Bengaluru, 5 March 2025 – Investment fraud is one of the most deceptive forms of financial crime, often fueled by social engineering tactics that manipulate the human mind. Fraudsters build trust by impersonating financial experts, fabricating endorsements from reputable organisations or at times using fake videos of social media influencers. They promise extraordinary returns, exclusive investment opportunities, or limited-time deals, pushing individuals to invest without due diligence. Once the individual invests, the fraudsters disappear abruptly or continue extracting funds till the individual realises that he is getting conned. As scams evolve with technology, awareness remains the best defense against these psychological manipulations.
Types of investment frauds
Fake Trading Platforms and Apps: Scammers create bogus investment apps or websites that resemble legitimate brokers, fund houses or exchanges. Users are initially enticed to deposit money by showing virtual profits on fake screens. Once they invest substantial amounts, they are prevented from withdrawing funds.
Stock at discounted prices: Fraudsters promote lesser known, low volume stocks and assure early access at heavily discounted prices only for select clients. They ask investors to transfer funds to personal accounts instead of the exchange or broking houses, indicating fraudulent intention. In this scam, they usually mop-up huge value of funds which is normally in lakhs, under the guise of creating riches through share trading.
Fake Job scams: Scammers, under the guise of offering employment, persuade victims to provide write-up’s and share documents. They ask for a nominal fee to establish legitimacy of the transaction. Subsequently, the victim is deceived into making further commission payments which typically goes up over multiple interactions, until they eventually recognize the fraudulent nature of the schemes.
Ponzi and Pyramid Schemes: These scams promise high returns to investors but pay early investors with funds from newer ones, not actual profits. They collapse when new money dries up.
How to Stay Safe from Investment Scams
· Verify Before Investing: Always check SEBI, RBI, or official regulatory websites for registered firms
· Be Skeptical of High Returns: If an investment sounds too good to be true, it is likely a scam
· Avoid Pressure Tactics: Legitimate investments don’t require urgent decisions
· Check Website & Email Authenticity: Look for HTTPS, official domain names, and avoid clicking on unsolicited links
· Never Share Personal or Banking Details: Fraudsters use these to manipulate and steal funds
Being cautious and well-informed is the best defense against investment scams. Always research before investing and never trust unsolicited investment offers. Report suspicious number to the national cybercrime helpline by dialing 1930 or the Department of Telecommunication (https://sancharsaathi.gov.in/sfc/). Save messages, take screenshots and document interactions.