AI-enabled scams proved 4.5 times more profitable than traditional methods, according to Chainalysis's newest study.
In the meantime, retail brokers like Pepperstone report taking down fraudulent clone websites almost daily.
Financial
fraud targeting retail trading platforms reached unprecedented levels in 2025.
Impersonation scams grew more than 1,400% year-over-year as criminals
deploy artificial intelligence and phishing-as-a-service tools to dupe
investors. Professional money laundering networks now process billions in
stolen funds annually, according to a new report from blockchain analytics firm
Chainalysis.
The
dramatic spike reflects how scammers have industrialized their operations,
purchasing AI-powered deepfake software and
bulk SMS systems that allow even technically unsophisticated criminals to
execute sophisticated attacks at scale.
The tools
have proven brutally effective: AI-enabled scams extracted 4.5 times more money
per operation than traditional fraud methods in 2025.
In our latest 2026 Crypto Crime Report chapter, we examine how crypto scams reached $17 billion in 2025, driven by sophisticated operations using AI, phishing-as-a-service tools, and professional money laundering networks. Our analysis reveals that impersonation scams grew 1400%… pic.twitter.com/ioiVFu4OJv
The
explosion in impersonation attempts has forced retail brokers to dedicate
full-time teams to combating fake websites and social media accounts.
Pepperstone Group CEO Tamas Szabo said in
December the
firm takes down scam sites impersonating the broker “on an almost daily
basis,” despite purchasing more than 100 domain variants to prevent
misuse.
Tamas Szabo, CEO of Pepperstone
“We've purchased over a hundred variants of our domain, but haven't been able to capture them all. It has become a full-time job for our fraud team to take these sites down,” he added.
The problem
extends beyond domain cybersquatting. Fraudsters increasingly impersonate not
just trading platforms but regulators themselves. The UK's Financial Conduct
Authority received 4,465
reports of
impersonation scams in the first half of 2025 alone, with 480 victims actually
transferring money to criminals posing as FCA officials.
The
Chainalysis report reveals how criminal enterprises have built modular,
service-based business models that dramatically lower barriers to entry.
Chinese-language vendors on Telegram
sell complete phishing kits for as little as $20 to $50, offering fake
website templates, domain setup tools, and spam distribution services designed
to evade detection.
One
prominent vendor, Lighthouse, received over 7,000 deposits and amassed more
than $1.5 million before Google filed suit in November 2025. The operation
allegedly reached 330,000 texts in a single day and duped over 1 million people
across 121 countries, according to court documents.
Artificial
intelligence has emerged as a force multiplier for scammers targeting retail
investors. New Zealand authorities warned in August about deepfake
videos featuring local financial experts promoting fraudulent trading schemes on
Facebook and WhatsApp. The AI-generated content proved alarmingly convincing to
victims unfamiliar with the technology.
Financial
institutions globally have detected a 2,137% increase in deepfake fraud
attempts over the past three years, according to identity verification firm
Signicat. Deepfakes now account for 42.5% of all fraud attempts in the
financial sector, making them the most common type of digital identity fraud
facing companies today.
The U.S.
Department of Justice unsealed charges against individuals allegedly running
forced-labor scam compounds in Cambodia, pairing the indictments with seizures
exceeding $15 billion.
European
regulators took down more
than 1,400 fraudulent trading platforms during a coordinated crackdown in
2025, following an earlier operation that shut down 800 illicit domains.
Germany's BaFin identified at least 20 nearly identical websites advertising
AI-based trading services with no verifiable operators or regulatory oversight.
The average
scam payment climbed from $782 in 2024 to $2,764 in 2025, a 253% year-over-year
increase, indicating scammers are successfully targeting more sophisticated
investors with larger account balances.
Financial
fraud targeting retail trading platforms reached unprecedented levels in 2025.
Impersonation scams grew more than 1,400% year-over-year as criminals
deploy artificial intelligence and phishing-as-a-service tools to dupe
investors. Professional money laundering networks now process billions in
stolen funds annually, according to a new report from blockchain analytics firm
Chainalysis.
The
dramatic spike reflects how scammers have industrialized their operations,
purchasing AI-powered deepfake software and
bulk SMS systems that allow even technically unsophisticated criminals to
execute sophisticated attacks at scale.
The tools
have proven brutally effective: AI-enabled scams extracted 4.5 times more money
per operation than traditional fraud methods in 2025.
In our latest 2026 Crypto Crime Report chapter, we examine how crypto scams reached $17 billion in 2025, driven by sophisticated operations using AI, phishing-as-a-service tools, and professional money laundering networks. Our analysis reveals that impersonation scams grew 1400%… pic.twitter.com/ioiVFu4OJv
The
explosion in impersonation attempts has forced retail brokers to dedicate
full-time teams to combating fake websites and social media accounts.
Pepperstone Group CEO Tamas Szabo said in
December the
firm takes down scam sites impersonating the broker “on an almost daily
basis,” despite purchasing more than 100 domain variants to prevent
misuse.
Tamas Szabo, CEO of Pepperstone
“We've purchased over a hundred variants of our domain, but haven't been able to capture them all. It has become a full-time job for our fraud team to take these sites down,” he added.
