What's a Cryptocurrency Exit Scam? How Do You Spot One?

In November 2017, an escrow-related cryptocurrency startup called Confido disappeared overnight after collecting $375,000 through its initial coin offering (ICO). Following the news of the Confido exit scam, the market cap of the cryptocurrency fell from about $6 million to $70,000 within a week.

LoopX is another crypto startup whose ICO promised “guaranteed profits every week thanks to the most advanced Trading Software out there to date.” It abruptly shut down in February 2018 after raising $4.5 million from investors through a combination of Bitcoin and Ethereum.

And in 2020, the definance project Yfdex.Finance (Yfdex) made off with $20 million of investors' money after only two days of promoting itself online.

Welcome to the exit scams; the new form of forgery now lurking in the anonymous and decentralized cryptocurrency world. The above examples are only a few of the many exit scams that occur every year.

Key Takeaways

  • An exit scam in the world of cryptocurrencies refers to when promoters of a cryptocurrency disappear with investors' money during or after an initial coin offering (ICO).
  • The process involves promoters launching a new crypto platform, marketing the currency and concept, raising money from investors, possibly running the business for a short time, and then disappearing with the money and abandoning the project.
  • It is difficult to trace these scammers due to the decentralized, anonymous, and regulation-free operations of the virtual currency system.
  • There are ways, however, to spot a possible exit scam, which include red flags on team credibility, extravagant return projections, documentation standards, a non-existing working model, and heavily promoted offerings.

What Is an Exit Scam?

An exit scam is a fraudulent practice by unethical cryptocurrency promoters who vanish with investors’ money during or after an ICO.

The modus operandi is simple: promoters launch a new cryptocurrency platform based on a promising concept; the ICO then raises money from various investors; the business may or may not run for some time; and then the promoters who had collected the ICO money disappear, leaving the investors in the lurch.

Due to the decentralized, anonymous, and regulation-free operations of the virtual currency ecosystem, it is difficult to trace scammers who dupe the investors.

Red Flags 

Though it is difficult to clearly identify a dubious ICO, investors can keep the following points in mind before making an investment decision.

1. Team Credibility

The biggest challenge with the virtual world is accountability and ownership. Before investing your hard-earned money in ICOs that may look very promising, an investor must verify the credentials of the crypto team.

Keep in mind that you can purchase likes, tweets, and followers on the various social media platforms to build fake online credibility. Therefore, you should do a basic check on ICO promoters and on the backers of cryptocurrency projects and the kind of connections/followers they have.

Blockonomi mentions this about the LinkedIn pages of Confido teams: “The dead giveaway was the fact that the pages of the four main scammers involved—two developers and two executives—were brand-new and had barely any connections.”

2. Extravagant Return Projections

Is it too good to be true? Then it probably is. For instance, BitConnect promised a steady 1% daily return, which would have transformed an initial investment of $1,000 into a return of more than $50 million within 3 years. Ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin rightfully called it a Ponzi scheme.

The cryptocurrency world is a new and complex investment arena. Like all investments, if you don't understand the product, the financials, or the company, then it is best to avoid investing.

In January 2018, BitConnect abruptly shut down its lending and exchange services after experiencing a meteoric rise and burgeoning client base since its ICO in December 2016. The market cap of BitConnect, which exceeded $2.9 billion at its height in 2017, suddenly tanked to $17 million by March 2018.

3. Documentation Standards

The white paper is a key document that details how a cryptocurrency project is designed and developed, how it evolved, and how it will generate business. Incomprehensible, unclear, and ambiguously written white papers are a big red flag to investors about a potential exit scam.

4. Non-Existent Working Model

Does the cryptocurrency project have a bare-bones working model? If it is a concept-only, non-existent product, then it probably won't work. It is true that some new-age technology may need to be designed completely from scratch, but promoters who want to raise millions of dollars should prove their project is worth investing in. To be safe, investors should avoid dubious offerings from obscure individuals.

5. Heavily Promoted Offerings

Big promotions may be another sign of an exit scam. It is common to see full-page ads of new ICOs by lesser-known founders in the print media in populous nations like India. Confido also reportedly paid bloggers to spread the word on various online forums.

While all ICO offerings with big promotions may not be dubious, an investor needs to take a cautious approach and do background checks on the claims made.

The Bottom Line

Scams and frauds are common even in the well-established centuries-old stock markets which are well-regulated. The anonymous world of cryptocurrencies adds more risk due to its non-regulated nature.

In the end, it is the investor who shoulders the responsibility to not get scammed out of their hard-earned money. Non-existent teams, extravagant profit projections, and unclear business models should be closely scrutinized before making any investment.

Article Sources
Investopedia requires writers to use primary sources to support their work. These include white papers, government data, original reporting, and interviews with industry experts. We also reference original research from other reputable publishers where appropriate. You can learn more about the standards we follow in producing accurate, unbiased content in our editorial policy.
  1. CNBC. "Cryptocurrency start-up Confido disappears with $375,000 from an ICO, and nobody can find the founders."

  2. ICOHolder. "LoopX."

  3. ZDNet. "LoopX pulls exit scam, walks away with $4.5m in investor cryptocurrency."

  4. Bitcoin.com. "Defi Project Yfdex.Finance Vanishes With $20M Investors' Funds Just Two Days After Launch."

  5. Blockonomi. "What is an “Exit Scam” & How Can You Avoid Them?"

  6. Digitalcoin. "BitConnect (BCC) Price in USD with Live Chart & Market Cap."

Take the Next Step to Invest
×
The offers that appear in this table are from partnerships from which Investopedia receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where listings appear. Investopedia does not include all offers available in the marketplace.