Tag: Abbey Wealth

  • Utmost Fraud approved by EU Commission

    Utmost Fraud approved by EU Commission

    Utmost (formerly Generali) is proposing buying Quilter (formerly Old Mutual). The deal is due to be completed by December 2021. The agreed price is nearly half a billion pounds. It is reported that Margrethe Vestager, Vice President of the European Commission, has “approved” this acquisition.

    Margrethe Vestager - EU Commissioner Executive Vice President - approved Utmost fraud
    Margrethe Vestager – EU Commissioner Executive Vice President

    The “approval” by the European Commission of this deal is an insult to thousands of victims of pension and investment fraud.  Widespread financial crime has been facilitated, encouraged and rewarded by Utmost and Quilter over the past decade.  The appalling result has been the destruction of millions of pounds’ worth of life savings and pensions.

    Death offices - Quilter & Utmost facilitate pension fraud

    Margrethe Vestager, EU Commissioner Executive Vice President, has proved that the Commission hasn’t got a clue about Utmost’s and Quilter’s role in offshore financial services fraud.  And this deal between these two death offices will create a monopoly over fraud against expats in Europe.


    For death offices – such as Utmost and Quilter – fraud against expats is clearly a lucrative business with a huge market.  The horrific damage – including distress, poverty and suicide – gives neither Utmost’s CEO Paul Thompson nor Quilter’s CEO Paul Feeney any cause for concern.  Thompson has described the proposed acquisition as:

    “highly attractive and in line with our growth strategy”. 

    But growing an industry based on fraud should neither be countenanced by the European Commission – nor the European Markets and Securities Authority.

    Paul Feeney CEO of Quilter
    Paul Feeney CEO of Quilter
    Paul Thompson CEO of Utmost
    Paul Thompson CEO of Utmost

    Utmost Fraud approved by EU Commission

    Utmost announced the planned takeover in April 2021. CEO Paul Thompson has bragged this would add £22 billion and 90,000 policies to its existing portfolio. This would give the Utmost/Quilter combo a total of £58 billion of funds. And much of this will have been acquired through fraud. It will also give them 600,000 “customers”. And many of these will have been victims of fraud – some of them currently on the verge of suicide.

    The toxic assets and suicidal victims result from Utmost’s and Quilter’s long-standing practice of giving terms of business to unlicensed scammers. These death offices have paid huge, undeserved and undisclosed commissions to these scammers for more than a decade. And there is no sign that there is any intention to pay redress to the thousands of victims who have lost their life savings and pensions in death bonds. 

    The Commission’s approval of this iniquitous acquisition is a grave insult to Utmost’s and Quilter’s existing victims. It also puts thousands of British expats across Europe at risk of becoming future victims of the fraudsters to whom the death offices give terms of business. 

     
    There are three clear strands to the fraud with which both Utmost and Quilter are undeniably complicit:

    1. The insurance bond – also known as a life, portfolio, or offshore bond. This is the core “product” routinely used and abused by the unethical sector of the offshore financial services market.  This toxic sector – which includes many known scammers – sells products and not advice. Bonds can – under certain, limited circumstances – play a valid tax-mitigation role in the UK.  But offshore, they serve zero purpose – other than to pay commissions to many unauthorised introducers and fraudsters posing as advisers.  Insurance bonds should never be used with offshore pensions (QROPS) since the pension is already a tax “wrapper” in its own right.

    2. The terms of the insurance bonds are clearly abusive to consumers as retail, inexperienced investors.  The high charges are mostly for the purpose of clawing back the concealed commissions paid to the introducers (many of whom are unauthorised).  Utmost and Quilter had known for years that large numbers of these introducers had no license to provide insurance mediation or investment advice.  They had also known that these same introducers had long-established track records of mis-selling and fraud.  And yet Utmost and Quilter continued to give them terms of business. They allowed them to invest thousands of victims’ pensions and life savings recklessly – and disastrously.

    3. The toxic, illiquid, high-risk “investments” offered by the death offices.  These products were offered on the death offices’ platforms for the scammers to sell to their victims. Investment products have included dozens of failed funds such as LM, Axiom, Premier New Earth, Quadris Forestry and Kijani.  Worse still are the professional-investor-only structured notes supplied by Leonteq, Commerzbank, Royal Bank of Canada and Nomura.  

