Investment fraud is the highest-dollar scam category. In 2024, Americans lost $4.6 billion to investment scams — a record high, driven largely by cryptocurrency fraud (FTC Consumer Sentinel Network).
The Investment Fraud Spectrum
Ponzi Schemes
Returns paid to early investors come from new investor deposits — not actual profits. Scheme collapses when new money dries up. Classic examples: Bernie Madoff, Allen Stanford. Modern variants frequently use crypto.
Pump and Dump
Fraudsters buy a low-value stock or cryptocurrency, aggressively promote it via social media and messaging groups, sell when the price spikes, leaving other investors holding worthless assets.
Pig Butchering / Relationship Investment Scams
Long-term trust-building via online relationships, followed by introduction to a fraudulent investment platform showing guaranteed returns. The fastest-growing fraud category globally.
Advance Fee Fraud
Victims pay upfront fees to participate in a lucrative investment — which never materializes. Each payment unlocks a new reason why another payment is required first.
Affinity Fraud
Fraudsters target tight-knit communities — religious groups, ethnic communities, professional associations — using shared identity to build trust and lower guard.
Who Gets Targeted?
Contrary to stereotypes, educated, financially sophisticated people are frequently targeted. The FBI notes that higher-income individuals lose more per incident. Perpetrators deliberately choose victims who appear to have money to invest.
Universal Warning Signs
- Guaranteed returns — no legitimate investment guarantees profits.
- Consistent high returns regardless of market conditions.
- Unregistered investments or unregistered sellers.
- Secretive or complex strategies that can't be explained clearly.
- Issues with paperwork or problems receiving payments.
Sources: FTC Consumer Sentinel Network 2024; FBI IC3; SEC Investor Education.