Home Business Online Investment Scam On The Rise, Research Shows
BusinessNews

Online Investment Scam On The Rise, Research Shows

486
Online Investment Scam On The Rise, Research Shows
Credit: Business News

A recent study by the Better Business Bureau (BBB), a U.S. nonprofit promoting good business practices, has revealed that the number of scams and the volume of money lost by victims are rising globally.

The investment scam study revealed a staggering increase in the average money lost by victims. In 2021, victims lost an average of $1,000 to investment scams. By 2024, this figure had skyrocketed to nearly $6,000. Shockingly, some victims reported losses in hundreds of thousands of dollars.

According to BBB, the study was conducted to curb the rising link between investment and cryptocurrency, some of which are tied to dangerous organised syndicates from Southeast Asia.

The syndicates operate by promising unrealistic returns on investment, where targeted victims are shown fake results to convince them to send the fraudster more money.

BBB also highlighted that social media plays about 60 per cent in contacting and luring victims into unrealistic promises and parting away their money to earn more.

“If the victim gets nervous and tries to withdraw their investment, that’s when the scammer and the money disappear,” said Jessie Schmidt, Vice President of the Better Business Bureau. “It’s all a Ponzi scheme. You get your money in, and you never get it out.”

Meanwhile, an ongoing scam example cited by the BBB was the prevailing “pig butchering scams” – a practice in which fraudsters first earn the victim’s trust through a perceived romantic or platonic relationship to persuade the victim into sending money or invest into dodgy investment.

Read: Malian Armed Forces Seize Weapons, Ammunition In Kidal Region

About The Author

Written by
Mayowa Durosinmi

M. Durosinmi is a West Africa Weekly investigative reporter covering Politics, Human Rights, Health, and Security in West Africa and the Sahel Region

Related Articles

NewsPolitics

Cotê D’Ivoire: Thousands Rally in Abidjan as Opposition Demands Electoral Reforms Ahead of October Election

Thousands of opposition supporters gathered in Abidjan on Saturday, May 31, to...

News

Togo Stops Issuing Mining Permits to Reform Outdated Mining Code

Togo has suspended the issuance of new mining permits for prospecting and...

News

ICYMI: Ghana Shuts Down Washington Embassy Over Visa Fraud Scandal

Ghana has temporarily closed its embassy in Washington, D.C., following the uncovering...

In a ministerial meeting of the Confederation of Sahel States (AES) held in Bamako on January 16, 2025, key decisions emerging from the session include establishing a Regional Investment Bank and launching transformative infrastructure projects across member states.
News

Confederation of Sahel States Moves to Establish Joint Judicial Body

The Confederation of Sahel States (CSS), comprising Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso,...