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March 30, 2026
Author: Adam Collins

How to Recognize an Investment Scam

In a Nutshell

  • Verify every platform through official government databases like the SEC (Investor.gov), FCA Register, or ASIC before depositing any funds.
  • Treat any "guaranteed return" or "risk-free" offer as an immediate confirmation of a fraudulent scheme.
  • Never pay "taxes" or "release fees" to withdraw your own money; legitimate exchanges deduct fees from your existing balance.
  • Ignore investment advice from strangers on WhatsApp, Telegram, or dating apps—these are the primary vectors for "pig butchering" scams.

Investment fraud accounts for billions of dollars in annual losses globally. From massive multi-billion dollar Ponzi scheme collapses to the daily "pig butchering" traps set on social media, the financial landscape is increasingly complex. You are likely reading this because a high-yield opportunity or a professional-looking "crypto expert" has crossed your path, and you need to know if the threat is real.

Learning to recognize these patterns is a survival requirement. Scammers use corporate branding and high-end web design to make their lies look like legitimate wealth-building tools. If you understand the mechanics of their deception, you can protect your life savings before a single dollar leaves your account.

How do I identify a "Pig Butchering" script?

The pig butchering scam—named for "fattening" a victim with trust before the "slaughter"—is a psychological operation. It often begins with a "wrong number" text or an accidental LinkedIn connection that evolves into a months-long friendship or romance. Scammers now use advanced AI to manage these conversations, making them feel deeply personal.

The specific red flag is the "emotional anchoring" of the conversation to your dreams. They will ask what you would do with a specific sum of money, then show you doctored screenshots of their own fake profits to prove it is possible. If a stranger is more interested in your financial portfolio than your personality, you are the target.

What are the signs of a Ponzi scheme?

A Ponzi scheme relies on using money from new investors to pay "returns" to earlier investors. This creates a vertical price line on a chart that has no backing in economic reality.

  • Lack of Transparency: If the company cannot explain how it generates profit beyond "proprietary algorithms," it is likely a shell.
  • Recruitment Pressure: If you are promised a "referral bonus" for bringing in friends and family, the platform is likely a pyramid or Ponzi hybrid. In these schemes, you are the unpaid sales force for your own financial destruction.

How can I verify if a platform is regulated?

Legitimate financial institutions must register with national regulators to operate legally. Scammers cannot fake a listing in a government-managed database because these registries are hosted on secure, official domains.

  • Check the URL: Registry sites are hosted on official domains like .gov or .org.uk.
  • Beware of "Cloned Firms": Scammers often use the name and registration number of a real, regulated company. Always cross-reference the contact details on the regulator’s website with the details provided by the platform. If the email domains do not match exactly, you are dealing with an impostor.

Why should I reject "guaranteed" high returns?

In the real world, risk and return are inextricably linked. Scammers use the phrase "guaranteed returns" because it triggers a psychological response that shuts down critical thinking.

  • The Math Test: No legitimate investment can guarantee a high daily or weekly percentage. To pay 1% daily, a firm would need to return over 3,700% annually—a feat no legitimate business has ever achieved consistently.
  • Jargon Overload: Scammers use "tech-babble" like "decentralized liquidity mining" to make impossible returns sound like a technical feature rather than a lie.

Is the withdrawal process a trap?

The moment of truth in any fake platform is the withdrawal request. Legitimate platforms make money by charging a small percentage of your trade; they never ask for new money to access your existing funds.

THE RED LINE: If the platform demands a "capital gains tax," "insurance fee," or "security deposit" before you can withdraw, it is a scam. No regulated exchange functions this way. Once you pay the fee, the scammer will invent a new reason to demand even more.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Can the FBI or a hacker get my money back from the blockchain?

No, blockchain transactions are mathematically irreversible, and anyone claiming they can "hack" it back is a recovery scammer.

Why does the platform show my balance is growing if it’s a scam?

The numbers you see on the screen are completely fabricated by the scammer to encourage you to deposit more money.

Is a video call with the "trader" proof that they are real?

No, scammers use real-time deepfake technology to impersonate trusted individuals or influencers during video calls.

Should I pay the "tax" the platform says I owe to withdraw?

No, legitimate exchanges always deduct fees from your account balance rather than asking for a separate payment.

Where do I report this if I have already sent money?

Immediately contact your bank’s fraud department and file a report with your national cybercrime agency, such as the FBI’s IC3 or Action Fraud.


If you cannot verify the person, the platform, and the profit source through an independent third party, the investment does not exist.

Adam Collins is a cybersecurity researcher at ScamAdviser who operates under a pseudonym for privacy and security. With over four years on the digital frontlines and 1,500+ days spent deconstructing thousands of fraud schemes, he specialises in translating complex threats into actionable advice. His mission: exposing red flags so you can navigate the web with confidence.

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