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Don't Be Fooled By These 3 Money Scams

Even if you're making sincere efforts to save and invest for your future, it can be hard to get ahead financially. Making that task even harder is that many of us occasionally fall for scams that can rob us not only of money but also of time and energy.

Here, then, is a review of three money scams that you might run across, with tips for spotting them and avoiding them and other financial scams.

two hands holding up a sign that says scam!
two hands holding up a sign that says scam!

Image source: Getty Images.

The penny-stock pump and dump

Penny stocks ensnare many investors -- especially newer and less sophisticated ones. That's because if you don't understand some investing basics, they can seem like wonderful opportunities.

A penny stock is one that's trading for less than about $5 per share. Such low prices can make it seem like the stock is a bargain -- to those who don't understand that a stock's price alone means little. A $1 stock can still plunge and become a $0.25 one. And a $200 stock can always grow into a $400 one.

Penny stocks are usually tied to unproven, volatile companies, often with little to no earnings. And while the companies themselves may be entirely legitimate -- albeit young or small -- their stock prices are easily manipulated by scammers because they have relatively small market caps, and don't usually trade heavily.

The classic pump-and-dump maneuver is an unfortunately great example: First, the ambitious con artists buy lots of shares of a penny stock, then starts hyping the company in newsletters, online, in day trader chat rooms, and elsewhere. They'll present a compelling story, claiming that the company is on the verge of curing cancer, proving a new oil field, or exploiting some other figurative gold mine.

Naive investors will get excited, start buying shares, and push the price higher. The rising prices will often excite further investors to buy in too, adding more hot air to the bubble. The scammers will then quickly sell their shares at the inflated prices and reap the profits. Afterward, they turn off the hype machine, (and the company may publicly debunk the rumors) share prices fall back to their natural levels, and those who took the bait get stuck with the losses.

You can avoid penny stock heartaches simply by steering clear of companies with very low share prices -- no matter how much you might love to own, say, 5,000 shares of a company for only $500. Also, beware of compelling stories that seem too good to be true. If the stock is really so great, those in the know would be buying all the shares they could, not telling others to do so.