Securities regulators Alberta and British Columbia have joined forces to provide an online tool to help educate investors about investment fraud, the regulators said Monday.
The interactive tool entitled, Investment Scams: How to Protect Your Money, focuses on some common methods that fraudsters use to approach potential victims — via friend and family or ‘affinity’, the Internet, seminars and advertisements.
Developed jointly by the Alberta Securities Commission and B.C. Securities Commission, the resource engages users with an opening quiz and testimonials to raise awareness of the ways fraudsters attract their victims. The testimonials are based on real cases depicting how people are drawn into scams.
The comprehensive tool provides information about how to recognize, research and prevent fraud. Offered as modules that can be easily accessed and shared, the resource provides investors with checklists and tips to help them evaluate and research investment opportunities for risks and potential fraud. As well, there are features within the resource to help investors directly email questions to a person offering them an investment and submit a complaint to the securities regulators.
Monday’s launch comes on the same day as the Canadian Securities Administrators released their 2009 Investor Index research. The 2009 study shows that people remain vulnerable to investment fraud as 38% of Canadians are being approached with fraudulent investments, the same rate as in 2006.
“What concerns us is the percentage of people being approached in B.C. is 10% higher than the national average,” says BCSC Executive Director Brenda Leong.
ASC Executive Director David Linder adds, “We know that Alberta investors are more prone than any other investors in Canada to believe that if you don’t act immediately on an opportunity that you may miss out.”
With recent large-scale Ponzi schemes widely-reported in Alberta and B.C. and research indicating that only 47% of Canadians actually take the time to research their investments before they invest, Leong and Linder both agree: “Investors in Alberta and B.C. should take advantage of this new tool, especially before they make important investment decisions.”
The Alberta and B.C. fraud prevention tool is supported by a video uploaded on YouTube that will help people find out about the course and easily
share it with their family, friends and colleagues.
IE
New tool teaches investors to recognize and prevent fraud
B.C. residents more likely to be approached with fraudulent investments
- By: IE Staff
- October 5, 2009 October 5, 2009
- 11:55