The Financial Services and Markets Authority (FSMA) warns the public against the activities of five new companies that make fraudulent wealth management offers.
As part of such fraudulent wealth management offers, the fraudsters contact you by phone, without you having requested it, or after you entered your contact details on an online form. A ‘specialist’ then offers to manage your assets, touting interest rates that are much higher than market rates and usually offering a capital guarantee. However, these offers are too good to be true. Be vigilant, since if you trust these fraudsters, you will never get your money back!
The FSMA has identified 5 new companies making such offers:
You may be approached after having expressed an interest in an advertisement dangling the promise of high-interest rates published on social media or other websites. In the following days, you will receive a call from a telephone salesperson who will offer to manage your assets.
You may also be contacted by phone without you having taken any initiative at all. This ‘cold calling’ technique is widely used in investment fraud. You will then be invited to consult the website of their ‘company’ and open a personal account. Sometimes you are also offered a contract. Contacts will continue by email, phone, text message, or via WhatsApp.
Be careful, don’t rely on the ‘professional’ appearance of the website to which you are referred; naturally, the fraudsters do everything to make their site seem as serious as possible.
Testimonies by consumers indicate that they are often offered wealth management contracts. In short, you entrust your money to your interlocutor, who will manage it for you, promising high returns that may even come with a guaranteed rate.
The FSMA invites you to heed the following recommendations to avoid fraudulent schemes:
If you have the least doubt about whether the financial services being offered to you are lawful, please do not hesitate to contact the FSMA directly via the consumer contact form. Also, feel free to notify it of any suspicious company that has not yet been the subject of a warning by the FSMA.
If you think you have been the victim of fraud, make sure you do not make any more payments to your interlocutor. Note: this is also especially true if you are promised a refund in exchange for the final payment, as this is a technique frequently used to obtain one last payment.
Contact your local police to make a complaint and report the scam to the FSMA via the consumer contact form.
This article was first published on Financial Services and Markets Authority (FSMA)