    This toxic “triptych” has resulted in horrific losses for thousands of victims over the past ten years.  And if this iniquitous acquisition goes ahead, there will be just as many – if not more – casualties in the next ten years.  The EU Commission – along with ESMA – will be complicit.

    Friends Provident International logo

    Of course, I might be entirely wrong: Utmost’s half a billion might have been subject to a sequestration deal enforced by the Commission.  Perhaps this money is going to be used to repay all the victims the hard-earned money they have lost?  And any surplus used to prosecute the dozens of fraudsters to whom the death offices had given terms of business?  (Sadly, I am not often wrong).

    RL360 logo

    Death offices Utmost and Quilter (as well as FPI and RL360) have routinely given terms of business to known scammers and unlicensed salesmen posing as advisers since 2010. They have created a toxic industry of selling dodgy products – not professional financial advice.  The result has been predictably awful. Victims have paid the price with poverty and misery in retirement.  Utmost’s acquisition of Quilter is likely to result in a huge increase in this widespread crime.

    Leonteq provide toxic structured notes

    The facts behind this perilous situation are irrefutable.  Quilter itself is suing Leonteq for £200 million for just one series of high-risk structured notes. This was for an extra 2% hidden commission on top of the 6% hidden commission allowed by Quilter.  Chief Executives Peter Kenny and Paul Feeney know that these toxic products should never have been promoted to retail, naive investors.  Kenny and Feeney are fully aware that their unlicensed introducers will sell any toxic and high-commission crap to their victims.  

    John Ferguson (left) & David Vilka (right) splashing stolen pension funds in Vegas
    John Ferguson (left) & David Vilka (right) of Square Mile International

    In 2016, Quilter provided hundreds of these toxic Leonteq structured notes (with total concealed commissions of up to 14.57%) to distributors such as Satori, Mayfields and Morgan Capital.  Quilter also sold these notes to known, serial scammers Square Mile International.  In the same year, Utmost sold the same Leonteq notes with hidden commissions of over 12%.

    Utmost Fraud approved by EU Commission

    The EU Commission needs to understand why Utmost’s proposed acquisition should not go ahead. In their Introducer Terms of Business Agreement, Utmost opens with a false statement:

    “Following completion of due diligence we are pleased to confirm your terms of business have been authorised on the following commission basis”. 

    But there is no due diligence. There are no checks on how the firms are licensed, or whether any of the staff or sub agents are qualified to provide insurance or investment advice. And certainly no acknowledgement that the commissions must be openly disclosed to the victims. 

    The starting point for the hidden commissions is that 140% of the victims’ portfolio will form the basis for the payment.  A fact which is never disclosed to the victims. 

    The Utmost Introducer Agreement requests details of the applicant’s experience and qualifications, in addition to membership of professional bodies or trade associations.  The application form also asks for confirmation of regulatory status in the markets where the firm operates.  They also ask for details and proof of professional indemnity insurance. Therefore, Utmost acknowledges that these are essential factors for a legitimate introducer. They willingly enter into terms of business with many unlicensed, unqualified scammers. These scammers have no experience, qualifications, membership of professional bodies or trade associations, and no essential regulatory status. They also have no professional indemnity insurance.

    In 2014, Utmost accepted one bond application from a victim resident in Spain.  Her “adviser” (introducer) had no license to provide either insurance mediation or investment advice anywhere in Europe.  And yet Utmost gave this firm complete freedom to invest the victim’s funds – accepting 19 separate investment dealing instructions (mostly with forged client signatures) totalling 529,251.80 Euros.  All of the investments were professional-investor-only, high-risk structured notes provided by Leonteq, Commerzbank, Royal Bank of Canada and Nomura.  Between 2014 and 2018, Utmost and the scammer between them destroyed over 75% of the victim’s fund.  The destruction was caused by repeated structured note failures and the inexorable high charges by Utmost.  When the victim finally took out what little was left, Utmost charged her a hefty early-exit penalty. There was no recognition of the horrific destruction Utmost had facilitated.

    This forest burning represents the many lives and pensions that have been destroyed by pension scammers

    Criminal proceedings against this, and other associated firms, are now in progress in Spain.  However, the main lead complainant – also an Utmost victim who lost most of his portfolio – has recently died.  Much of his life savings and pension – which started out at three quarters of a million pounds – were destroyed by Utmost and the scammer.  The causes of the losses were not only the toxic structured notes but also some unregulated, professional-investor-only funds such as the Quadris Brazilian Teak Forestry Fund.  The deceased victim’s disabled widow is now facing poverty on top of bereavement.

