BUSINESS
EMAAR Investment Collapse Sparks Looming Class-Action Lawsuit as Victims Accuse Moniepoint of Enabling Multi-Billion-Naira Digital Scam
Following the devastating collapse of the “EMAAR” digital investment platform, a coalition of aggrieved investors has announced plans to file a class-action lawsuit against Moniepoint Microfinance Bank, escalating what is fast becoming one of Nigeria’s most consequential fintech-related controversies. The legal action accuses the fintech unicorn of gross negligence, failure to protect users, and providing the primary financial infrastructure that enabled a shadowy syndicate to defraud over 4,000 Nigerians of billions of naira.
At the heart of the unfolding legal battle is a Moniepoint account operated under the merchant name “CreditB-24H.” Investigations gathered by victims indicate that this single account functioned as the main collection channel for thousands of unsuspecting Nigerians who believed they were investing in a legitimate real estate opportunity. That confidence evaporated on October 27, 2025, when the EMAAR platform abruptly crashed, cutting off access to funds and plunging families across the country into severe financial distress.
Many of the affected investors say they poured in life savings, business capital, cooperative funds, and borrowed money, lured by promises of quick returns and the perceived legitimacy that came with the use of a well-known, CBN-licensed fintech platform.
The coalition of victims argues that the scandal exposes deep flaws in Moniepoint’s internal safeguards, particularly its Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) frameworks. According to the plaintiffs, the bank processed hundreds of high-value and repetitive transactions for a “virtual-only” merchant with no verifiable physical address, yet failed to flag or restrict the account.
Central to their claims is Moniepoint’s alleged failure to apply the “Post No Debit” (PND) restriction, a regulatory tool designed to immediately freeze suspicious accounts and prevent further losses. Victims insist that timely action could have significantly reduced the scale of the fraud or halted it entirely.
Under the banner of social media campaigns such as #HoldMoniepointAccountable, affected investors say the issue goes beyond one collapsed scheme and reflects a wider vulnerability in Nigeria’s fast-growing digital finance ecosystem.
Legal representatives for the victims warn that the implications of the EMAAR collapse extend far beyond individual losses. They point to a growing pattern of large-scale digital investment scams, arguing that repeated failures by regulators and major fintechs could have far-reaching consequences.
They outline two major risks facing the Nigerian public if decisive regulatory action is not taken:
1. Total Erosion of Trust: The recurring nature of such scams, coming on the heels of the reported ₦1.3 trillion CBEX collapse, could push millions of Nigerians back into the informal economy, undermining years of progress in financial inclusion and digital banking adoption.
2. Regulatory Impunity: Critics contend that Moniepoint’s recent $200 million Series C fundraising has fostered a sense of being “too big to care.” They argue that without firm intervention from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the bank may continue to prioritize transaction volumes and rapid “unicorn” expansion over consumer protection and systemic risk management.
As part of the proposed lawsuit, the plaintiffs are demanding that the Central Bank of Nigeria conduct a comprehensive forensic audit of Moniepoint’s merchant onboarding procedures, transaction monitoring systems, and internal compliance controls. They are also seeking to have the bank held liable for funds lost through accounts operated on its platform.
“This lawsuit is not just about recovery; it is about ensuring that Moniepoint can never again hide behind a ‘technical glitch’ while enabling a national tragedy,” the victims stated, emphasizing that the case is intended to set a precedent for accountability across Nigeria’s fintech sector.
They further warned that continued regulatory silence could embolden bad actors to exploit licensed institutions as cover for large-scale fraud.
EMAAR was an online investment portal that emerged in mid-2025, promoting itself as a digital real estate investment platform offering unusually high returns within a 10-day window. Leveraging fintech payment channels, primarily Moniepoint, the scheme attracted deposits from thousands of Nigerians nationwide before abruptly collapsing in October 2025. To date, over 4,000 victims have been identified, with total losses estimated in the billions of naira.
As legal preparations intensify, the case is expected to test the boundaries of fintech responsibility, regulatory oversight, and consumer protection in Nigeria’s rapidly evolving digital financial landscape.
