Tag: Dean Stogsdill

  • International Adviser – Have I Got News For You!

    International Adviser – Have I Got News For You!

    International Adviser really can’t make up its mind whether it is organising a piss-up in a brewery, a news roundup carefully slewed in favour sponsors Old Mutual International, or a marketing machine.  I read with interest the recent  IA Industry Most Influential Top 100 described by IA thus: “we at International Adviser decided to shine a light on the movers and shakers that have helped this industry get to where it is today”.

    But where exactly is the industry today?  And have the so-called top 100 moved and shaken the industry in a helpful way or a detrimental way?  To find out, why don’t we have a look at a few of the “influencers”.  To get the measure of them, let’s put them into a game of “Have I Got News For You”:

    Bob Pain in the chair as quiz master.  A bloke who ran Cayman Islands-based Investors Trust until recently appointed chair of the Association of International Life Offices, the trade body for international life offices. During his 35 years of experience in financial services, he facilitated the scam run by Phillip Nunn of Blackmore Global and David Vilka of Square Mile International Financial Services Investors Trust accepted over 1,000 investments into illegal UCIS funds for UK-based victims scammed into QROPS with Integrated Capabilities and Harbour (now STM).

     

    As Captain of the Navel Team, let’s have dashing Tim Searle – Chairman of Dubai-based Globaleye.  With his eight-year Naval history, he should make an ideal leader and would come in particularly useful in the event of icebergs, torpedos or sharks.

     

     

    Captain of the Army Team I nominate as Sam Instone of AES International.  His experience as an Army officer should give him the leadership skills to oppose the Navel Team.  Sam’s track record as the “enemy of traditional financial services” should give him the basis for a sound battle plan.

     

     

     

    On the Army  Team, we’ll have international wealth and regulatory specialist, Phil Billingham.  Phil must be utterly disgusted with the likes of Stephen Ward (another fully-qualified adviser) messing up the reputation of the profession by running a long series of pension scams and ruining thousands of lives.

     

     

    And the final member of the Army team will be Paul Stanfield, CEO of FEIFA (Federation of European Independent Financial Advisers).  Another real gentleman – and handsome to boot – and one who understands the importance of outlawing scammers.  Several years ago he excommunicated Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions from FEIFA to loud cheers from victims and industry professionals alike.  (My only gripe with him would be that he still hasn’t kicked out Square Mile Financial Services run by scammers John Ferguson and David Vilka).

     

    On the Navel Team we’ll have Geraint Davies of Montfort International – an expert IFA specialising in international financial services, and Roger Berry of Concept Group Trustees in Guernsey.  These two chaps also have, between them, extensive experience of Stephen Ward in their own ways and will, no doubt, have much to talk about.

    The contest will be to spot the “odd one out”: Michael Doherty of Woodbrook Group, Conor McCarthy of SEB, Peter Kenny of OMI and Winnie-the-Pooh.

    Tim Searle: “They’re all Irish, except Winnie-the-Pooh who’s English?”

    Geraint Davies: “They all hate Angie except Winnie-the-Pooh who’s never heard of her?”

    Roger Berry: “They all love Angie except Winnie-the-Pooh who’s never heard of her?”

    Sam Instone: “They’ve all got names that end in Y except Winnie-the-Pooh?”

    Phil Billingham: “They’re all involved in money except Winnie-the-Pooh who’s involved in honey?”

    Paul Stanfield: “None of them have applied to be members of FEIFA except Winnie-the-Pooh?”

    Bob Pain: “No, you’re all wrong.  The answer is Peter Kenny of OMI.  The other three have been doing “nothing”: Michael Doherty was employing ex CWM scammers Dean Stogsdill and Neil Hathaway (known as Dog Kill and Hadaway) but claimed he was paying them nothing; Conor McCarthy of SEB has been asked numerous times for his comments on why SEB allowed the scammers at CWM to invest most of their victims’ funds in toxic structured notes, but McCarthy is saying nothing and won’t reply; and Winnie-the-Pool is doing nothing all the time.

    The odd one out is Peter Kenny who is doing “something” and is suing Leonteq for the £94 million worth of fraudulent structured notes they sold to OMI.

  • CWM CONference

    All victims of the Continental Wealth Management pension scam will agree – this kind of disaster must never be allowed to happen again. Here´s Pension Life´s take on what happened in the CWM CONference given by Darren Kirby.

