Sign In

How the FTX debacle triggered a wave of crypto fraud

Fraudsters are treating the implosion of the crypto exchange and the declining value of several popular cryptocurrencies as a chance to target a whole new set of potential victims
Gettyimages 1247199410

The demise of a cryp­tocur­ren­cy exchange offers a use­ful case study of the vicious cycles that can arise in online fraud. When a large exchange col­laps­es, bad actors seek­ing to recoup their own loss­es sud­den­ly have many new poten­tial vic­tims in the same boat, whom they can offer ‘help’ to res­cue their accounts.  

The most recent high-pro­file exam­ple is pro­vid­ed by the ill-fat­ed FTX exchange, which filed for bank­rupt­cy pro­tec­tion in Novem­ber 2022 with $8bn (£6.7bn) of investors’ mon­ey miss­ing and more than $400m iden­ti­fied as hav­ing been stolen by hack­ers. While its founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, has plead­ed not guilty to charges of fraud and oth­er crimes, this is mere­ly the lat­est in a string of cas­es where a com­bi­na­tion of reck­less mis­man­age­ment, delib­er­ate fraud and inad­e­quate reg­u­la­tion has cost unwary investors dear­ly. 

Indeed, the prob­lems extend well beyond FTX. Accord­ing to data obtained by the FT from police unit Action Fraud, finan­cial loss­es to cryp­to fraud in the UK totalled £226m in the 12 months to Octo­ber 2022 – up by near­ly a third on the pre­vi­ous year. Across the Atlantic, a report pub­lished by the Fed­er­al Trade Com­mis­sion in June 2022 esti­mat­ed that loss­es to cryp­to fraud in the US since the start of 2021 had topped $1bn. 

Why the worst is yet to come

Pru­dent investors might pre­sume that such cas­es would deter all but the fool­hardi­est from tak­ing big risks in the cryp­to mar­kets, lead­ing to a nat­ur­al decline in fraud. But experts such as Lewis Duke, a senior spe­cial­ist in Sec­Ops risk and threat intel­li­gence at cyber­se­cu­ri­ty soft­ware firm Trend Micro, dis­agree.

Fraud­sters will exploit uncer­tain­ty and tar­get those try­ing to recov­er lost invest­ments

He pre­dicts an upsurge in cryp­to fraud in the short to medi­um term because both crim­i­nals and hon­est investors will be high­ly moti­vat­ed to chase loss­es caused by the FTX deba­cle. The impact of the exchange’s col­lapse is also putting down­ward pres­sure on the val­ues of the main cryp­tocur­ren­cies, which are already worth far less than they were a year ago. One bit­coin, for instance, was trad­ing at around the $44,000 mark at the start of March 2022. Twelve months on, it was worth about $24,800.

“Fraud­sters will exploit uncer­tain­ty and tar­get those try­ing to recov­er lost invest­ments through fake exchanges and scams involv­ing ini­tial coin offer­ings,” Duke says. “For the threat actors, there is the extra moti­va­tion of the reduced mon­e­tary val­ue of the dig­i­tal cur­ren­cy, as well as the poten­tial for large finan­cial loss­es should an exchange or cur­ren­cy go offline.”

Daniel Seely, an asso­ciate spe­cial­is­ing in cryp­to mat­ters at law firm Freeths, agrees. He explains that, while there’s always a cer­tain lev­el of fraud in this field, it tends to rise when an exchange fails, because it offers crim­i­nals an extra way to swin­dle dis­tressed investors. 

“Once a site is known to have gone down – even tem­porar­i­ly – fraud­sters will take it as an oppor­tu­ni­ty to imper­son­ate its staff and con­tact affect­ed cus­tomers,” he says. “They’ll often approach vic­tims with an offer to help ‘resolve prob­lems with their account’, which they claim arose from the out­age, and use this as a pre­text to obtain infor­ma­tion such as pass­words, encryp­tion codes and oth­er sen­si­tive data.”

Could the FTX scandal be an inflection point?

One poten­tial sil­ver lin­ing from the FTX scan­dal and its pre­de­ces­sors is that legit­i­mate exchanges are coop­er­at­ing more proac­tive­ly with inves­ti­ga­tors try­ing to recov­er users’ funds. That’s the view of Josh Chinn, co-founder and direc­tor of Wealth Recov­ery Solic­i­tors. 

Get­ting help used to be a long and cost­ly process for fraud vic­tims, but the exchanges – acute­ly aware of their sector’s Wild West image – have become more will­ing to offer assis­tance, he explains. 

“Since the FTX scan­dal, we’ve seen a huge shift in the way exchanges and end points deal with us,” Chinn reports. “In the past, end points usu­al­ly wouldn’t coop­er­ate until our clients had incurred fees to obtain court orders requir­ing them to do so. Exchanges are being more coop­er­a­tive, pro­vid­ing dis­clo­sures and help­ing us to work towards recov­er­ing lost assets.”

The rise of crypto regulation

The oth­er pos­i­tive devel­op­ment con­cerns reg­u­la­tion. The UK’s pro­posed reg­u­la­to­ry frame­work for cryp­to providers is par­tic­u­lar­ly rig­or­ous. The FTX case is almost cer­tain to build sup­port for this more strin­gent set of rules to be enact­ed as quick­ly as pos­si­ble.

Andrew Par­sons, a part­ner at law firm Womble Bond Dick­in­son, believes that the UK could emerge as a leader in legit­i­mate cryp­tocur­ren­cy trans­ac­tions as a result. Obtain­ing a reg­is­tra­tion with the Finan­cial Con­duct Author­i­ty (FCA), which over­sees the UK’s anti-mon­ey-laun­der­ing rules, rep­re­sents a high reg­u­la­to­ry hur­dle for cryp­to providers to clear. Their reward for sur­mount­ing it could be win­ning the con­fi­dence – and busi­ness – of the many investors who don’t deal with unreg­u­lat­ed enti­ties, he says.

“Get­ting autho­rised by FCA is a long and com­plex process, while ensur­ing com­pli­ance is always bur­den­some,” Par­sons says. “As more unreg­u­lat­ed cryp­to exchanges col­lapse, it’s pos­si­ble that more peo­ple may see the ben­e­fits of reg­u­lat­ing exchanges in the way the UK is propos­ing. There are def­i­nite­ly oppor­tu­ni­ties for exchanges that are will­ing to put in the time, effort and mon­ey to secure FCA autho­ri­sa­tion.”

That doesn’t improve mat­ters much in the short to medi­um term, of course. Nei­ther does the new lev­el of coop­er­a­tion with inves­ti­ga­tors, which applies only once an investor has been conned. 

Sad­ly, then, the experts’ warn­ings are like­ly to be accu­rate. The crim­i­nals are using this par­tic­u­lar­ly tur­bu­lent peri­od in the cryp­to mar­kets to redou­ble their efforts to defraud peo­ple who’ve already made big loss­es and are in a vul­ner­a­ble state. The best advice for those dis­tressed investors, there­fore, may well be: trust no one – least of all the ‘help­ing hand’ who arrives out of the blue offer­ing to recov­er their mon­ey.