"Investment Fraud" --------------------------------
Internet Fraud: How to Avoid Internet Investment Scams
The Internet
serves as an excellent tool for investors, allowing them to easily and
inexpensively research investment opportunities. But the Internet is also an
excellent tool for fraudsters. That's why you should always think twice
before you invest your money in any opportunity you learn about through
the Internet.
This alert
tells you how to spot different types of Internet fraud, what the SEC is
doing to fight Internet investment scams, and how to use the Internet to
invest wisely.
Navigating the Frontier: Where the Frauds Are
The Internet
allows individuals or companies to communicate with a large audience without
spending a lot of time, effort, or money. Anyone can reach tens of thousands
of people by building an Internet web site, posting a message on an online
bulletin board, entering a discussion in a live "chat" room, or sending mass
e-mails. It's easy for fraudsters to make their messages look real and
credible. But it's nearly impossible for investors to tell the difference
between fact and fiction.
Online Investment Newsletters
Hundreds of
online investment newsletters have appeared on the Internet in recent years.
Many offer investors seemingly unbiased information free of charge about
featured companies or recommending "stock picks of the month." While
legitimate online newsletters can help investors gather valuable
information, some online newsletters are tools for fraud.
Some companies
pay the people who write online newsletters cash or securities to "tout" or
recommend their stocks. While this isn't illegal, the federal securities
laws require the newsletters to disclose who paid them, the amount, and the
type of payment. But many fraudsters fail to do so. Instead, they'll lie
about the payments they received, their independence, their so-called
research, and their track records. Their newsletters masquerade as sources
of unbiased information, when in fact they stand to profit handsomely if
they convince investors to buy or sell particular stocks.
Some online
newsletters falsely claim to independently research the stocks they profile.
Others spread false information or promote worthless stocks. The most
notorious sometimes "scalp" the stocks they hype, driving up the price of
the stock with their baseless recommendations and then selling their own
holdings at high prices and high profits.
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