The US Department of Justice announced on June 30 the recovery of over $19.5 million tied to two pump-and-dump schemes that exploited stolen financial advisor credentials to manipulate the stock prices of Nasdaq-listed companies. The targets: Dreamland Limited (ticker: TDIC) and CTRL Group Limited, both linked to Hong Kong and the Cayman Islands.
How the scheme worked
Bad actors obtained the credentials of a financial advisor, giving them the ability to place unauthorized transactions. They used those credentials to generate massive buying pressure on thinly traded stocks, inflating prices well beyond any rational valuation.
Dreamland Limited provides the clearest case study. The stock had been trading in a range of $0.57 to $2.36. On May 13, 2026, it hit $30. That’s a price increase of roughly 1,170% from the top of its prior range, all in a single trading session.
Approximately 109 million shares of TDIC changed hands on that single day. On the buying side, roughly 1.36 million shares were attempted to be purchased for about $22.9 million before the trades were ultimately canceled. On the selling side, an account claiming to represent a Cayman Islands fund allegedly offloaded around 1.49 million shares for approximately $17.69 million. The stock subsequently plummeted back to approximately $0.80.









