Investment Scams
Targeting Seniors on the Rise
The
economic climate is ripe for investment scams. Such scams hit consumers of all
ages, but seniors are particularly susceptible. The North American Securities
Administrators Association (NASAA) reports that older investors are being
targeted with increasingly complex investment scams involving unregistered
securities, promissory notes, charitable gift annuities, viatical
settlements and Ponzi schemes, all promising inflated
returns.
Opportunists
who commit these scams know that seniors and others living on fixed incomes are
being squeezed in the current financial environment. Their products and pitches
sound tempting to many seniors who have seen their retirement nest egg dwindle
in the past few years.
Seniors,
however can educate themselves to avoid being taken. The Better Business Bureau,
along with the NASAA offer the following tips:
- Do not be a courtesy victim. Con
artists will not hesitate to exploit your good manners.
- Check out strangers touting too good
to be true deals. Trusting strangers is a mistake anyone can make when it
comes to their personal finances. Extensive background information on
investment salespeople and firms is available from the Central
Registration Depository files available from your state securities agency.
- Always stay in charge of your money.
Beware of anyone who suggests putting your money into something you do not
understand or who urges that you leave everything in his or her hands.
- Do not judge a book by its cover.
Successful con artists sound and look extremely professional and have the
ability to make even the flimsiest investment deal sound as safe and sound
as putting money in the bank. The sound of a voice, particularly on the phone,
has no bearing on the soundness of an investment opportunity.
- Watch out for salespeople who prey on
your fears. Con artists know that you worry about outliving your savings.
Fear can cloud your good judgment. An investment that is right for you
will make sense because you understand it and feel comfortable with the
risk involved.
- Monitor your investments and ask
questions. Do not compound the mistake of trusting an unscrupulous
investment professional or a con artist by failing to keep an eye on the
progress of your investment. Insist on regular written or oral reports.
Look for signs of excessive or unauthorized trading of your funds. If you
are stalled when you want to withdraw your
principal or profits from an investment, consider that a red flag.
- Do not let embarrassment or fear keep
you from reporting investment fraud or abuse. Con artists know that you
might hesitate to report that you have been victimized in financial
schemes out of embarrassment or fear. Every day that you delay reporting
fraud is one more day that the con artist is spending your money and
finding new victims.
This
information is general in nature and is not intended as a reliability report on
any company, product, or service.