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Pump-and-Dump Schemes

Pump-and-Dump Schemes are a form of securities fraud that involves illegally and artificially inflating the price of a stock (the “pump”) to sell it at a higher price to unsuspecting investors (the “dump”). These schemes prey on greed and the fear of missing out, often targeting newcomers to the market. Typically, fraudsters will first acquire a large position in a low-priced, thinly traded stock, like a penny stock or micro-cap stock. Then, they unleash a torrent of false and misleading positive statements through spam emails, social media posts, online forums, and even fake press releases. This creates a frenzy of buying activity from the public, which drives the stock price up. Once the price is sufficiently inflated, the perpetrators sell—or “dump”—all their shares, pocketing a hefty profit. The sudden sell-off overwhelms the market, causing the stock price to collapse and leaving the duped investors holding virtually worthless shares. It's a classic get-rich-quick scam, but only for the scammers.

The Anatomy of a Scam

Understanding how these schemes unfold is your first line of defense. They almost always follow a predictable, three-act script.

The Three-Act Tragedy

The Value Investor's Shield: Why This Isn't Investing

From a value investing perspective, pump-and-dump schemes are the polar opposite of a sound investment strategy. Value investing, the philosophy championed by greats like Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett, is the discipline of buying securities for less than their calculated intrinsic value. This requires patience, discipline, and rigorous fundamental analysis—poring over financial statements, understanding the business model, and assessing management quality. Victims of pump-and-dump scams are not investing; they are gambling. They are buying a stock based purely on price momentum and hype, with zero regard for the underlying company's actual worth. A true value investor would immediately be suspicious of a company with no solid business fundamentals suddenly being promoted as a “once-in-a-lifetime” opportunity. The core defense is simple: know what you own, and why you own it. If your reason for buying is a hot tip from an anonymous internet source, you aren't investing, you're speculating, and you're likely the target of a scam.

How to Spot and Avoid the Trap

Protecting your capital is paramount. While regulators like the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) work to stop these scams, you are your own best defense. Be skeptical and watch out for these classic red flags:

Ultimately, the best way to avoid being a victim is to stick to sound investment principles. Invest in businesses you understand, ignore the noise, and never, ever buy a stock just because someone else told you it was going to the moon.