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Building Financial Capability Through Investor Education

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Published April 6th, 2026
Detected April 6th, 2026
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Summary

The Colorado Division of Securities issued a consumer alert for Financial Capability Month promoting investor education resources including Investing 101, Smart Investor Checklist, and guidance on working with financial professionals. The alert references FTC data showing U.S. consumers lost $7.9 billion to investment fraud in 2025 and provides links to resources for spotting red flags of investment fraud.

What changed

The Colorado Division of Securities released a consumer alert commemorating Financial Capability Month by promoting its investor education resources and tools. The alert highlights five key resources: Investing 101 (basics of securities regulation), Smart Investor Checklist (questions to ask before investing), Working With Financial Professionals guide, Military Guide to Money and Investing, and Investment Red Flags materials. The alert cites FTC testimony that U.S. consumers lost $7.9 billion to investment fraud in 2025, making it the costliest fraud category.\n\nThis is an informational consumer alert with no regulatory requirements or compliance deadlines. Regulated entities and financial professionals may reference these state-provided educational resources when advising clients on investor protection. The Division provides contact information (Dora_SecuritiesWebsite@state.co.us, 303-894-2320) for verifying licensing status of financial professionals and reporting investment scams.

Source document (simplified)

Consumer Alert: Building Financial Capability Through Investor Education

Monday, April 6, 2026

Submitted by [user:fieldfirstname] Denver — April 6, 2026 — April is Financial Capability Month — a time dedicated to promoting financial education and literacy. Financial capability helps consumers build long-term economic stability through saving and investing. Investor education initiatives can help consumers become financially capable. The Colorado Division of Securities can support this through its educational resources, including:

Investing 101
If someone is new to investing and wants to learn about the basics, the Division’s Investing 101 page can help. This resource defines what securities are, why they are regulated, what securities are regulated and how regulation is enforced.

Smart Investor Checklist
The Smart Investor Checklist consists of a series of questions consumers should ask before committing to an investment opportunity. How does the investment work? A reputable professional should always be able to explain their strategies. Is the person offering the investment licensed to sell securities? Anyone offering securities must be licensed to do so. Asking these questions not only enhances an individual's financial capability but can also protect their finances from scammers.

Working with Financial Professionals
The Working With Financial Professionals guide is designed to help investors determine which type of financial professional is best for them, and the fees commonly charged by these financial professionals. Are they looking for someone to provide investment advice and manage their portfolio? Or are they looking for someone to buy and sell investments from their portfolio? Is the financial professional’s compensation based on a percentage of your assets or a commission for each purchase or sale? Knowing the differences between the various types of financial professionals can help investors make more informed decisions.

Guide for Military Members
The Military Guide to Money and Investing educates service members about how to successfully manage money at every stage of their military careers. This includes information about investing to save for retirement and investing to build wealth.
Additionally, the resource discusses investment risks and how service members can avoid scams.

Red Flags of Investment Fraud
According to the Federal Trade Commission, U.S. consumers reported losing $7.9 billion to investment fraud in 2025. Investment fraud was also the costliest category of fraud, and these scams show no signs of slowing down. Knowing how to spot the red
flags of investment fraud can help investors protect their hard-earned money. See the following resources to learn more:


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Source

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Classification

Agency
CO Securities
Published
April 6th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Consumers Investors
Activity scope
Investor Education Securities Fraud Prevention
Geographic scope
Colorado US-CO

Taxonomy

Primary area
Consumer Protection
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Consumer Finance Securities

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