    The CWM advisers. . . Dean Stogsdill   *   Alan Gorringe   *   Richard Peasley   *   Neil Hathaway, but to name a few. . . lied about charges; lied about investment “guarantees” and growth; lied about structured note losses (“don’t worry – they are only paper losses”); lied about the firm’s regulation.

    Through a series of cold calls and personal house visits, they were able to persuade the victims into trusting them with their hard-earned pension pots. Aided and abetted by Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions – who provided the initial transfer advice – CWM brought financial ruin to hundreds of victims.

    The rogue “advisers” of CWM, forged clients’ signatures on dealing instructions and conned hundreds of victims in Spain, France, Portugal and beyond into transferring their safe, UK-based pensions into this dreadful scam, which was bound to lose some, most of or all of the money in each victim’s pension fund.

    Pension Life Blog - CWM CONference pension scam - Continental Wealth Management

    Trustees and insurance companies must never give these kinds of firms terms of business again. Old Mutual International (OMI), facilitated the fraud, paid commissions/fees to CWM who not only held no investment licence – but also held no license of any kind. Furthermore, OMI continue to apply crippling fees to these ever decreasing and totally unsuitable investments they made. SEB also acted as facilitators to this heinous crime.

    These so-called advisers must never be allowed to work in financial services again. However, the sorry truth is that they all are still working AND they are still scamming!! Raising awareness on how scammers work and how to avoid being scammed, seems to be the only defense we currently have.

    Pension Life will continue to speak out against these companies – the public must be warned – loudly and publicly. Scams like the Continental Wealth Management (CWM CONference) disaster must be stopped!

    SCAMMERS ARE CRIMINALS!!!

  • CWM Pension scam – A victim’s reconstruction

    CWM Pension scam – A victim’s reconstruction

    Pension Life Blog - CWM Pension scam – A victims reconstruction - CWM pension scam - Stogsdill sold John Rogers selling blue chip notesJohn Rodges had a pension pot of £202,000.  He was cold called by a salesman called Dean Stogsdill and persuaded to transfer his pension fund to a QROPS (Qualifying Recognised Overseas Pension Scheme) with Continental Wealth Management (CWM pension scam using high-risk, professional-investor-only structured notes which Stogsdill referred to as “Blue Chip Notes”).

    With false promises of greater flexibility, better growth and a 25% tax-free cash lump sum, the transfer seemed like a good opportunity. In reality, it was an offer too good to be true –  it was a pension scam-  in which the CWM salesmen, Dean Stogsdill and Anthony Downs would reap high commissions.  The victims – like John Rogers – would be left with heavy losses.

    67 year old John Rodgers, a former research and development chemist, had a collection of occupational and private pensions in the UK.  As he had moved to Spain 11 years previously, he had the opportunity of consolidating his pension into a QROPS.

    Stogsdill – Chief Executive of CWM, assured John Rodgers that he had been evaluated as a low-medium risk investor, and that the costs would be 1.75% a year over a period of five years – or 1.5% for ten years. This would be based on the original value of the investment, so the promised growth of 8% would not incur any further costs. He was also promised that life assurance would be ‘thrown in’. Unfortunately, John was to become the next victim of the CWM pension scam.

    Pension Life Blog - CWM Pension scam – A victims reconstruction - CWM pension scam - Stogsdill sold John Rogers selling blue chip notes

    What actually happened was John Rodger’s pension fund was invested into a selection of high-risk structured notes from Royal Bank of Canada – “Blue Chip Notes”.  John was told that these “Blue Chip Notes”, were capital protected inside a life bond which would give him life assurance. No real explanation of what a structured note actually was, was given to John.

    Structured notes are generally high-risk, FOR PROFESSIONAL INVESTORS ONLY. Therefore, these “Blue Chip Notes” had no place in a pension fund. This investment strategy was part of the CWM pension scam – earning salesmen like Stogsdill big bucks while destroying innocent victims’ pension funds.

    Stogsdill also failed to disclose the commissions they were going to earn from the life assurance bond and the “Blue Chip Notes” so even before John’s funds were placed in the toxic high-risk investements – they had incurred a significant loss.

    It took just two years for John’s fund to plummet to half of its original value. However, CWM assured him that it was just a “paper loss”, and that the fund would go back up at maturity.

    However, CWM went ‘bust’ before the fund could mature.  togsdill and all the other salesmen did a runner!

    Today John’s pension fund is worth just £60,000 (if he is lucky).

