La amenaza cada vez mayor de fraude con cajeros automáticos de Bitcoin: implicaciones para los inversores institucionales y marcos regulatorios

Generado por agente de IACarina RivasRevisado porTianhao Xu
sábado, 3 de enero de 2026, 2:00 pm ET2 min de lectura

The surge in

fraud in the United States has emerged as a critical vulnerability in the cryptocurrency infrastructure, with financial losses escalating at an alarming rate. , Americans lost over $333 million to Bitcoin ATM scams in 2025 alone, a stark increase from $247 million in 2024 and $12 million in 2020. This exponential growth underscores a systemic risk not only for individual victims but also for institutional investors and regulators tasked with safeguarding financial stability.

The Surge in Fraud: A Systemic Vulnerability

Bitcoin ATMs, now numbering over 45,000 in the U.S., have become a preferred tool for fraudsters due to their accessibility and the irreversibility of

transactions . Scammers often exploit elderly individuals, with a median victim age of 71, or bank account compromises to coerce victims into depositing cash. In one high-profile case, that 93% of transactions on Athena Bitcoin's ATMs were fraudulent, prompting legal action against the company. Athena denied the claims, asserting its "strong safeguards against fraud," but critics argue that such machines profit from scams by charging high markups while failing to implement effective anti-fraud measures .

The FBI has documented over 10,956 complaints involving crypto ATMs in 2024, with losses exceeding $247 million

. These incidents highlight a critical flaw in the current infrastructure: the lack of robust Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) protocols at many kiosk operators. FinCEN has since issued warnings emphasizing the need for stricter compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act, could result in severe penalties.

Regulatory Responses and Policy Shifts

Regulators are increasingly targeting the structural weaknesses enabling Bitcoin ATM fraud.

cryptocurrency kiosks as high-risk, urging operators to adopt stringent AML measures. Meanwhile, states like New Jersey have introduced legislation to outright ban crypto ATMs, . At the federal level, the Digital Financial Assets Law (DFAL) has imposed daily transaction limits of $1,000 per person at kiosks, .

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), under Chair Paul Atkins, has recalibrated its enforcement priorities,

while adopting a more pragmatic stance toward blockchain innovation. This shift has been reflected in no-action letters to startups, signaling a reduced emphasis on crypto-specific enforcement. However, critics argue that this approach may inadvertently weaken safeguards for consumers, leaving gaps that fraudsters exploit.

Institutional Investor Strategies: Mitigating Exposure

Institutional investors are reevaluating their risk management frameworks to address the growing threat of Bitcoin ATM fraud.

, such as those developed by TRM Labs, are being deployed to trace illicit fund flows in real time. Beacon Network, a collaborative crypto crime response system, and propagate alerts across exchanges, preventing illicit withdrawals.

Beyond technological solutions, institutional investors are advocating for stricter regulatory frameworks. For instance, the DFAL's $1,000 daily transaction cap has been

in limiting the scale of potential losses. Additionally, multi-layered strategies-combining real-time transaction monitoring, law enforcement collaboration, and policy advocacy-are gaining traction as best practices .

Implications for the Crypto Sector

The surge in Bitcoin ATM fraud is reshaping the crypto landscape in three key ways:
1. Investment Strategies: Institutional investors are prioritizing platforms with robust AML/KYC compliance, shifting capital away from unregulated kiosk operators.
2. Regulatory Frameworks: Policymakers are under pressure to harmonize state and federal regulations, with a focus on transaction limits and operator accountability.
3. Risk Management: The integration of blockchain analytics into risk protocols is becoming standard practice, reflecting a broader industry-wide recognition of fraud as a systemic risk.

As

in Bitcoin ATM scams, the crypto sector must balance innovation with accountability. For institutional investors, the path forward lies in leveraging technology, advocating for regulatory clarity, and fostering collaboration with law enforcement to mitigate the fallout of this growing crisis.

author avatar
Carina Rivas

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