally: if successful traders and AI systems can truly generate consistently above-average returns with minimal risk, why is this knowledge being sold to retail investors on a mass scale?
Until these questions are clearly answered, many former investors may find that the promise of freedom is overshadowed by the concern of once again encountering old stories in new packaging.
Note:
This article presents a journalistic analysis.
It is based on publicly available sources as well as original research and distinguishes between facts, assessments, and opinions . The evaluations of external sources reflect their respective assessments. No final legal or criminal assessment is made. Publication is in accordance with the freedom of the press guaranteed by Article 5 of the German Basic Law and Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
Sources
- Publicly available profiles of the referenced projects (including Youtube, Facebook, Telegram channels/ groups); research status: June 2026
- Independent editorial analysis of webinars, marketing materials, and investor reports














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