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COMMISSION ADVISORY
BEWARE OF
FOREIGN CURRENCY TRADING FRAUDS
- Have you been solicited to trade foreign currency contracts (also
known as "forex")?
- If so, you need to know how to spot foreign currency trading frauds.
The United States
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the federal agency that regulates
commodity futures and options markets in the United States, warns consumers to
take special care to protect themselves from the various kinds of frauds being
perpetrated in today's financial markets, including those involving so-called
"foreign currency trading."
A new federal law,
the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, makes clear that the CFTC has
the jurisdiction and authority to investigate and take legal action to close
down a wide assortment of unregulated firms offering or selling foreign currency
futures and options contracts to the general public. In addition, the CFTC has
jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute foreign currency fraud occurring in
its registered firms and their affiliates.
The CFTC has
witnessed the increasing numbers and growing complexity of financial investment
opportunities in recent years, including a sharp rise in foreign currency
trading scams. While much foreign currency trading is legitimate, various forms
of foreign currency trading have been touted in recent years to defraud members
of the public.
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.
Understanding
Legitimate Foreign Currency Operations
Generally
speaking, foreign currency futures and options contracts may be traded legally
on an exchange or board of trade that has been approved by the CFTC.
Even where
currency trading does not occur on a Commission-approved exchange or
board of trade, the trading can be conducted legally where, generally speaking,
one or both parties to the trading is (or is a regulated affiliate of) a bank,
insurance company, registered securities broker-dealer, futures commission
merchant or other financial institution, or is an individual or entity with a
high net worth.
Where forex firms
do not fall into the categories of regulated entities outlined above and engage
in foreign currency futures and options transactions with or for retail
customers who do not have high net worths, the CFTC has jurisdiction over those
firms and their transactions.
Warning Signs of
Fraud
If you are
solicited by a company that claims to trade foreign currencies and asks you to
commit funds for those purposes, you should be very careful. Watch for the
warning signs listed below, and take the following precautions before placing
your funds with any currency trading company.
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.
The following are
examples of statements that either are or most likely are fraudulent:
- "Whether the market moves up or down, in the currency
market you will make a profit."
- "Make $1000 per week, every week"
- "We are out-performing 90% of domestic investments."
- "The main advantage of the forex markets is that there
is no bear market."
- "We guarantee you will make at least a 30-40% rate of
return within two months."
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.
The currency
futures and options markets are volatile and contain substantial risks for
unsophisticated customers. The currency futures and options markets are not the
place to put any funds that you cannot afford to lose. For example, retirement
funds should not be used for currency trading. You can lose most or all of those
funds very quickly trading foreign currency futures or options contracts.
Therefore, beware of companies that make the following types of statements:
- "With a $10,000 deposit, the maximum you can lose is
$200 to $250 per day."
- "We promise to recover any losses you have."
- "Your investment is secure."
4. Don't Trade on
Margin Unless You Understand What It Means
Margin trading can
make you responsible for losses that greatly exceed the dollar amount you
deposited.
Many currency
traders ask customers to give them money, which they sometimes refer to as
"margin," often sums in the range of $1,000 to $5,000. However, those amounts,
which are relatively small in the currency markets, actually control far larger
dollar amounts of trading, a fact that often is poorly explained to customers.
Don't trade on
margin unless you fully understand what you are doing and are prepared to accept
losses that exceed the margin amounts you paid.
5. Question Firms
That Claim To Trade in the "Interbank Market"
Be wary of firms
that claim that you can or should trade in the "interbank market," or that they
will do so on your behalf.
Unregulated,
fraudulent currency trading firms often tell retail customers that their funds
are traded in the "interbank market," where good prices can be obtained. 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.
6. Be Wary of
Sending or Transferring Cash on the Internet, By Mail or Otherwise
Be especially
alert to the dangers of trading on-line; it is very easy to transfer funds
on-line, but often can be impossible to get a refund.
It costs an
Internet advertiser just pennies per day to reach a potential audience of
millions of persons, and phony currency trading firms have seized upon the
Internet as an inexpensive and effective way of reaching a large pool of
potential customers.
Many companies
offering currency trading on-line are not located within the United States and
may not display an address or any other information identifying their
nationality on their Web site. Be aware that if you transfer funds to those
foreign firms, it may be very difficult or impossible to recover your funds.
7. Currency Scams
Often Target Members of Ethnic Minorities
Some currency
trading scams target potential customers in ethnic communities, particularly
persons in the Russian, Chinese and Indian immigrant communities, through
advertisements in ethnic newspapers and television "infomercials."
