Changeflow GovPing Securities & Markets Investor Alert: Ramp-and-dump Scam Surge Target...
Priority review Guidance Added Final

Investor Alert: Ramp-and-dump Scam Surge Targeting Investors

Favicon for www.asc.ca ASC Alberta News
Published
Detected
Email

Summary

The Canadian Securities Administrators issued an investor alert on April 16, 2026 warning Canadians about a surge in fraudulent "ramp-and-dump" investment schemes promoted through social media platforms and closed group messaging services. These coordinated scams involve fraudsters pressuring victims to purchase specific low-priced or thinly traded stocks through investment groups on WhatsApp, Discord, and Telegram, artificially inflating the price before selling their own shares for profit and leaving victims with significant losses. The alert outlines specific warning signs including claims of guaranteed returns, requests to purchase stocks at specific prices on specific dates, and impersonation of registered professionals or well-known companies.

“Ramp and dump schemes, a variant of pump and dumps, involve coordinated efforts by fraudsters to take control of low priced or thinly traded stocks, push their prices sharply upward, and then sell their holdings for profit.”

CSA , verbatim from source
Why this matters

This investor alert describes specific tactics used in ramp-and-dump schemes — pressure to buy at a specific price on a specific date, invitations to single-stock WhatsApp groups, and impersonation of registered professionals. Compliance teams at registered investment advisers and broker-dealers should consider using these specific red flags in client communications and training materials, particularly for retail client-facing staff who may encounter clients discussing social media investment groups.

AI-drafted from the source document, validated against GovPing's analyst note standards . For the primary regulatory language, read the source document .
Published by CSA on asc.ca . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

About this source

GovPing monitors ASC Alberta News for new securities & markets regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 3 changes logged to date.

What changed

The Canadian Securities Administrators issued a new investor alert warning of increasing ramp-and-dump stock manipulation schemes organized through social media and private messaging platforms. These scams operate by forming investment groups on WhatsApp, Discord, and Telegram where fraudsters impersonate knowledgeable investors, pressure members to buy specific stocks, and then sell their own holdings after the price has been artificially inflated, leaving victims with significant losses.

Compliance and legal professionals advising retail investor clients should treat this alert as a reference tool. Firms should consider reminding clients to verify advisor credentials through the CSA National Registration Search, to be skeptical of unsolicited investment advice on social media, and to watch for specific warning signs such as guaranteed-return promises, requests to purchase at a specific price on a specific date, and invitations to private encrypted group chats focused on a single stock. Victims are advised to contact their local provincial securities regulator, the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, their bank, and local police.

Archived snapshot

Apr 23, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

News Release

News & Publications
- News Releases
- ASC Investor Alerts
- Reports & Publications
- Featured publications
- Events & Presentations
- Weekly Updates

Investor Alert: Ramp-and-dump scams surge as fraudulent “investment groups” target unsuspecting investors

Apr 16, 2026

TORONTO – The Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) is warning Canadians about fraudulent investment groups being promoted on social media that could be running a stock price manipulation scam called a “ramp and dump.”

Ramp and dump schemes, a variant of pump and dumps, involve coordinated efforts by fraudsters to take control of low priced or thinly traded stocks, push their prices sharply upward, and then sell their holdings for profit. When the price falls afterward, ordinary investors are often left with significant losses. These schemes increasingly rely on social media and private messaging platforms to draw people into what appear to be legitimate investment groups.

CSA members jurisdictions are increasingly seeing these schemes are organized through social media and closed group messaging platforms, such as, WhatsApp, Discord and Telegram where scammers pose as knowledgeable investors, promote specific stocks and pressure individuals to buy in before exiting their positions. When stock prices fall, the groups typically disappear and victims who were pressured to buy are left with significant losses.

How the scam works:

  • Scammers reach out to vulnerable investors on social media platforms, like Facebook and Instagram. They may use to establish a connection of trust, including friendship or a romantic relationship, and then invite victims to join an investment group on a messaging platform like WhatsApp.
  • Once in the investment group, scammers use high-pressure tactics to encourage victims to purchase specific stocks, promising high returns and exploiting their fear of missing out.
  • When victims buy into the hype and invest, this artificially inflates the price of a stock.
  • Once enough people – many of whom are members of the investment group – buy at the high price, the scammers sell their shares causing the stock price to crash.
  • Investors who bought at the high price suffer significant losses and investor harm.
    How they try to lure you in:

  • Private WhatsApp group: The scammers promote the investment groups on social media platforms. Then they invite would-be investors to encrypted group chats on WhatsApp. In some cases, the group chat is focused on a single stock.

  • Inside information: The scammers may tell investors that they have non-public information or a special connection to a company in order to make investors believe they will earn guaranteed profits. In most cases the scammers have no special connection and regardless, trading on inside information would be illegal.

  • Fake credentials and impersonation: The scammers might claim to be a registered professional or affiliated with a well-known, legitimate company. These are often aliases, based on deceit in order to trick investors into investing.
    Scammers will often impersonate individuals or companies to lend themselves an air of legitimacy. Scammers may impersonate famous stock advisors, industry leaders, politicians, athletes, and celebrities. They may also impersonate well-known companies or financial institutions. They may even impersonate clients of legitimate financial entities warranting caution by all.

  • Small foreign based targets: The scammers will often target smaller, unfamiliar stocks. Limited public float means that only a small portion of overall shares are available to the public. When a company has limited public float, its shares can be more volatile and harder for investors to sell and easier for scammers to manipulate. They are often headquartered abroad in places like China.

  • Pressure tactics: Scammers will try to convince you to invest quickly based on a supposed market-moving event, –such as a company acquisition or promises of price increase. They will encourage you to invest independently via your own brokerage account and direct you to purchase a specific price and quantity on a specific date, and ask for confirmation.
    Protect yourself:

Be wary of unsolicited investment advice, especially on social media. Be careful when interacting in investment group WhatsApp chats that claim to provide investment advice. Some are scams designed to take advantage of potential investors – you may be pressured to buy shares to ramp up the price so that scammers can make money.

Check the background, qualifications and disciplinary history of investment advisors before you invest. You can use the CSA’s National Registration Search. Check the CSA’s Investor Alerts page for a list of firms to avoid. You can subscribe to updates from the CSA to know when new alerts are issued.

If you think you have been a victim of this or a similar scam, immediately contact your local provincial securities regulator, the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, your bank and local police.
The CSA, the council of the securities regulators of Canada’s provinces and territories, coordinates and harmonizes regulation for the Canadian capital markets.

For investor inquiries, please contact your local securities regulator.

For Media Inquiries:

Ilana Kelemen
Canadian Securities Administrators
[email protected]

Curtis Lindsay
Ontario Securities Commission
[email protected]

Get daily alerts for ASC Alberta News

Daily digest delivered to your inbox.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

About this page

What is GovPing?

Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission

What's from the agency?

Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from CSA.

What's AI-generated?

The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.

Last updated

Classification

Agency
CSA
Published
April 16th, 2026
Instrument
Guidance
Branch
Executive
Joint with
OSC
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Investors
Industry sector
5231 Securities & Investments
Activity scope
Investor protection Fraud prevention Securities regulation
Geographic scope
Canada CA

Taxonomy

Primary area
Securities
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Consumer Protection Anti-Money Laundering

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when ASC Alberta News publishes new changes.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

You're subscribed!