Inside an Investment Scam: How People Are Systematically Trapped
Introduction
The internet and media are flooded with warnings about investment scams. Investors are cautioned to “be careful”, “verify credentials”, or “avoid unrealistic returns”. Yet, despite this abundance of cautionary content, investment scams continue to thrive consuming working professionals, homemakers, retirees, and even financially literate individuals.
Given the exponential increase in investment scams, the Government of India recently notified the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) as the authorised agency under Section 79 (3)(b) of the Information Technology Act, 2000 read with Rule 3 (1)(d) of the Information Technology (Guidelines for Intermediaries and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021. For more information on this, please read: SEBI becomes the authorised agent under the Information Technology Act.
The problem is not the lack of warnings. The real problem is that most articles or cautionary content do not explain how an investment scam actually unfolds.
From dealing with victims of such scams first-hand in our practice, we try to dissect the anatomy of the investment scams. This article attempts to explain, step by step, how a typical investment scam unfolds.
Stage One: Where It All Begins
An investment scam rarely begins with a demand for money.
It usually starts innocuously:
- A “wrong number” message on WhatsApp or Telegram.
- An invitation to a Telegram or WhatsApp group discussing stocks or crypto.
- A social media advertisement promising “educational trading insights”. The moment victim clicks the ad, he or she gets added to WhatsApp or Telegram group.
- A referral from someone who appears to have already benefited.
At this stage, there is no pressure, no urgency, and no talk of money. The objective is simple: start a conversation.
Victims often say, “I did not even intend to invest initially.”
That is precisely the design.
Stage Two: Stage Set to Welcome the Victim
Behind the scenes, investment scams are run by tech-savvy fraudsters who meticulously curate digital content to manufacture credibility. To create an appearance of legitimacy:
- WhatsApp Business, Telegram Business, and other Social Media Profiles/Pages are created to impersonate or mimic genuine investment companies.
- The logos, trademarks, brand names, and profile pictures are used on such profiles imitating the real ones.
- The details of the company, its operations, and rules of engagement are published in the relevant sections of the profile in flowery language to inspire confidence.
- Photos of real people working in actual investment companies are used to gain the trust of victims.
At this stage, the victims perform what they believe is due diligence. They google for the company and its people, only to find out that such company and people actually exist and they deal in investments. This is the initial phase of trust building.
Stage Three: Trust Engineering
Once contact is established, the scam shifts into its next dangerous phase of trust building.
This is done through:
- Daily market tips that appear logical.
- Screenshots of profits (often fabricated) posted by fraudsters who are discreetly present on the group.
- Fake dashboards or trading apps showing steady returns.
- Constant access to a “relationship manager” or “mentor” or “professors”.
Stage Four: Contact the Victim
When the fraudsters realise that the victim has stayed on the group for some time, the fraudsters do the following:
- Posting “market trends”, “stock analysis”, “intra-day profit maximisation” and such other insights or images which trigger the urge for the victim to read, follow, and use them for his gains.
- At this point, the victim’s logic and reasoning begins to give way to fear of missing out (FOMO) and innate desire to optimise gains.
- The victim is then contacted by fancy self-designated people: “sales head”, “assistant researchers”, “mentors”, or the likes.
- The victim is asked to download a fake trading app and complete the registration process. There are cases where the victim allows the app to access their phone media, contacts, files, camera, location, etc. The moment such access is granted, needless to state, the victim is stripped naked and exposed.
- The victim is also guided and allowed to trade on fraudulent website showing fake dashboards.
Stage Five: Premium Incentives
This escalation is subtle and heavily discounted to lure the victim:
- “You qualify for a premium plan now”
- “This opportunity is time-sensitive”
- “Gain access to premium insights”
This phase is not driven by greed. It is driven by trust and consistency bias.
Stage Six: The Myth of SEBI Approvals
One of the most powerful tools used in the current investment scams is the claim of regulatory approval.
Victims are often shown documents or certificates stating that:
- Bank accounts are “SEBI-approved”
- Accounts are “privileged deposit accounts after scrutiny by SEBI”
- Funds deposited are “protected under SEBI guidelines”
- Bank accounts are “SEBI-scrutinised investment accounts”
By now, the victim is not relying on hope. They believe they have verified the system.
This is false. SEBI does not approve bank accounts for accepting investments. Such documents are either fabricated or deliberately misleading, designed to give a false regulatory comfort.
Stage Seven: The Investment and Exit Trap
- The victim is asked to invest in lucrative stocks, IPOs, institutional stocks, etc.
- Victim is provided with bank accounts (often mule accounts) to transfer money for the purpose of his investment.
- Fabricated investment tabs, dashboards, trading interfaces are shown to reflect fictitious transactions and defraud the victim.
- False profits are displayed, showing exponential returns within a short time.
The victim is elated to have earned exponential profits from his “investments”.
- The victim is then encouraged to reinvest the entire amounts into new opportunities. If the victim is hesitant or unwilling to reinvest the entire amount, he is then encouraged to atleast invest the principal amount or substantial portions thereof.
- The victim who is already psychologically conditioned, is more likely to follow.
- The victim eventually requests withdrawal of the profits or full investments. In multiple cases, victims are allowed to withdraw small amounts initially. This act neutralises suspicion far more effectively than any promise ever could.
The scam usually reveals itself only when the victim tries to withdraw a substantial amount. Common tactics of withdrawal failures include:
- Account freeze due to compliance issues.
- Demand for additional charges, service fee, or liquidity fees.
- Sudden unresponsiveness of customer support.
- App and website going offline altogether.
By the time this happens, the money has already been layered through multiple accounts, often involving mule accounts, cross-border transfers, and/or conversion to crypto. This is why recovery becomes difficult.
What Should the Victims Do?
If someone suspects an investment scam or is already a victim, the following steps are crucial:
- Preserve all evidence: chats, transaction details, screenshots, etc.
- Immediately file a complaint on the National Crime Reporting Portal www.cybercrime.gov.in.
- Lodge a cybercrime complaint in your nearest cybercrime police station.
- Inform the bank without delay.
- Seek legal assistance early for structured action.
Delays significantly reduce the chances of tracing funds.
Common Mistakes by Victims
- Waiting for the “withdrawals” to be processed.
- Calling the “customer support team”.
- Not disclosing or sharing the incident to their parents, family members, friends, well-wishers, particularly in the case of students and young professionals, due to fear, embarrassment, or self-blame.
- Trying to surf the internet and remedy their situation.
- Avoiding interaction with their close ones and slipping into depression.
Rethinking the Narrative
Investment scams do not succeed because victims are careless. They succeed because fraudsters are patient, systematic, technologically and psychologically sophisticated. Understanding how the scam works is the first real step towards prevention. Warnings alone are not enough. Process awareness is perhaps most important.
Disclaimer: This article is intended for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. This article is intended to create awareness based on patterns observed in real cases.
Author: Vishnu Vinayak C R