/ Usurpation of the identity of certain banks by fraudsters: the FSMA reiterates its warning
During recent weeks, the FSMA has continued to receive notifications
from consumers who have been approached by companies usurping the
names of certain banks to present them with savings plans offering
extremely high yields. The FSMA reiterates its warning against this
practice, because behind these tantalizing offers are fraudsters whose
sole aim is to steal your savings. The principle always remains the
same: victims are contacted by telephone or by e-mail without having
taken any prior initiative themselves or after having entered their
contact details on an online form. Such forms can often be found on
websites that invite consumers to ‘check their eligibility’ for what
they claim is a very profitable investment opportunity. The sites pass
themselves off as information websites such as 'La Revue Economique'
or 'Le Guide Financier'. The fraudsters then offer consumers savings
plans with the promise of returns in excess of market returns and most
often with a capital guarantee. But in the end the result remains the
same: the victims find themselves unable to recover their money. The
FSMA recently observed that fraudsters usurped the names of several
banks to deceive consumers. The FSMA has received reports about
scammers using the following names: Royal Bank of Scotland, using
e-mail addresses ending with ‘@personalrbs. com’;
Banco
Santander Totta, using e-mail addresses ending with ‘@stdrdepartment.
com’;
Neo26, using the e-mail address ‘access. [email protected]
com’;
First-Direct / HSBC, using e-mail addresses ending with
‘@firstd-private. com’;
BPI-Portugal, using e-mail addresses
ending with ‘@bpi-portugal. com’ and a website ‘www. app-bpi-portugal.
com’. Fraudsters might also usurp the names of other financial
institutions. Swindlers redirect consumers wishing to take up the
offer to an online platform where they can monitor the progress of
their investment. The FSMA has received reports about such a platform
that usurps the name and the logo of the London Stock Exchange: www.
lse-client. com / www. lse-asset. com. For more information on how
these fraudulent schemes work, consumers are invited to consult the
FSMA’s warning of 29 January 2021. How to avoid this trap? The FSMA
also encourages you to see the recommendations it made in its previous
warning. In particular, the FSMA urges you to look very carefully at
the e-mail addresses or contact details of the companies who are
contacting you. If you have the least doubt, please feel free to
contact the FSMA directly using the consumer contact form. As well,
feel free to notify the FSMA should you come across a suspicious
company that has not yet been the subject of a warning by the FSMA.
What to do if you have been the victim of fraud? If you think you are
the victim of fraud, make sure you do not pay any additional sums to
your contact. Please note, this is also and especially true if you
are promised a refund in exchange for a final payment, as this is a
technique frequently used by fraudsters in order to obtain additional
funds. Also, immediately contact the local police to make a complaint
and alert the FSMA to the scam via the consumer contact form. The
FSMA stresses the importance of filing a complaint quickly and
with ample documentation (the company in question, bank accounts to
which you transferred money, etc. ).