Mitch Anthony, author and president of Advisor Insights, recently revealed in a column for Financial Advisor magazine that he, along with his mother, had fallen victim to investment fraud, losing nearly a million dollars. 

But Anthony's experience isn't uncommon.

Millions of Americans are defrauded every year, according to financial regulators.

The Federal Trade Commission announced in March that, although fraud reports declined in 2017, the losses of those who submitted complaints was significant. Americans lost $905 million to fraud, which the FTC said was a $63 million increase from the year before. 

Government agencies that look out for investors, such as the North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) report the most common types of investment fraud that investors complain about are promissory notes, Ponzi schemes and unlicensed salesmen paired with unregistered products. 

The SEC, in fact, has compiled a list of the most common types of fraud that consumers need to be aware of. The list is as follows:

Affinity Fraud

Wolves in sheep's clothing is how regulators and law enforcement authorities describe these scamsters.

The affinity fraud exploits the trust and friendship that exists in religious communities, senior citizen groups, military service members, ethnic groups and other communities.

A fraudster within a community or pretending to be a part of a community lies about the details of an investment like its return or the existence of the investment. Once the fraudster takes money from new investors, he or she may use it to pay early investors to keep the scheme going for as long as possible, also known as a Ponzi scheme, or absconds the money on personal expenses.

In April, the federal courts in Houston accused a mega-church pastor and his alleged partner-in-crime, a barred financial planner, of using their trusted status to swindle investors out of more than $1 million. Allegedly, the pastor and the planner got their trusting acquaintances to invest in defaulted Chinese bonds.

To avoid affinity fraud, the SEC suggests that investors research the background of people selling investments, as well as research the investments themselves.

“Be aware that the person telling you about the investment may have been fooled into believing that the investment is legitimate when it is not,” said the SEC.

Affinity Fraud