Close Menu
  • Home
  • Finance News
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Cards
    • Credit Cards
    • Debit
  • Insurance
  • Loans
  • Mortgage
  • More
    • Save Money
    • Banking
    • Taxes
    • Crime
What's Hot

High-yield savings rates today: June 30, 2025 | Top APY bumps up to 4.44%

June 30, 2025

The Ultimate Guide to Enjoying Wimbledon 2025: In Person or at Home

June 30, 2025

How Treasury Bills Generate Returns

June 30, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Smart SpendingSmart Spending
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Finance News
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Cards
    • Credit Cards
    • Debit
  • Insurance
  • Loans
  • Mortgage
  • More
    • Save Money
    • Banking
    • Taxes
    • Crime
Smart SpendingSmart Spending
Home»Finance News»Investment fraud is on the rise. Here’s how to protect yourself
Finance News

Investment fraud is on the rise. Here’s how to protect yourself

March 15, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Investment fraud is on the rise. Here’s how to protect yourself
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

South_agency | E+ | Getty Images

Consumers lost $5.7 billion to investment scams in 2024 — more than in any other type of fraud and up 24% from 2023, according to new data from the Federal Trade Commission.

Investment scams generally involve claims that a consumer will get big returns by investing in a hot new moneymaking scheme, according to the FTC.

Most people — 79% — who reported an investment scam to the FTC lost money, with the typical victim losing more than $9,000 on average, the agency said.

Since FTC data is based on consumer reports of fraud, the true scope of investment fraud is likely much higher after factoring in people who don’t step forward.

“These scams are becoming a really huge problem for consumers,” said John Breyault, the National Consumers League’s vice president of public policy, telecommunications and fraud.

More from Personal Finance:
Crypto relationship scams pose ‘catastrophic harm’
How this 77-year-old widow lost $661,000 in a common tech scam
‘Financial sextortion’ of teens is a ‘rapidly escalating threat’

AI, cryptocurrency contribute to investment fraud

Common investment frauds include “pig-butchering” scams, a name that references the practice of fattening a pig before slaughter.

The fraudsters often contact victims out of nowhere — perhaps via text, social media or a dating app — to try to develop relationships and gain trust before pitching investment opportunities that supposedly yield high returns, often in virtual assets such as cryptocurrency, experts said.

Though the investments may seem legitimate, criminals eventually disappear with the consumers’ money.

It has gotten easier to commit these and other related frauds as artificial intelligence has helped make criminals more convincing, such as in using deepfakes, Breyault said. Deepfakes are manipulated videos or other images or sounds in which people can say and do things that seem real but are not.

See also  'We have these two markets'

Organized crime networks have also established scam operations centers across Southeast Asia, in countries including Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar, according to the Council on Foreign Relations. The centers are staffed by thousands of people, often illegally trafficked and forced to carry out these investment schemes globally, it said.

Criminal networks often use cryptocurrency to facilitate pig-butchering frauds because it lets them “move substantial funds easily, cheaply, and without much fear of detection,” researchers at the University of Texas at Austin wrote in a recent research paper.

How to reduce investment fraud risk

While there’s no “silver bullet” to protect against fraud, there are ways consumers can reduce their risk, Breyault said. Here are three characteristics that run through many frauds, he said:

  1. Urgency. Be wary of any pitch that has a form of urgency attached to it, Breyault said. The FTC warns that scammers “want you to act before you have time to think. … They might threaten to arrest you, sue you, take away your driver’s or business license, or deport you. They might say your computer is about to be corrupted.”
  2. Unusual payment method. Scammers often ask victims to pay in specific or unusual ways, Breyault said. “They often insist that you can only pay by using cryptocurrency, wiring money through a company like MoneyGram or Western Union, using a payment app, or putting money on a gift card and then giving them the numbers on the back of the card,” the FTC said.
  3. Isolation. Scammers will try to isolate victims so they don’t tell other people about the circumstances who might alert them that it’s a scam, Breyault said. They might say things like, “‘No one will believe you if you tell them about this,’ or ‘the cops will come get you if you report it,’ or ‘your loved ones will be in danger,'” Breyault said.
See also  How much you can save by not drinking for a month

Source link

fraud Heres Investment Protect rise
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
Previous ArticleJudge pauses firings at CFPB, FDIC, Treasury
Next Article 25 Canadians Charged In Multimillion Dollar Grandparent Scam

Related Posts

What Are The Wealthiest Cities In Nebraska? Latest Census Data Shows

June 30, 2025

Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: META, MRNA, HPE, JNPR

June 30, 2025

Bureau Of Prisons Director William Marshall Addresses Challenges

June 30, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

AI Companies Are Becoming The New Monopsonists That Will Control Work

December 17, 2024

Banks have optimized for efficiency at the cost of customer trust

June 18, 2025

How to Pay Off a Personal Loan Early

October 20, 2024
Ads Banner

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to Get the Latest Financial Tips and Insights Delivered to Your Inbox!

Stay informed with our finance blog! Get expert insights, money management tips, investment strategies, and the latest financial news to help you make smart financial decisions.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
Top Insights

High-yield savings rates today: June 30, 2025 | Top APY bumps up to 4.44%

June 30, 2025

The Ultimate Guide to Enjoying Wimbledon 2025: In Person or at Home

June 30, 2025

How Treasury Bills Generate Returns

June 30, 2025
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to Get the Latest Financial Tips and Insights Delivered to Your Inbox!

© 2025 Smartspending.ai - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.