The Pak Banker

Americans lose thousands of dollars to crypto scammers

- -REUTERS

All of us face cons every other day, especially in connection with our finances. However, the riskiest type of scams are those that take place in the world of cryptocurr­ency and investment, the Better Business Bureau (BBB) has sounded the alarm.

The BBB highlighte­d the increasing number of crypto fraudsters preying on victims and making off with substantia­l sums of money, the CBS reported. In its annual report on the major scams of 2023, the BBB revealed startling statistics, drawing from 67,000 scams reported so far.

Around 80% of Americans, who were targeted in crypto and investment scams during the past year ended up losing their money, the BBB said.

The average amount of money lost in such scams stands at $3,800.

CBS News national consumer investigat­ive correspond­ent Anna Werner shed light on the issue, saying, "Many people lose much more than that" in crypto scams.

Hackers start conversati­ons with their potential target by utilising social media, video game platforms, or text messages.

Once into a dialogue with their prey, they brag about their financial success resulting from crypto investment­s. As soon as the targeted person shows interest, the conversati­on takes a sharp turn, with scammers asking their target to do a certain act.

They pressure individual­s to engage in buying, trading, or storing digital assets, including cryptocurr­ency, on deceptive exchanges.

"This is where the crooks pressure you to purchase, trade or store digital assets such as cryptocurr­ency on fraudulent exchanges," Werner said.

The unregulate­d nature of the crypto investment business has long alarmed federal regulators and consumer advocacy groups because it fosters an environmen­t that is conducive to fraud.

Even with its astounding $2.65 trillion market cap today, the cryptocurr­ency market is not risk-free, despite its surge in popularity throughout the epidemic.

Formerly reputable companies like FTX, once a major crypto exchange, collapsed in 2022 due to a billion shortfall in funds and allegation­s of misusing customer money.

Crypto frauds have consequenc­es that go beyond just monetary losses. A 70-year-old woman from California recently sued Chase Bank after she lost $720,000 in a cryptocurr­ency scheme due to fraud.

Reflecting on the broader landscape of scams, the BBB identified employment scams as the second riskiest, involving scammers posing as employers and tricking victims into divulging personal informatio­n.

Last year, victims lost a median of $1,995 to these deceptive practices.

Online purchase scams rounded out the top three, with victims typically encounteri­ng phony websites and losing a median of $71 without receiving the promised products.

The cryptocurr­ency enthusiast­s of Australia said that the current spike in Bitcoin value is like stepping into a "brand new world" for cryptocurr­encies, according to experts. The current price hike has buoyed up cryptocurr­ency enthusiast­s as just two years ago, a major issue caused billions of dollars to vanish from the bitcoin industry, according to Mail Online.

According to Melbourne-based Bitcoin broker Jackson Zeng, the reason for the unexpected increase in Bitcoin's value is that the regulators in the United States approved 11 new Bitcoin investment avenues in January.

These are known as Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs), and they facilitate the easy purchase of Bitcoin by anyone, much like stock in a corporatio­n.

Since then, almost a billion has gone into these Bitcoin ETFs in the United States. The biggest one, called BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust, has more than billion in it.

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