How Did Two Individuals in Hyderabad Lose Over Rs 50 Lakh to Trading and Investment Fraud?

Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- Stay informed about the latest fraud tactics.
- Verify investment platforms thoroughly before investing.
- Be cautious of unsolicited offers on social media.
- Report any suspicious activities immediately.
- Educate yourself on financial literacy.
Hyderabad, Oct 5 (NationPress) Two individuals fell victim to trading and online investment fraud, losing over Rs 50 lakh in two separate incidents in Hyderabad, as reported by the police on Sunday.
In the case of online gold stocks trading fraud, one victim was deceived out of Rs 6.32 lakh, while another lost Rs 43 lakh in an investment scam.
A 57-year-old man from Himayathnagar was duped by a fraudulent trading platform named NFM Capital Markets, communicated to him by an agent named Amrutha Reddy through Facebook and WhatsApp.
She persuaded him to invest in 'US Gold Stocks' with a counterfeit trading dashboard displaying fictitious profits.
The victim made transactions amounting to Rs 6,32,000 via Google Pay and SBI YONO, under the illusion that a fake wallet balance of $38,694.94 was legitimate.
Subsequently, the fraudsters requested additional funds for 'taxes' and 'withdrawal charges', even issuing threats of legal action.
Realizing it was a scam when asked for another Rs 8 lakh, the victim reported the incident through the 1930 Cyber Helpline, which led to partial recovery of funds.
In a separate instance, a 63-year-old investor received a WhatsApp message from 'AXIS Security', purportedly linked to Axis Bank, promoting IPO allotments and trading opportunities.
Believing it to be authentic, he invested over Rs 43,00,000 from July 12 to early August 2025.
The fraudsters frequently displayed fake dashboards showing profits and enticing share allotments, claiming the trades were under the Qualified Institutional Placement (QIP) quota.
They allocated more shares than he was entitled to, labeling the excess as a 'non-interest loan' and pressured him for repayment while threatening to freeze his account.
Upon discovering that AXIS Security was a scam, the victim filed a complaint.
The Cyber Crime Police have urged the public to stay alert against deceptive online investment and trading platforms that are actively misleading citizens via WhatsApp, Telegram, Facebook, Instagram, and X.
Fraudsters create fraudulent trading websites, applications, and dashboards that display false profits to build trust and entice victims to deposit larger sums.
They later obstruct withdrawals under various pretexts like 'tax payments', 'compliance verification', or 'conversion charges'.
Once they amass significant amounts, they either vanish or threaten victims with fabricated legal actions, stated Police Commissioner V.C. Sajjanar.