The problem
extends beyond domain cybersquatting. Fraudsters increasingly impersonate not
just trading platforms but regulators themselves. The UK's Financial Conduct
Authority received 4,465
reports of
impersonation scams in the first half of 2025 alone, with 480 victims actually
transferring money to criminals posing as FCA officials.
The
Chainalysis report reveals how criminal enterprises have built modular,
service-based business models that dramatically lower barriers to entry.
Chinese-language vendors on Telegram
sell complete phishing kits for as little as $20 to $50, offering fake
website templates, domain setup tools, and spam distribution services designed
to evade detection.
One
prominent vendor, Lighthouse, received over 7,000 deposits and amassed more
than $1.5 million before Google filed suit in November 2025. The operation
allegedly reached 330,000 texts in a single day and duped over 1 million people
across 121 countries, according to court documents.
Artificial
intelligence has emerged as a force multiplier for scammers targeting retail
investors. New Zealand authorities warned in August about deepfake
videos featuring local financial experts promoting fraudulent trading schemes on
Facebook and WhatsApp. The AI-generated content proved alarmingly convincing to
victims unfamiliar with the technology.
Financial
institutions globally have detected a 2,137% increase in deepfake fraud
attempts over the past three years, according to identity verification firm
Signicat. Deepfakes now account for 42.5% of all fraud attempts in the
financial sector, making them the most common type of digital identity fraud
facing companies today.
The U.S.
Department of Justice unsealed charges against individuals allegedly running
forced-labor scam compounds in Cambodia, pairing the indictments with seizures
exceeding $15 billion.
European
regulators took down more
than 1,400 fraudulent trading platforms during a coordinated crackdown in
2025, following an earlier operation that shut down 800 illicit domains.
Germany's BaFin identified at least 20 nearly identical websites advertising
AI-based trading services with no verifiable operators or regulatory oversight.
The average
scam payment climbed from $782 in 2024 to $2,764 in 2025, a 253% year-over-year
increase, indicating scammers are successfully targeting more sophisticated
investors with larger account balances.
Damian Chmiel is a Senior Analyst & Editor at Finance Magnates with more than 15 years of experience in the CFD and online trading industry. Active as both a trader and journalist since 2010, he focuses on broker coverage, fintech innovation, and regulatory developments across Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.
His work includes interviews with C-level leaders at major brokerages and fintech platforms, as well as co-authoring Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry benchmarking reports. Damian’s reporting is data-driven, market-aware, and grounded in direct industry engagement. His analysis and commentary have also been cited by external media outlets, including Investing.com, Binance, The Asset, Stockhead, and Dispatch.
Education:
MA in Finance and Accounting, Cracow University of Economics
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 29 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 29 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 29 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 29 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 29 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 29 April 2026
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
Startrader posts three-point-one trillion dollars in first-quarter volume — up three hundred and forty percent from a year ago. Also ahead: Fintokei claims sub-second trader payouts, and eToro opens its premium subscription tier to all investors.
Startrader posts three-point-one trillion dollars in first-quarter volume — up three hundred and forty percent from a year ago. Also ahead: Fintokei claims sub-second trader payouts, and eToro opens its premium subscription tier to all investors.
Startrader posts three-point-one trillion dollars in first-quarter volume — up three hundred and forty percent from a year ago. Also ahead: Fintokei claims sub-second trader payouts, and eToro opens its premium subscription tier to all investors.
Startrader posts three-point-one trillion dollars in first-quarter volume — up three hundred and forty percent from a year ago. Also ahead: Fintokei claims sub-second trader payouts, and eToro opens its premium subscription tier to all investors.
Startrader posts three-point-one trillion dollars in first-quarter volume — up three hundred and forty percent from a year ago. Also ahead: Fintokei claims sub-second trader payouts, and eToro opens its premium subscription tier to all investors.
Startrader posts three-point-one trillion dollars in first-quarter volume — up three hundred and forty percent from a year ago. Also ahead: Fintokei claims sub-second trader payouts, and eToro opens its premium subscription tier to all investors.
FM Daily Brief - 27 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 27 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 27 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 27 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 27 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 27 April 2026
Finance Magnates spoke with IG Group's MENA CEO. Also ahead: EC Markets posts a record five-point-one-three trillion dollar first quarter. Plus Hola Prime brings in Deloitte to audit prop firm payouts.
Finance Magnates spoke with IG Group's MENA CEO. Also ahead: EC Markets posts a record five-point-one-three trillion dollar first quarter. Plus Hola Prime brings in Deloitte to audit prop firm payouts.
Finance Magnates spoke with IG Group's MENA CEO. Also ahead: EC Markets posts a record five-point-one-three trillion dollar first quarter. Plus Hola Prime brings in Deloitte to audit prop firm payouts.
Finance Magnates spoke with IG Group's MENA CEO. Also ahead: EC Markets posts a record five-point-one-three trillion dollar first quarter. Plus Hola Prime brings in Deloitte to audit prop firm payouts.
Finance Magnates spoke with IG Group's MENA CEO. Also ahead: EC Markets posts a record five-point-one-three trillion dollar first quarter. Plus Hola Prime brings in Deloitte to audit prop firm payouts.
Finance Magnates spoke with IG Group's MENA CEO. Also ahead: EC Markets posts a record five-point-one-three trillion dollar first quarter. Plus Hola Prime brings in Deloitte to audit prop firm payouts.