Over $10bn Stolen as Crypto Scams Rise 80% in 2021
The increasing investment in crypto currencies and crypto
markets has led to a significant rise in crypto scams and thefts, with a loss
of over $10 billion globally in 2021, a new report has revealed.
The “Crypto Hacks & Scams Report 2021” was released
yesterday by Crystal Blockchain, a firm involved in investigative analytics for
block chain and crypto currencies. It showed over 80 per cent rise in crypto
scams and thefts in 2021.
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) had banned banks and other
key players in the financial sector from crypto currency transactions.
The latest report said the crypto currency markets had seen
a volatile 2021, starting with a strong rally that took some prices to all-time
highs over the spring before they crashed in May and attempted a recovery over
the summer.
Bitcoin jumped to a new high in November but took a bearish
turn in December, defying predictions that it would continue to make gains.
Despite the CBN ban, Nigeria was rated the second country
most interested in bitcoin after El Salvador, notwithstanding the difficulty in
accessing the trillion-dollar crypto in the country.
South Africa and Kenya were identified as two other top
markets for crypto currency on the continent.
The new report revealed that there were 115 security
attacks, 40 attacks on DeFi protocols, and 26 fraudulent schemes as of December
17, 2021, which resulted in the theft of approximately $10 billion worth of
crypto assets in the year.
According to the Crystal database, over a third, or 39 per
cent of all stolen funds (in Bitcoin or BTC) were distributed via fraudulent
exchanges, which are defined as having been involved in exit scams, some
illegal behaviour, or that have had funds seized by the government.
Exit scams involve a crypto currency profiting from early
investors by “pulling out” all their funds from the market.
Amid the growing uncertainty due to the COVID-19 pandemic,
crypto currencies, like Bitcoin and Ethereum, gained significant fame among
investors.
Investment in the crypto market has been growing across the
globe, with the crypto currency market size expected to grow from $1.6 billion
in 2021 to $2.2 billion by 2026, at a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of
7.1 per cent, based on a report released in April 2021 by Markets and Markets
Research, a market research firm.
According to the report, many countries, even banks have
started buying cryptos. It added that banks in the United States of America
were creating their own block chain-based systems, including digital
currencies, to enable B2B crypto-currency payments between their customers.
While on one hand, it noted that there had been a huge loss
of wealth through crypto assets, the latest research report by International
Monetary Fund (IMF) found that crypto posed a threat to global financial
stability.
The market value of the ecosystem increased dramatically in
2021 and expanded beyond Bitcoin.
According to the IMF report, the financial stability
challenge posed by crypto broadly include operational, cyber, and governance
risks, integrity, and Anti-Money Laundering and Countering of Financial
Terrorism (AML/CFT) risks, data availability/reliability issues, and challenges
from cross-border activities.
The report noted that with increase in crypto scams and
frauds, the financial system would be more vulnerable.
A recent report by Chainalysis, a crypto currency exchange
platform, also said crypto crimes rose by 81 per cent in 2021, with a loss of
over $7.7 billion worth of crypto currency worldwide.
One of the major factors that led to the rise in crypto scam
was the emergence of what the report described as “rug pulls”.
Rug pull is a new type of scam where “developers of a crypto
currency project, typically a new token, abandon it unexpectedly, taking users’
funds with them.”
Despite a significant fall seen in crypto scams between 2019
and 2020, rug pull spiked the number in 2021, the report pointed out, stressing
that in all the scams, users lost over $2 billion worth of crypto currency, which
represents nearly 90 per cent of all value stolen in rug pulls.
The Chainalysis report noted that the number of financial
scams active at any point in the year rose by more than 60 per cent, from 2,052
in 2020 to 3,300 in 2021.
Being active means their addresses are receiving funds.
The Chief Economist, Care Ratings, a credit rating agency,
Madan Sabnavis, said, “Several gullible people are investing in this fictitious
currency and will be losing money as all trading is a zero-sum game.
“Crypto is fuzzy as there is no underlying that backs the
price. For gold there is a metal, for equity there is share but for crypto,
there is no such thing.”
There has been a steady increase in the amount being stolen
through the crypto assets, it noted.
But the total number of reported incidents of thefts against
crypto entities did not change much and stood at 31 in 2021.
Decentralised finance (DeFi) hacks have become the most
popular way to steal crypto during 2020-2021 and the total amount of stolen virtual
assets in crypto being stolen through DeFi hack doubled in this period, said
the Chinanalysis report.
The emergence of rug pulls, a relatively new scam type
facilitated the growing DeFi hacks.
Apart from DeFi breaches, crypto frauds and security breaches
are common.
So far, $2.86 billion had been stolen through security
breaches, while $6.8 billion had been stolen through scams and frauds.
So, crypto scams or frauds account for more than 65 per cent
of the total amount stolen.
The anonymity of crypto assets and limited global standards
lead to significant data gaps for regulators.
Sabnavis added, “The problem is that all such transactions
are opaque and one cannot be sure if the money is being diverted to drugs or
other illicit activity. Today a lot of financial savings are getting diverted
to the crypto markets which is not good for the country.”
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