Abstract:A Malaysian doctor has lost RM468,000 after falling for an online investment scam promoted on Facebook. She believed it was an advertisement from a well-known investment company, but it turned out to be a fake operation in which scammers had misused the company’s name.
A Malaysian doctor has lost RM468,000 after falling for an online investment scam promoted on Facebook.
Police in Pahang said the 55-year-old victim first came across the advertisement in May. She was later contacted by someone pretending to represent Nikko Asset Management, a well-known investment company based in Tokyo with offices worldwide. The scammer used the companys name to appear legitimate.
The woman was told she could earn between 80 and 128 per cent in returns within just a month. Believing the promise, she began transferring money taken from her Employees Provident Fund savings. Between 17 June and 6 August, she made 14 transfers to four different bank accounts.
To make the scam look real, the suspect sent her fake profit statements showing her investment had grown to RM800,000, including the original capital. Later, she was asked to pay another RM152,725 as “taxes” before she could withdraw her money. At this point, she grew suspicious and stopped making payments.
She then filed a police report at the Kuantan District Police Headquarters. The case is being investigated under Section 420 of the Penal Code, which deals with cheating. Authorities confirmed that Nikko Asset Management had no part in the fraud and that its name had been used without permission.
This type of scam is becoming more common, with criminals using well-known brand names to win trust. The promise of very high and fast returns is often the first warning sign, but many victims are convinced by official-looking documents and professional presentations.
Experts say that investors can protect themselves by checking the background of any broker or platform before sending money. Tools such as WikiFX can help with this. The service offers a global database of brokers, along with details of their licences, user reviews, and warnings about unlicensed or suspicious firms. By using resources like these, investors can spot danger early and avoid losing their savings.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has secured nearly $4 million from the widow of a deceased investment adviser who orchestrated a Ponzi scheme that defrauded more than 50 investors out of $29 million over more than a decade.
A new wave of investment scams has hit Japan’s Chinese community, with reported losses of over ¥100 million (approximately RM2.8 million). At the center is Chen Mansato (real name: Chen Sheng), a Japanese citizen of Chinese descent, who introduced himself as an investment expert and directed people to the broker ACY Securities.
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