Mail Online

It’s Kidcoin! Now pupils risk £10k on crypto craze

By Sam Merriman

CHILDREN as young as 14 are gambling sums of up to £10,000 on volatile digital currencies without their parents’ knowledge.

With a craze for cryptocurrencies sweeping through schools, techsavvy pupils are using smartphones to get involved in trading – despite it being illegal for anyone under 18.

The trend is being driven by platforms such as YouTube and TikTok, where unqualified influencers dispense financial advice to amateur investors drawn in by the promise of easy money. Experts are concerned that youngsters could fall prey to scams which have seen some traders lose millions.

Cryptocurrencies are decentralised and unregulated meaning they aren’t controlled by a bank or government, as with traditional currencies.

Some pupils have persuaded parents to set up and finance trading accounts for them, before reinvesting the profits, while others buy digital ‘coins’, such as Bitcoin, pictured, at special ATMs.

Peter Jerrom, a maths teacher and former trader, said talk of digital currencies is ‘rife’ among pupils as young as 14 who view it as ‘easy money or free money’.

While it has proved useful for maths lessons, he has had to warn some pupils at his comprehensive school in Croydon, South London, that trading is illegal for under-18s.

He said: ‘Year 11 students are buying up to £500 worth of digital currency using an app, and the Year 13 students are trading £5,000 to £10,000. It’s a highdeprivation area so £5,000 is a very significant amount.

‘There are some students doing it without their parents’ knowledge. However, there are a considerable number doing it with their parents.’ Gareth Shaw, head of money at Which?, said: ‘The rise in young people investing in cryptocurrencies is very worrying, especially as fraudsters have flooded social media with scam investment adverts that prey on victims who may have little or no experience of investing.’

News

en-gb

2021-11-28T08:00:00.0000000Z

2021-11-28T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://mailonline.pressreader.com/article/282282438572068

dmg media (UK)