Inside the $75 Billion Machine: How Pig-Butchering Investment Scams Became the World's Fastest-Growing Cyber Fraud

Confidence-enabled crypto investment fraud is the world's fastest-growing online scam. Here's how it works, the warning signs, and what to do if you're targeted.
It usually starts with a harmless text to the wrong person. You reply to correct it, the stranger is friendly, and the conversation drifts on for weeks. Eventually they mention how well their crypto investments are doing — and offer to show you.
That slow grooming is the signature of confidence-enabled cryptocurrency investment fraud, known by the underworld term "pig butchering": the victim is fattened with trust before being drained of everything.
The scale
It is now one of the most damaging crimes online. The FBI's 2025 IC3 report logged over $20.8 billion in cybercrime losses — up 26% in a year — with crypto fraud alone near $11.4 billion. Pig-butchering-style investment losses to Americans rose to more than $7.2 billion, and victims over 60 lost roughly $7.7 billion. Globally, the Global Anti-Scam Alliance estimated total scam losses at a staggering $442 billion.
The "charming stranger" is often not a willing criminal but a trafficking victim. INTERPOL reports that scam compounds in Southeast Asia are staffed by people lured from 66 countries with fake job ads, then forced to run scams under threat of violence.
How it works
- Approach — a dating app, DM, or "wrong number" text. No mention of money.
- Cultivation — weeks of friendship or romance to build trust.
- Introduction — a "great" crypto platform, shown casually, never pushed.
- The slaughter — fake profits lure bigger deposits; then withdrawals are blocked behind "taxes" and "fees" that are also stolen.
Red flags
- A stranger online warms quickly into friendship or romance but won't meet or video-call properly.
- Conversation drifts toward crypto, forex, or gold trading.
- You're steered to an app or site you'd never heard of.
- You're told you must pay a fee or tax to withdraw your own money. Legitimate platforms never do this.
A rule that beats every version of this scam: if someone you met online introduces you to an investment, the investment is the reason they met you.
If you're targeted
Stop sending money immediately — including any "fee" to release funds. Save everything: chats, the platform link, wallet addresses, transaction IDs.
Report fast: IC3 (US), Action Fraud (UK), Scamwatch (Australia), the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, plus your bank.
And beware the second wave: "recovery agents" who promise to get your crypto back for an upfront fee are almost always the same criminals running a follow-on scam.