The Rewards Group managed 12,000 hectares of forestry and fruit  plantations in Queensland, Western Australia and Victoria.It wasn't successful and voluntary administrators Ferrier Hodgson  have been called in. 
MIS analyst Shane Kelly says the  administrators have some tough decisions to make.
"The worst  outcome is that the administrators look to wind up the projects and sell  the land as cleared title," he says.
"A good outcome would be  a similar outcome that has occurred for Timbercorp mangoes or avocados,  where new responsible entities came in to replace Timbercorp, as they  would Rewards, that allowed those projects to continue on in the manner  to which the investors invested."
A former head of the  Australian Mango Industry Association says he isn't surprised another  MIS provider has fallen over.
Mareeba farmer Joe Moro wrote to  the Australian Securities and Investments Commission many years ago to  raise concerns about the mango return projections being quoted by  Rewards Group and Timbercorp.
He says they were unrealistic.
"There  were projections there of 30 per cent they'd be exporting, from both of  the MIS's," he says.
"They never were able to achieve those  outcomes.
"It never was possible for mangoes, if you  understood the export market for mangoes, and the prices they were  talking they were going to get for some of this product was always at  the top end and had to be in situations where the market was  undersupplied, rather than oversupplied, which is where we're at today."