    Of course, Quilter has performed just as atrociously as Utmost over the past decade.  Thousands of Quilter’s victims are facing similar poverty and suffering at the hands of the same scammers. This fraud is facilitated and rewarded by hidden commissions and the freedom to invest portfolios without the victims’ knowledge, using forged client signatures.  With similar callousness, Quilter has allowed the flotsam and jetsam of the offshore cowboys to commit the exact same type of fraud as Utmost has.  

    One such scammer – with Quilter terms of business – boasts that his qualification to work in financial services is working as a bar manager and managing a successful sales company:

    Pennick Blackwell another firm affiliated with Quilter & pension scams.

    https://pennickblackwell.com/pennick-blackwell-team/

    Kristoffer Taft of Pennick Blackwell
    Kristoffer Taft of Pennick Blackwell

    (formerly an agent of AES International and now an agent of Abbey Wealth)

    If I am wrong, and the Commission has already made arrangements to freeze Utmost’s half a billion pounds, then I apologise unreservedly for doubting you.  But if I am right, then the European Commission is just as bad as the death offices and the scammers.

  • Pension Life – Pension File October 2019

    Pension Life – Pension File October 2019

    The Kiwis were grass and England was a lawnmower. For a couple of hours we forgot Brexit and remembered our national pride.

    In a Week that saw an inconclusive result in the UK v Europe match (yet again), at least England taught New Zealand how to play rugby.

    And the battle against pension scams moved up a gear as the press reported on the first round in the victims v scammers tournament.

    Olive Press journalist Joshua Parfitt reported on the first round of the criminal proceedings in Denia on the Costa not so Blanca. His surprisingly well-written article pulled no punches as it exposed the one million Euros that Continental Wealth Management boss Jody Smart Bell Kirby Pearson took out of the business in the two years before it collapsed in September 2017.

    Former cleaner Jody claims she was only a “non-active” director of Continental Wealth and that the company was run by former boyfriend Darren Kirby. She also claims that her property company Mercurio Compro S.L. (which received 670k of the million) was just a front for Darren’s property dealings and that he used the company bank account because he didn’t have his own personal bank account.

    Jody’s fashion business – Jody Bell – received 326k of the million. At least she hasn’t tried to claim that this was Darren’s business in reality (and that he had taken to designing frilly frocks between scamming 1,000 investors out of their life savings).

    Whichever way you look at it, however, Jody paid herself 1 million Euros on top of her salary of 280,000 Euros. But this was only during the last two years of the life of doomed Continental Wealth – we still don’t know how many millions she paid herself prior to that – at the height of the structured note/insurance bond scam operated by Darren and his team.

    There’s an interesting comment on the Olive Press article: English naivete is amazing given any chance for a quick return. Doesn’t anybody do due diligence when it comes to investment? This is like episodes on ” L’l Britain”.

    Due diligence would, indeed, have revealed that Continental Wealth operated without a license and that the staff were not qualified.

    Until 2015, Continental Wealth claimed to be an “agent” of a firm in Cyprus called Inter Alliance – and that this allowed the CWM scammers to use the Cyprus license. However, this was entirely untrue as Inter Alliance never had any license and had in fact been fined by the Cyprus regulator for falsely claiming to be licensed.

    Interestingly, when I click on the Olive Press Article, an irritating advert for Abbey Wealth keeps popping up. The ad offers the same old same old scammers’ trick: “free pension review”. So, coming from the same “stable” as Jody and Darren’s Continental Wealth scam, let’s do our due diligence on Abbey Wealth.

    According to the Abbey Wealth website, there are 17 “Senior Wealth” Managers. Most of these have no verifiable evidence of any qualifications, and quite a few are former mortgage brokers. Despite there being no investment license for the firm, several mention investments:

    Ben Noifeld: “investment solutions”; Christian Holbrook: “providing highly-regulated, tax-efficient investment solutions”; Mark Smith: “portfolio management and investment planning”; Michael Chambers: “making clients comfortable with their investments”.