    Pension Life has reconstructed John’s story and we would like to share it, in the hope that other people can spot the signs of a pension scam like CWM and avoid falling victim to the scammers – the only ones who profit from investments like these.

    It is estimated that up to 1,000 people fell victim to the CWM pension scam and that around 40 million pounds was lost to these high-risk, toxic investments with providers such as

    Royal Bank of Canada, Nomura Commerzbank and Leonteq.

    The CWM pension scam was promoted by unqualified, unregulated salesmen posing as financial advisers. People who were not legally allowed to provide this kind of financial advice. The scam was promoted with outright lies and undisclosed fees and costs.

    Pension Life blog - CWM pension scam - Stephen Ward Trustee for Pension Scams - uses advisers like Stogsdill to do his dirty work in selling blue chip notes to John Rodgers
    Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions

    A financial adviser that can be linked to not just the CWM pension scam, but also many others including Ark,  is a man called STEPHEN WARD (pictured).  He IS fully qualified AND registered with the CII.  However, he does not have a conscience when it comes to destroying hard-earned pension funds – check out another of Pension Life’s videos:

    Pension Scams – Stephen Ward

    If the name Stephen Ward appears on any pension transfer you are offered, make sure you say no and walk away – Pete and Val – another couple who were victims of the CWM pension scam – wish they had.

    When considering transferring your pension fund, please make sure you check all the facts and fully understand all of the costs. Ensure your pension is going into a suitable retail investment – not a structured note.

    Kim – a member of the Pension Life team is writing a series of blogs about pensions and we would love it if everyone would read and share these. Let’s stop pension scammers in their tracks worldwide by educating the masses on pension rules and regulations.

    What is a pension scam?

  • DEALING WITH STRESS WHEN SCAMMED OUT OF YOUR PENSION

    DEALING WITH STRESS WHEN SCAMMED OUT OF YOUR PENSION

    DEALING WITH STRESS WHEN SCAMMED

    OUT OF YOUR PENSION

    Being scammed out of a big chunk of your pension once is bad enough.  But TWICE is awful.  Double pension scam victim Jessica M.J. talks about her experience and gives other victims advice about how to cope with the stress that results from being a pension scam victim.

    Jessica was scammed by Continental Wealth Management – one of Pension Life’s top-ten worst scammers – into the Evergreen QROPS scheme.  Continental Wealth Management was acting as the cold callers and lead generators to Stephen Ward’s firm Premier Pension Solutions.  Evergreen was a New Zealand pension scheme which was being used for pension liberation fraud using Ward’s pension loan company, Marazion.  Jessica did not get (and was not offered) a loan.

    Jessica was brave and generous enough to share her own story – which, sadly, was so typical of hundreds of other cases.  However, she was one of the few who were actually scammed twice by Continental Wealth Management.  She spoke of her own feelings: “I was very angry.  I felt betrayed, cheated.”

    Pension Life Blog - Pension scam - CWM scam was not regulated - 218 victims funds were placed in toxic risky structured notes - not suitable for low-risk clients - the CWM group lost 11 million GBP - over 52% of the original 21million GBPAfter losing a third of her pension, Jessica was then moved by Continental Wealth Management to a Malta QROPS and put into an Old Mutual International insurance bond (which she didn’t need and couldn’t afford – and only served to earn the scammers a hefty commission).  By investing what was left of the fund in high-risk, professional-investor-only structured notes, half of what was left of Jessica’s pension was then destroyed.  So she ended up losing two thirds of her hard-earned retirement savings.

    Continental Wealth Management collapsed at the end of September 2017, leaving hundreds of victims with their pension funds in ruins and facing poverty in retirement.  Old Mutual International, Generali and SEB – the life offices who allowed this devastation to happen and stood idly by while the structured notes destroyed the victims’ funds – have done nothing to compensate the victims for their losses.

    Jessica has advised the public:

    “There’s a lot of scammers out there – check ’em out!”

    Sadly, if Jessica had known the questions to ask, the warning signs were there from the start.  Continental Wealth Management was not licensed for investment advice.  Few of the so-called advisers had any qualifications relevant to financial advice.  The investments were professional-investor-only structured notes provided by RBC, Commerzbank, Nomura and Leonteq – among others.  Continental Wealth Management used life bonds provided by Old Mutual International, Generali and SEB.  These bonds served absolutely no purpose except to pay the scammers huge commissions.  Dealing instructions had forged client signatures and the advisers lied about the losses when they were first reported claiming they were “only paper losses, and would recover”.

