Malaysia

CEO loses RM1 mil in forex investments

Victim, 53, only received investment returns of RM50,000 in stages before suspect disappeared

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 06 Jan 2021 12:00AM

CEO loses RM1 mil in forex investments
A suspect believed to be involved in cheating a 53-year-old man out of RM1 million was arrested at Seremban, Negri Sembilan yesterday. – AFP pic, January 5, 2021

MELAKA – Due to the pull of lucrative returns on stock investments, a chief executive officer lost RM1 million in foreign exchange (forex) investments he has been involved in since 2018.

Melaka Commercial Crime Investigation Department (CCID) head E. Sundra Rajan said the 53-year-old victim had made seven investment capital payment transactions over a period of about three years.

He said the victim, however, only received a return of RM50,000 in stages before the suspect disappeared.

“The 44-year-old suspect is the owner of a company that teaches people to invest in stocks, and the victim became interested in investing in forex after meeting the former.

“The victim then realised he was deceived as his returns did not commensurate with the capital invested and lodged a report at the Malim Police Station on December 31. The case is being investigated under Section 420 of the Penal Code for cheating,” he said in a statement here tonight. 

He said the suspect was arrested at a premises in Seremban, Negri Sembilan yesterday, and various investment-related documents were confiscated to assist with further investigations. The suspect has been placed under remand until Friday.

In another development, he said a clerk in her 30s lost RM92,450 on December 30 after trying to get a loan of RM30,000 through a website that advertised money-lending services.

He said the victim lodged a report at the Malim Police Station two days ago and the case is being investigated under Section 420 of the Penal Code for cheating.

He advised the public to apply for loans through licenced financial institutions and check on dubious phone numbers or account numbers via the CCID website or by downloading the Check Scammer CCID application on the Google Play Store. – Bernama, January 5, 2021

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