    In Spain, all these “Senior Wealth Managers” are committing a criminal offence by promoting investment advice without a license”.

    There’s one chap – Craig Allanson – who claims to be a Senior International Pensions Adviser, despite no evidence of any qualifications. And the Managing Partner – Victor France – has no evidence of any qualifications (as well as being ex Old Mutual – the kiss of death as far as most Continental Wealth victims are concerned).

    However, there is one adviser who is indeed Chartered: Ian Boden. But why on earth would a man who states he “holds the highest level of qualification of Fellowship and Chartered Financial Planner status with the Chartered Insurance Institute (CII)” work for a firm with no investment license? He, of all people, should know better. He’s either desperate or has some dark skeleton lurking in his cupboard.

    The final nail in the coffin is that the firm’s insurance license is from the Central Bank of Ireland. So there’s no protection for any of the clients if anything goes wrong. The Irish Ombudsman is hopeless, never upholds any victims’ complaints and is clearly bent towards Irish-licensed firms and against their victims. The Ombudsman’s determinations against SEB and OMI victims are clear evidence of this. And talking of SEB, Abbey’s “Senior Wealth Manager” Iwan Thomas (with no evidence of any qualifications) is ex SEB.

    Abbey Wealth – will they altar their insurance bond salesmen’s approach to “wealth management”?

    The comment on the Olive Press article by “Chas” does indeed raise the essential issue of due diligence. DD isn’t hard – it is just a question of knowing the questions to ask and understanding the answers. Finding out about regulation (license) is easy – you just start with the firm’s own website. The licensing bit is usually at the bottom on the website. Then you look at each of the advisers and check on the CII and CISI websites to see if they are listed on the register. Then, most important of all, do a Google search.

    So here’s a prime example: QROPS provider STM is now trying to force members to use an IoM advisory firm called Creechurch Capital. STM is headed up by Alan Kentish (below) who is no stranger to handcuffs himself, and has a penchant for working with scammers.

    A quick Google search reveals that a “whistleblower” had exposed Creechurch for falsifying client records. If you would still want to have this firm as your financial adviser, consider that it is based in the Isle of Man (where many scammers, and Old Mutual International, are based). The Isle of Man has a rubbish regulator and ombudsman and – like Ireland and Gibraltar – seems to positively encourage scams and scammers and treat victims as irrelevant.

    You can tell a lot about a firm by the pictures on their website. In the case of Creechurch Capital, it is a bottle of wine. Does that suggest a client would need to be drunk to use Creechurch? Drunk or sober, any potential client should check out the people behind the firm.

    Managing Director Jim Dolan claims to be qualified with the Chartered Institute of Securities and Insurance. And indeed he shows up on the CISI register as being Chartered FCSI – only not with Creechurch but with a firm in London called Sentient Capital. Nothing particularly suspicious about that, I suppose, but how can a person be Managing Director of two firms simultaneously? (I thought it was only women who can multi-task).

    Miles Ashworth, Creechurch’s Head of Private Wealth, appears on the CISI register as claimed. And the rest of the senior management team seem to be a reasonable bunch. Also, the company was sold to Nayyar Group in March 2019. So somebody must have done their due diligence on the firm and paid good money for it.

    But the question remains: why would a decent bunch of qualified and experienced financial services professionals be seen dead working on the Isle of Man along with so many dodgy, unregulated fund houses such as Blackmore Group and rogue life offices like Old Mutual International and Friends Provident?

    And, even more important, why on earth would the guys at Creechurch want to be associated with STM? Don’t they know that STM has a history of working with scammers and that they facilitated the Trafalgar Multi-Asset Fund scam by investing all 400 victims’ pensions in XXXX XXXX’s own fund?

    So back to the real World: rugby; Brexit; Halloween and the end of the decade looming. It really has been a dreadful decade for pension scams: thousands of people scammed out of £ billions. Let’s hope the scammers at Continental Wealth Management will all get hefty jail sentences and that this will force any advisory firms operating the same business model to turn away from the dark side.

    So what exactly is the “dark side”? In a nutshell:

    • Providing services without a license
    • Having unqualified “advisers”
    • Mis-using insurance bonds (purely for the commissions)
    • Putting low-risk investors in high-risk investments (purely for the commissions)

    HAPPY HALLOWEEN TO ALL!

    (don’t let the Dark Side get you!)