     

     

     

  • Say NO to structured notes for pensions!

    Say NO to structured notes for pensions!

    Pension Life warns structured notes are only for PROFESSIONAL investors. Scams often involve structured notes - e.g. the Continental Wealth Management pension scam.Structured notes – say NO to them if an adviser wants to invest your pension in them.  They are high-risk investments which are for professional investors ONLY – and not for ordinary retail investors  – especially pensions.

    Say NO to structured notes for pensions!

    Structured notes have been used as pension investments for some years.  Many advisers don’t understand them – and certainly, no retail pension investors understand them either.  Structured notes are definitely not the low risk, high return investments originally promised – and the capital is NOT protected as claimed by some advisers.

    Say no to toxic structured notes peddled by rogue advisers and provided by rogues such as Commerzbank, RBC, Nomura and LeonteqAs in the above example, it is a disgrace that structured note providers such as Commerzbank, Nomura, RBC and Leonteq have allowed their toxic products to be used for retail pension savers.  Even when these rotten products have nosedived repeatedly, these dishonest and dishonourable providers keep on flogging them to destroy victims’ retirement savings.

    Along with the rogue advisers – such as the scammers from Holborn Assets and Continental Wealth Management – and the rogue structured note providers, there are also rogue insurance companies who accept these toxic, high-risk, professional-investor-only investments.  These insurers know full well that accepting these notes will doom the policyholders to poverty in retirement, but they don’t care.  Some of the worst of these “life offices” are Old Mutual International, SEB, and Generali.  These companies are no better than scammers and really should be called “death offices” since they effectively kill off thousands of victims’ life savings with their extortionate charges.

    Commerzbank, Nomura, RBC and Leonteq all claim to be “award winning and innovative companies” and yet they show zero compassion to the victims who lose huge proportions of their retirement savings.  The structured note providers keep paying commissions to the scammers – ranging from 6% to 8% of the investments.  And then, when the structured notes go belly up, they simply sell more of the same toxic rubbish to the same scammers in an attempt to further ruin the victims.

    So what the hell are structured notes?  And why should investors say NO to them?

    A structured note is an IOU from an investment bank that uses derivatives to create exposure to one or more investments. For example, you can have a structured note betting on the S&P 500 Price Index, the Emerging Market Price Index, or both. The combinations are almost limitless.

    Say NO to structured notes for pensions!

    Structured notes are frequently peddled by less-scrupulous financial advisers – as well as outright scammers – as a “high-yield, low-risk” supposedly backdoor way to own stocks.  However, regulators have warned that investors can get burned – which they frequently do.  If the investment banks can flog it, they will make just about any toxic cocktail you can dream up.  In reality, a structured note is an unsecured debt issued by a bank or brokerage firm – and the amount of money the investor might (or might not) get back is pegged to the performance of stocks or broad market indexes. 

    Read more: Structured Notes: Buyer Beware! 

    Pension Life and regulators warn that structured notes are not suitable for Pension investments, they are unsecured and high risk. If offered as a pension investment it could be a pension scam.On the surface, the ‘cocktails’ the structured note providers make seems like they could generate a great return.  However, the truth is they often benefit the financial adviser rather than the investors.

    Structured notes are suitable for professional investors only – and the fact sheets issued by the providers state this clearly.  Whilst they do offer high returns if successful, they are also high risk with no protection on the amount invested. Structured notes should not be used for pensions.

    Continental Wealth Management(CWM) invested over a thousand low to medium risk clients’ retirement savings in structured notes – mostly provided by Commerzbank, Nomura, RBC and Leonteq. These clients now have seriously decimated funds and are worried sick.  But Commerzbank, Nomura, RBC and Leonteq have shown neither remorse for their toxic, high-risk, illiquid products nor concern for the hundreds of victims.

    OMI (Quilter), Generali and SEB have also been totally disinterested in the thousands of failed structured notes they have facilitated.  Indeed they are even charging the victims crippling early exit penalties when they decide to get out of the expensive and pointless insurance bonds which are further eating into the remaining funds.

     

    Avoid pension scams: pension life highlights the instability of structured notes using a graph. Structured notes are not safe for retail investors with pension funds because of this

    Most structures notes have no guarantee, so their worth often depreciates to less than the paper they are printed on. Much like a bet at the races, if you bet £10 on Noble Nag to win in the 2.30 at Kempton Park at ten to one, you are guaranteed to win £100 if the horse wins.  But if the horse doesn’t win, you say goodbye to your money.

