Did you know that U.S. organizations lost over $12.5 billion to fraud in 2024, a 25% jump from the prior year?
Two of the most common threats behind this surge are securities fraud and wire fraud, which operate through different channels and carry distinct legal and operational risks.
In this article, we’ll dive deep into securities fraud vs wire fraud, explaining how each works, who they target, and what practical steps you can take to detect, prevent, and protect your organization from both.
Securities fraud, also known as investment fraud, involves the misrepresentation or concealment of material information to influence investors’ financial decisions regarding securities. It is a deceptive practice within the stock, bond, or investment markets that causes investors to buy, sell, or hold assets based on false or misleading information.
Globally, securities fraud encompasses a wide range of nonviolent financial crimes, including:
Common characteristics of securities fraud include:
Securities fraud has evolved rapidly with advances in technology, social media, and artificial intelligence. Today, scammers operate on a global scale, using sophisticated digital tools and emotional manipulation to deceive investors.
Here are the most common ways securities fraud occurs:
Scammers design fake investment opportunities, such as bogus hedge funds, crypto ventures, or “guaranteed” high-yield programs, and present them as legitimate. They often use sleek websites, influencer endorsements, and targeted social media ads to create the illusion of credibility.
For example, the SEC charged the operators of “HyperFund,” a crypto-asset Ponzi scheme that allegedly raised over $1.7 billion by promising extraordinary weekly returns. The fraud was marketed globally through professional-looking online materials and promotional campaigns.
Some securities fraud is committed by corporate insiders or executives who falsify company information to mislead investors. They may inflate financial results, misstate performance metrics, or conceal key risks to maintain valuations or attract acquisitions.
In 2025, startup CEO Charlie Javice was convicted of fraud for fabricating user data to induce JPMorgan Chase to acquire her education finance startup for $175 million. She hired a data scientist to create fake customer lists and falsely claimed over four million users, when only a few hundred thousand actually existed.
Modern market manipulators exploit social media, chat forums, and AI-generated content to influence stock and crypto prices. Pump-and-dump schemes often appear on Reddit, Telegram, or X (formerly Twitter), where coordinated online activity drives artificial price spikes.
Between 2023 and 2025, regulators observed increasing use of AI to generate fake stock newsletters and deepfake videos showing CEOs delivering false company updates.
Regulatory agencies have raised alarms about “artificial intelligence and investment fraud,” warning that con artists may deploy AI to produce more believable promotional materials or even impersonate trustworthy sources.
Preventing securities fraud is essential for protecting investors, maintaining market integrity, and upholding trust in the financial system. The following measures can help detect and stop fraudulent activity before it causes harm.
Ethical leadership is the first line of defense against fraud. When boards and executives champion transparency and accountability, that culture permeates throughout the organization.
Compliance is more than a box to check. It protects firms from costly violations and ensures fintechs and investment companies follow securities laws rigorously.
Fraud prevention should be integrated within your enterprise risk framework, not alongside it. Regular assessments reveal weak points before they become entry points.
In modern financial ecosystems, fraud can happen in milliseconds. That’s why detection must be just as fast.
Below, we will explore two examples showing how securities fraud has impacted both traditional companies and the crypto market.
The Enron scandal of the early 2000s remains one of the most notorious cases of securities fraud in U.S. history.
Executives at Enron Corporation used complex accounting loopholes and special-purpose entities to conceal massive debt and inflate profits, creating the illusion of a thriving company. When the truth emerged in 2001, Enron’s stock plummeted from over $90 to less than $1, wiping out billions in investor wealth and forcing the energy giant into bankruptcy.
The fallout also led to the collapse of its auditor, Arthur Andersen, and the creation of the Sarbanes–Oxley Act of 2002, which strengthened corporate transparency and accountability.
A more recent example is the 2023 case against Terraform Labs and its CEO, Do Kwon, who were charged by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for orchestrating a multi-billion-dollar crypto fraud. The company falsely claimed that its algorithmic stablecoin, TerraUSD (UST), was reliably stable and backed by sound mechanisms.
In reality, its assurances about UST’s stability and the linked token LUNA were misleading. When the system collapsed in May 2022, it erased over $40 billion in market value and devastated investors worldwide.
Wire fraud is a federal crime that involves using electronic communications, such as phone calls, emails, text messages, or online platforms, to carry out a scheme intended to defraud someone of money, property, or valuable information.
The name comes from the U.S. law that defines it (18 U.S.C. § 1343). Originally, the law covered fraud committed over telephone and telegraph wires, but today it applies to nearly all forms of electronic communication, including:
Common characteristics of wire fraud include:
Wire fraud can occur through any digital or electronic channel, making it one of the most versatile and widespread types of financial crime. In fact, a 2024 survey of U.S. companies found that 63% of businesses experienced at least one incident of wire-transfer fraud.
Below are some of the most common methods.
One of the most damaging forms of corporate wire fraud, BEC, involves criminals hacking or spoofing legitimate business email accounts to send fraudulent payment instructions.
