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Written by 3:38 pm Blog

FINRA Announcement:

It Can Be Hard to Recover from “Recovery” Scams

It’s an alluring offer. You hear from someone who claims to be able to help you recover money you lost from a previous investment. The information sounds credible and the organization sounds legitimate. Documents you receive also look authentic, and the money that’s promised is not only welcome, but seems well-deserved compensation for previous losses.

The catch? They want you to pay money upfront for the recovery “services,” which in some cases are purely fraudulent. In addition to the original money you lost, you now may lose more money at the hands of professional con artists.

FINRA is issuing this alert to warn investors, particularly investors who live outside the U.S., that offers to recover money lost from securities investments may be fraudulent. Both FINRA and the SEC routinely receive questions and concerns about recovery offers.

This alert provides seven tips for how to spot and avoid fraudulent “recovery” scams. In an accompanying resource, FINRA offers information about legitimate ways to attempt to recover funds or be compensated for losses.

Seven Tips

If you find yourself in contact with someone offering to help you recover lost capital, use these tips to help you avoid suffering additional losses:

  1. Proceed with caution. Be extremely skeptical of a purported U.S. firm reaching across the globe offering to recover funds on your behalf, especially if the firm claims to be a regulatory organization, law firm or U.S. brokerage firm. If you choose to contact a firm that claims to be registered with FINRA, do so using the contact information found on Page 1 of the firm’s full BrokerCheck report, not a number provided by the organization that contacted you. Posing as a legitimate securities firm, regulator or government agency is a tried and true tactic of fraudsters designed to build credibility. It is often a first step in a series of tactics designed to culminate in the payment of money to the scammers.
  2. Do some research. Do an internet search of the organizations or individuals who contact you. Also search the type of offer you are being pitched and tactics used. Do so before you send any money. You may turn up red flags, or find that consumer protection, regulatory or law enforcement organizations have identified your situation as a potential fraud.
  3. Consider your history. Realize that a previous purchase of speculative securities that lost money, or an earlier fraud, makes you a more likely candidate for additional scams, including follow-on frauds. Lists of previous victims are often recirculated. It is common for scammers to “go back to the well” and try to take more money from a previous victim.
  4. Know the tricks fraudsters use. On its MoneySmart website, the Australian Securities & Investments Commission cautions investors to be aware of follow-up (or recovery) scam tactics. These include offers to: (1) swap your investment for another to recover losses; (2) buy your shares back at a premium (provided you pay an administration or other fee); or (3) recover your losses for a fee described as a tax, deposit or refundable insurance bond. FINRA’s website includes numerous “tricks of the trade,” including the influence tactics and persuasion techniques cons tend to use, along with ways to avoid becoming victimized. And the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority provides additional tips related to avoiding scams, including recovery scams.
  5. Don’t send money by wire transfer. Fraudsters often push to have funds sent by wire transfer. When you wire money, it can go anywhere in the world, and you can’t get it back. In general, unless the person is well known to you (a relative, for instance) don’t send money by wire transfer, and treat requests to do so with caution.
  6. Call your national securities regulator before sending any money. Visit the website of the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) to find contact information for the national securities regulator in your country. In the U.S., contact the SEC or FINRA.
  7. Learn About Legitimate Avenues for Recovery of Investment Losses. All investments carry some degree of risk, including risk of loss, even of all their value, if market conditions sour. But if you believe you have been treated unfairly, FINRA, other regulators and the courts have mechanisms to help you recover assets or receive compensation.
Last modified: October 7, 2016