I took my friend’s advice to invest my $180K nest egg in a foreign savings firm. All my money is gone. What can I do?

Investment scams are on the rise in the U.S., with data from the FTC showing a 25% increase in losses between 2023 to 2024 (1). Consumers reported $5.7 billion lost to these scams last year — and for many Americans, that number highlights how easy it can be to fall for a fraudster’s schemes.

Consider someone like Michael, a 46-year-old warehouse supervisor in Ohio. Last year, a close friend urged him to invest his life savings with a foreign firm that was supposedly generating double-digit returns for everyday investors. The friend said he had already seen strong results and even showed screenshots of his growing balance.

Trusting his friend was enough. Michael wired nearly $180,000 — his entire nest egg — to the firm, with little additional research. A few months later, the company announced “temporary liquidity issues.” By the end of the year, the CEO was in court overseas and customers learned that the firm had funneled money into high-risk, unregulated investments, before collapsing. Michael and his friend lost everything.

Investment scams convince unsuspecting victims that they can earn big returns with a new opportunity that few others know about. And scammers are getting better at making these schemes look legitimate (2), as the FTC warns.

“The data we’re releasing today shows that scammers’ tactics are constantly evolving,” said Christopher Mufarrige, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “The FTC is monitoring those trends closely and working hard to protect the American people from fraud (1)”.

While these schemes take different forms, the general process is similar: They get your attention via ads, free events, or financial advice. They’ll often say you’ll make lots of money and may pitch the investment as something new or unique. Many scammers use “real” people’s stories to show you how much you could make by showing their lavish lifestyles.

The actual investment can vary. Sometimes it’s coins, cryptocurrency, real estate, or investments in international firms. Scammers often promise high returns and may even show you a dashboard of your money growing, usually to encourage you to increase your investment (2).

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