For example, a scammer may infiltrate a vendor’s email system and send an invoice with “updated” bank details that actually belong to the fraudster.
Others impersonate executives and pressure employees to urgently transfer funds for a confidential or time-sensitive project.
According to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), BEC scams have been reported in all 50 U.S. states and 186 countries, with global losses now exceeding $55 billion.
These scams exploit digital communication channels to trick victims into revealing sensitive information or making payments. They are typically conducted in three different ways:
Criminals may pose as fraud department agents, urging victims to “secure” their funds by transferring them to a supposedly safe account controlled by the scammer.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) reports that impersonation scams were the most common consumer fraud category in 2023, costing victims billions of dollars.
Fraudsters have begun using AI voice cloning and deepfake video calls to impersonate executives or trusted contacts, convincing employees to approve urgent fund transfers.
Law enforcement agencies, including Interpol and UK Finance, warn that AI tools are making fraud more “professional” and scalable, even for low-skilled criminals. Reports have surfaced of companies losing millions after brief but convincing deepfake phone calls from what appeared to be their CEOs.
The strategies below can help financial institutions and businesses protect funds and preserve customer confidence.
Email and text requests for payments are common attack vectors. Always verify transfer instructions using a different, verified communication method before releasing funds.
Compromised credentials are a leading cause of wire fraud and business email compromise (BEC). MFA and layered security controls significantly reduce these risks.
Human error is often the weakest link in wire fraud cases. Continuous awareness and testing help staff recognize and resist social engineering attempts.
Empowered customers can help prevent fraud before it occurs. Inform them about common scams and what legitimate institutions will never ask them to do.
Speed is critical in detecting and stopping fraudulent transfers. Advanced analytics can identify unusual patterns and block suspicious activity before funds are transferred.
The examples below highlight how wire fraud is evolving in both traditional corporate scams and modern AI-driven attacks.
In early 2024, the Hong Kong branch of a multinational engineering and design firm lost approximately HK$200 million (about US$25 million) in one of the world’s most sophisticated AI-enabled wire frauds.
Criminals used deepfake video conferencing to impersonate senior executives of the firm, including the company’s CFO. During the fake virtual meeting, the scammers instructed a finance employee to transfer funds to several bank accounts for a supposed confidential transaction. The employee, believing the meeting participants were real colleagues, complied with the instructions.
Between 2013 and 2015, a Lithuanian hacker named Evaldas Rimasauskas defrauded Google and Facebook of over $100 million by posing as a vendor, Quanta Computer, a legitimate Asian hardware supplier. He sent fake invoices and contract documents that perfectly mimicked the real supplier’s style. The companies wired funds to bank accounts controlled by Rimasauskas in Latvia and Cyprus.
He was later arrested and extradited to the U.S., where he pleaded guilty to wire fraud, aggravated identity theft, and money laundering.
To better illustrate the differences between these two types of fraud, the table below provides a side-by-side comparison across key aspects, including nature, execution, scale, and prevention.
|
Aspect |
Securities Fraud |
Wire Fraud |
|
Core Definition |
Involves deception in investments by falsifying or hiding information to mislead investors and manipulate financial markets |
Involves using electronic communication, such as phone, email, or the internet to deceive someone and obtain money or property |
|
Common Schemes |
Includes investment scams such as Ponzi or pyramid schemes, fake funds, fraudulent cryptocurrency offers, accounting fraud, and insider trading |
Includes phishing, business email compromise, romance and lottery scams, and hacking or spoofed wire transfers |
|
Victims and Targets |
Mainly, investors and financial markets, where victims expect returns based on investment activity |
Individuals, employees, or businesses that can be tricked into sending funds or revealing sensitive information |
|
Method of Execution |
Relies on false financial information or misleading investment opportunities that often unfold over time |
Relies on persuasive communication through calls or emails to make victims act quickly and transfer funds |
|
Scale of Impact |
Fewer but very large cases that can cause major financial losses and reduce trust in markets |
Very frequent incidents that together cause huge global losses each year |
|
Enforcement and Laws |
Enforced by agencies like the SEC and DOJ through civil or criminal actions with fines and long prison sentences |
Prosecuted mainly by law enforcement, such as the FBI, with penalties of up to 20 or 30 years in serious cases |
|
Prevention Focus |
Focus on transparency, accurate disclosures, strong compliance, and investor education |
Focus on security controls, transaction verification, and awareness training to prevent scams |
Securities fraud and wire fraud may operate on different rails, but both share a common weakness: delayed detection. When oversight lags behind attacker innovation, losses multiply fast.
That’s where VALID Systems closes the gap.
It is a fintech innovator specializing in real-time deposit and payment fraud prevention. Its patented technology helps banks identify, stop, and even guarantee coverage against financial losses before they occur.
Here’s what it does:
Book a free consultation with VALID Systems to see how real-time machine learning and guaranteed risk management can help you detect and prevent securities and wire fraud before losses occur!