Investment scams are the highest-loss scam category, with victims losing a median of $7,761 per incident. From fake trading platforms to Ponzi schemes, this guide helps you identify fraudulent investment opportunities before committing your money.
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Legitimate investment firms and advisors must be registered with financial regulators. In the US, check the SEC's EDGAR database, FINRA BrokerCheck, and the CFTC. In the UK, check the FCA register. If the firm or advisor isn't registered, don't invest.
Scammers sometimes use the names and registration numbers of real firms. Verify by contacting the regulator directly, not through links provided by the person pitching the investment.
No legitimate investment can guarantee returns. If anyone promises "guaranteed 5% monthly," "risk-free profits," or "never lose money," it's a scam. Even the best hedge funds have down months. The higher the promised return, the more likely it's fraudulent.
If you can't clearly explain the investment to a friend, don't invest. Scammers use complexity and jargon to prevent scrutiny. Legitimate investments have clear, understandable business models. Ask: "Where exactly do the returns come from?"
Before investing significant money, make a small deposit and immediately try to withdraw it (plus any profits). Scam platforms show fake profits but block withdrawals with excuses: "minimum balance required," "withdrawal tax," "verification needed." If you can't get your money out, it's a scam.
Search for "[platform name] scam," "[platform name] reviews," and "[platform name] withdrawal problems." Check forums, Reddit, and Trustpilot. A legitimate platform will have a long history of real user reviews, both positive and negative.
Investment advice from strangers on social media, Telegram groups, or dating apps is almost always a scam. Pig butchering scams specifically combine romantic attention with investment fraud. Never invest based on advice from someone you've only met online.