

According to The Straits Times on March 29, a 75-year-old retiree from Singapore was defrauded of roughly S$600,000 (about RM1.87 million) over three years in a complex impersonation scam.
How it came to light
• In April 2025, her daughters Faith (43) and Sarah Phua (45) found their mother trying to transfer S$67,000 (about RM208,577) to an unfamiliar account.
• She was convinced that “Elon Musk” required the money to rescue a struggling enterprise—a belief reinforced by AI-generated deepfake video calls mimicking Musk’s face and speech.
Family intervention
• Although cautioned numerous times, she maintained she was working alongside Musk and even asserted she was overseeing monetary affairs for his alleged associates, Donald Trump and Mark Zuckerberg.
• The fraudsters recommended she make smaller remittances—between S$1,000 and S$2,000 (RM3,114 to RM6,228)—to keep the bank from flagging her transactions.
Legal safeguard introduced
• In July 2025, Singapore authorities imposed the inaugural restriction order (RO) under the Protection from Scams Act 2025, limiting her banking activities to stem additional losses. ROs have since become a standard tool to shield at-risk adults from continued scams.
• “After our mother’s accounts were frozen, she attempted to put our home on the market and even asked for a divorce when Dad stepped in,” Sarah recalled. Following their mother’s psychosis diagnosis, she and Faith secured a lasting power of attorney.
A broader pattern of deception
• Elsewhere, a man in his 70s, identified solely as Charlie, fell victim to a “trading mentor” on a fraudulent investment platform. Convinced he had grown his principal into S$80,000 (RM249,126) in gains, he ultimately forfeited all his savings.
• “I believed it was a simple route to profit—but losing everything showed me that every opportunity carries risk,” Charlie told The Straits Times.
📊 Market Context & Insight
For Malaysian investors, options include residential rental assets, budget-friendly housing projects, commercial real estate, and REITs on Bursa Malaysia. As urbanisation accelerates and rental demand grows, blending direct property investments with listed REITs offers a balanced way to mitigate risk and tap into growth.
💡 What This Means for Malaysian Investors
Factors influencing Malaysia’s real estate market include city-centric demand in Kuala Lumpur, Selangor, and Penang, state-led programs such as PR1MA, policy rate moves by Bank Negara Malaysia, and major infrastructure undertakings like the MRT3 and LRT network expansions. Meanwhile, Bursa Malaysia–listed REITs mirror overall economic trends.
🔗 Useful Resources
Disclaimer: This content is purely informational and does not constitute financial advice. Consult a licensed property agent or financial adviser in Malaysia before making investment decisions.

