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Be Careful, Someone Wants
Your Money
Source: Commodity Futures
Trading Commission
The United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(CFTC) warns consumers to take special care to protect
themselves from the many types of commodities fraud being perpetrated
in todays financial markets. The CFTC is the federal agency
that regulates commodity futures and options markets in the United
States. We have seen a great increase in the number of scams that
falsely promise high profits with low risks. Many of these scams
are targeted at ethnic communities in their language, from New York
to South Florida and from the Southwest to California, among other
areas.
The public should be wary of any firm that offers
to sell commodities or commodity futures or options. They might
be selling precious metals, such as silver or gold, or on foreign
currency, such as Euros, Yen or Deutschmarks. They might be selling
futures or options on precious metals or foreign currency, or on
other commodities such as crude oil, heating oil, unleaded gas,
or agricultural products such as corn, soybeans, or cattle. The
firm might be offering to manage your money for you to trade in
commodity futures or options, or to pool your money with other customers.
If a firm offers any of these investments, and promises high profits
and low risks, or claims that they have made profits for all of
their customers, you should not believe them without proof. The
commodities and futures markets are very risky, and you can lose
your entire investment very quickly. Anyone who claims otherwise
might be breaking the law.
Foreign currency trading scams often attract customers
through advertisements in local newspapers, radio promotions or
attractive Internet sites. These advertisements may tout high-return,
low-risk investment opportunities in foreign currency trading, or
even highly-paid currency-trading employment opportunities. The
CFTC urges you to be skeptical when promoters of foreign currency
trading claim that their services or account management will earn
high profits with minimal risks, or that employment as a currency
trader will make you wealthy quickly. Precious metals scams often
work the same way.
Commodity pool operators often solicit investments
from friends, neighbors, co-workers and fellow religious or social
group members by using their reputations in the community or their
personal relationships. In many cases, however, the investment schemes
turn out to be fraudulent, and investors lose their entire investment,
in many cases as a result of outright theft. Individuals and firms
that fraudulently solicit funds from investors for commodity futures
and options trading are usually not registered with the CFTC. They
may operate Ponzi schemes in which little or none of
the money sent in by investors is ever invested as promised
in the commodity markets. Instead, the operator of the scam steals
the funds, and creates the illusion of a successful business by
using some of the money put in by later investors to pay phony profits"
to
earlier investors. This tactic makes it appear to investors that
the investment is actually making money, which in turn attracts
additional investors. Be wary of such payouts if you do not fully
understand the source of any purported profits.
Introducing Brokers often use advertisements on
radio and television, as well as infomercials program-length
television commercials to promote commodity futures and options.
These advertisements may claim that seasonal trends in the demand
for certain commodities or well-known current events create an opportunity
to make big money by trading in commodity futures and options. The
advertisements and infomercials promise quick riches such
as turning $5,000 into $20,000 in just a few months with
predetermined risk. The CFTC has brought actions against wrongdoers
who lured customers by claims that one could earn large profits
with little risk based on predictable seasonal demands, published
reports, or well-known current events.
Warning Signs of Fraud
1. Stay Away From Opportunities That Sound Too
Good to Be True
Get-rich-quick schemes, including those involving
foreign currency trading, tend to be frauds.
Always remember that there is no such thing as a
"free lunch." Be especially cautious if you have acquired
a large sum of cash recently and are looking for a safe investment
vehicle. In particular, retirees with access to their retirement
funds may be attractive targets for fraudulent operators. Getting
your money back once it is gone can be difficult or impossible.
2. Avoid Any Company that Predicts or Guarantees
Large Profits
Be extremely wary of companies that guarantee profits,
or that tout extremely high performance. In many cases, those claims
are false.
Be sure you get all the information about the company
and its track record and verify the data. If you can, before you
invest with any company, check the company's materials with someone
whose financial advice you trust
3. Stay Away From Companies That Promise Little
or No Financial Risk
Be suspicious of companies that downplay risks or
state that written risk disclosure statements are routine formalities
imposed by the government.
If in doubt, don't invest. If you can't get solid
information about the company and the investment, you may not want
to risk your money
4. Question Firms That Claim To Trade in the
"Interbank Market"
Be wary of firms that claim that you can or should
trade foreign currency in the "interbank market," or that
they will do so on your behalf. Firms that trade currencies in the
interbank market, however, are most likely to be banks, investment
banks and large corporations, since the term "interbank market"
refers simply to a loose network of currency transactions negotiated
between financial institutions and other large companies.
5. Be Wary of High-Pressure Efforts to Convince
You to Send or Transfer Cash Immediately to the Firm, via Overnight
Shipping Companies, the Internet, by Mail, or Otherwise
6. Be Skeptical about Unsolicited Phone Calls
about Investments, Especially Those from Out-of-State Salespersons
or Companies with Which You Are Unfamiliar
Original article can be found here: www.cftc.gov/opa/opaconsumeradv0404.htm
For More Information and
Contacts:
Prior to Trading, Contact the CFTC or Other Authorities,
Including Your State's Attorney General's Office's Consumer Protection
Bureau, and the Better Business Bureaus. You can find out if someone
is registered by calling the National Futures Association at 1-800-676-4632.
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commissions
(CFTC) Division of Enforcement has established a toll-free telephone
number to assist members of the public in reporting possible violations
of the commodities laws. Anyone who wishes to report possible wrong-doing
should call the Division of Enforcement at 866-FON-CFTC (866-366-2382).
Commodities misconduct can also be reported
to the Enforcement Division through a form on the CFTC's website,
www.cftc.gov/enf/enfform.htm, or by mail addressed to Office of
Cooperative Enforcement, CFTC, 1155 21st St., NW, Washington, DC
20581. In addition to this Advisory and Consumer Alerts, the CFTC
has also issued the following Consumer Alerts that are posted on
its web site at www.cftc.gov/cftc/cftccustomer.htm.
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