Police Record Sharp Rise In Romance Scams

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

Related News Programmes

"); jQuery(document).ready(function() { jwplayer.key='EKOtdBrvhiKxeOU807UIF56TaHWapYjKnFiG7ipl3gw='; var playerInstance = jwplayer("jquery_jwplayer_1"); playerInstance.setup({ file: "https://newsstatic.rthk.hk/audios/mfile_1633509_1_20220213232649.mp3", skin: { url: location.href.split('/', 4).join('/') + '/jwplayer/skin/rthk/five.css', name: 'five' }, hlshtml: true, width: "100%", height: 30, wmode: 'transparent', primary: navigator.userAgent.indexOf("Trident")>-1 ? "flash" : "html5", events: { onPlay: function(event) { dcsMultiTrack('DCS.dcsuri', 'https://news.rthk.hk/rthk/en/component/k2/1633509-20220214.mp3', 'WT.ti', ' Audio at newsfeed', 'WT.cg_n', '#rthknews', 'WT.cg_s', 'Multimedia','WT.es','https://news.rthk.hk/rthk/en/component/k2/1633509-20220214.htm', 'DCS.dcsqry', '' ); } } }); }); });

2022-02-14 HKT 00:06

Share this story

facebook

  • Police set up the Anti-Deception Coordination Centre, under the Commercial Crime Bureau, to combat scams. Photo: Courtesy of the Hong Kong Police

    Police set up the Anti-Deception Coordination Centre, under the Commercial Crime Bureau, to combat scams. Photo: Courtesy of the Hong Kong Police

The police have reported a sharp rise in romance investment scams, with victims losing HK$360 million between them last year.

The force had 642 such cases in 2021, a more than two-fold increase compared with the year before.

Detectives said people aged between 21 and 50, and women in particular, are extra vulnerable to this type of scam, where victims - who believe they've found love online - are tricked into handing over money for fake investments.

The single largest loss recorded last year involved a 65-year-old retired woman who said she was conned out of HK$17.8 million after putting money into a virtual currency investment app.

Meanwhile, police said fewer elderly people had fallen prey to telephone scams last year, but more mainland students were swindled.

The force said there were 1,140 telephone fraud cases, down 4.4 percent from 2020, but the total losses reported rose more than 40 percent to HK$811 million.

Officers said the increase was mainly due to a single case, where a 90-year-old woman lost HK$250 million to con artists.

Police said that following a series of publicity campaigns, the number of victims aged 61 and above fell from 200 in 2020, to 70 in 2021.

What’s worrying, officers said, was that more university students from the mainland got conned by people pretending to be officials, with the number of such cases doubling to about 190.

One 21-year-old student is said to have lost HK$3 million in seven days.

In all, the force received a total of 19,249 scam cases of various kinds last year, a 24 percent year-on-year rise.

Police have set up an Anti-Deception Coordination Centre, under the Commercial Crime Bureau, to combat scams.

RECENT NEWS

Indonesia And South Korea Begin Cross-Border QRIS Payments In Local Currencies

Bank Indonesia and the Bank of Korea have launched cross-border QR payment connectivity between Indonesia and South Kor... Read more

Hong Kong Misses March Deadline For First Stablecoin Licenses, No Issuers Approved

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) has yet to issue its first batch of stablecoin licenses, missing an earlier tar... Read more

Hong Kong Sees Digital Wallets Surpass Cards For The First Time

Digital wallets have surpassed cards for the first time in the city’s payments landscape, according to the Global Pay... Read more

HSBC Appoints Max Xu And Samuel Chen To Lead Wealth And Private Banking In China

HSBC has appointed Max Xu as Head of International Wealth and Premier Banking (IWPB), HSBC China, and Samuel Chen as He... Read more

OSL Group 2025 Revenue Hits HK$489M, Stablecoins Account For 60% Of Trading

OSL Group reported its annual results for the year ended 31 December 2025. The company said it recorded growth during t... Read more

JCB Brings Google Pay Contactless To Taiwan In First Overseas Rollout

JCB has announced that JCB-branded credit cards issued by Union Bank of Taiwan and Bank SinoPac will, for the first tim... Read more