Sometimes those
advertisements offer so-called "job opportunities" for "account executives" to
trade foreign currencies. Be aware that "account executives" that are hired
might be expected to use their own money for currency trading, as well as to
recruit their family and friends to do likewise. What appears to be a promising
job opportunity often is another way many of these companies lure customers into
parting with their cash.
8. Be Sure You Get
the Company's Performance Track Record
Get as much
information as possible about the firm's or individual's performance record on
behalf of other clients. You should be aware, however, that It may be difficult
or impossible to do so, or to verify the information you receive. While firms
and individuals are not required to provide this information, you should be wary
of any person who is not willing to do so or who provides you with incomplete
information. However, keep in mind, even if you do receive a glossy brochure or
sophisticated-looking charts, that the information they contain might be false.
9. Don't Deal With
Anyone Who Won't Give You Their Background
Plan to do a lot
of checking of any information you receive to be sure that the company is and
does exactly what it says.
Get the background
of the persons running or promoting the company, if possible. Do not rely solely
on oral statements or promises from the firm's employees. Ask for all
information in written form.
If you cannot
satisfy yourself that the persons with whom you are dealing are completely
legitimate and above-board, the wisest course of action is to avoid trading
foreign currencies through those companies.
10. Warning Signs
Of Commodity "Come-Ons"
If you are
solicited by a company to purchase commodities, watch for the warning signs
listed below:
- Avoid any company that predicts or guarantees large profits
with little or no financial risk.
- Be wary of high-pressure tactics to convince you to send or
transfer cash immediately to the firm, via overnight delivery companies, the
internet, by mail, or otherwise.
- Be skeptical about unsolicited phone calls about investments
from offshore salespersons or companies with which you are unfamiliar.
- Prior to purchasing:
·
- Contact the CFTC.
- Visit the
CFTC's forex fraud web page.
- Contact the National Futures Association
to see whether the company is registered with the CFTC or is a members of the
National Futures Association (NFA)?. You can do this easily by calling the NFA
(800-621-3570 or 800-676-4NFA) or by checking the NFA's registration and
membership information on its website at
www.nfa.futures.org/basicnet/.
While registration may not be required, you might want to confirm the
status and disciplinary record of a particular company or salesperson.
- Get in touch with other authorities,
including your state's securities commissioner (www.nasaa.org),
Attorney General's consumer protection bureau (www.naag.org/),
the Better Business Bureau (www.bbb.org)
and the National Futures Association (www.nfa.futures.org).
- Be sure you get all information about the
company and verify that data, if possible. If you can, check the company's
materials with someone whose financial advice you trust.
- Learn all possible information about fees
charged, and the
basis for each of these charges.
- If in doubt, don't invest.
If you can't get solid information about the company, the salesperson, and the
investment, you may not want to risk your money.
11. More
Information and Contacts
- Questions concerning this advisory may be addressed to
the CFTC's Office of Public Affairs at (202) 418-5080.
Commodity Futures
Trading Commission
Three LaFayette
Centre
1155 21st Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20581
- The Commodity Futures Modernization Act is available
in our
Law and Regulation page.
(requires an Adobe Acrobat reader, which can be downloaded for free from
www.adobe.com and numerous
other sites on the Internet)
- For other consumer advisories concerning possible
fraudulent activity in the commodity futures and options industry, click on
the
Customer Protection page.
- Contact the
National Fraud Information
Center (www.fraud.org).
- The CFTC's website also offers general information
about trading in the commodity futures and options markets. You may wish to
visit our
Before You Trade page.
- To find out whether firms or counterparties with whom
you plan to trade are registered or regulated institutions or entities that
are outside the CFTC's jurisdiction, you can check the lists of regulated
institutions on the following websites. Some institutions outside the CFTC's
jurisdiction do not appear on any of these lists or in other readily-available
places:
·
- Federal Reserve Board (www.federalreserve.gov)
- Federal Financial Institutions Examination
Council (www.ffiec.gov)
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (www.fdic.gov)
- U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (www.sec.gov)
- The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (www.occ.treas.gov)
- Office of Thrift Supervision (www.ots.treas.gov)
- National Credit Union Association (www.ncua.gov)
- National Association of Securities Dealers
Regulation, Inc. (www.nasdr.com)
- All U.S. Government web sites can be located
through links at
www.firstgov.gov
- Your state Attorney General's office and state
banking, insurance and securities regulators (which often have their own web
sites)
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