    Most structured notes are dressed up to look appealing to the uninformed victim.  But in reality they are high risk and illiquid and can result in total decimation of a victim’s life savings.  The advisors rarely disclose the commissions they are earning from the purchase of the structured notes (or from the insurance bond).  Plus, once the structured notes start showing a serious loss, the adviser just dismisses this as “only a paper loss”.  As the advisors have already taken their cut, they are rarely bothered if this high-risk investment does lose the client money.

    So if you hear the term ‘structured note’ in connection with your retirement fund, just say ‘NO’.  The only people profiting from this type of investment are the advisers.

    ********************************************

    As always, Pension Life would like to remind you that if you are planning to transfer any pension funds, make sure that you are transferring into a legitimate scheme. To find out how to avoid being scammed, please see our blog:

    What is a pension scam?

    Follow Pension Life on twitter to keep up with all things pension related, good and bad.

  • QUILTER – A NEW HOBBY FOR OMI?

    QUILTER – A NEW HOBBY FOR OMI?

    Quilter - Old Mutual International - new name to try to hide past crimes
                                   Quilter – Old Mutual International – new name to try to hide past crimes

    QUILTER – A NEW HOBBY FOR OMI?   OMI – Old Mutual International – needs to compensate thousands of victims of financial crime which they facilitated.  I can’t make up my mind whether they are adopting the brand “Quilter” to attempt to shake off their sordid and toxic past, or whether they are actually taking up quilting.

    If OMI really is going to become a quilter, it needs to make a quilt depicting all the criminals whose crimes it has facilitated for so many years.  And all the victims who have lost part of or all of their life savings.

    What OMI really needs to do is to get firmly behind the prosecution of the criminals – from whom they profited for many years.  OMI must contribute to the cost of denouncing these criminals and ensuring they are given maximum prison sentences.

    Also, OMI – Old Mutual – must stop allowing toxic, professional-investor-0nly structured notes in their bonds.  Typically, these were provided by Commerzbank, Nomura, Leonteq and RBC.  If Old Mutual International wants to gamble away its own money on these crap products, then be my guest.  But don’t expose retail pension savers to these sordid, high-risk instruments – used by the scammers as mere tiles in a game of Scrabble.

    Thanks to IFA Al Rush, there is now a criminal investigation into the hordes of vultures who preyed on the British Steelworkers.  This has been eloquently reported by Henry Tapper in his blog about the police investigation at Port Talbot.

    Al Rush championing the British Steelworkers who have been scammed
     Al Rush championing the British Steelworkers who have been scammed

    Al Rush has suggested the wording which victims can use to report those who scammed – or attempted to scam – them.  And all of what Al and his colleagues have done has been done at their own expense and out of a sense of decency.

     

    Hard to tell the difference between OMI and Quilter and Jabba The Hut
    Hard to tell the difference between OMI and Quilter and Jabba The Hut

    This is in stark and stinky contrast to OMI – Old Mutual International.  Since 2011, OMI has sat and watched – like a cross between Jabba The Hut and a Black Widow Spider – while thousands of victims have seen their life savings dwindle away to very little or even nothing.  And all the while, taking extortionate fees and paying commissions to the very scammers who ruined the victims in the first place.

     

    So does OMI really think that adopting the name “Quilter” will make future victims fail to make the connection – that this is the same firm that took business from dozens of unregulated scammers such as Continental Wealth Management, Abbey Financial Solutions, Holborn Assets, Guardian Wealth Management, and other “chiringuitos”?

    Perhaps the worst crime committed by OMI is not that they took business from unlicensed scammers; not that they allowed 100% of victims’ pension funds to be invested in professional-investor-only, high-risk structured notes; not that they sat there idly and negligently while the clients’ pensions and investments shrank inexorably……

    Old Mutual International - the rubbish end of financial services
    Old Mutual International – the rubbish end of financial services

    the worst of OMI’s crimes has been that when there are only a few crumbs left of a life-time’s retirement savings, they will still charge crippling early-exit penalties.  OMI, or Skandia, or Quilter or Jabba The Hut or whatever the hell this toxic, evil shower call themselves, have no place in financial services.  They have facilitated and profited from financial crime for years and benefited from the misery and ruin of thousands of victims.

    In an attempt to emulate Al Rush’s suggested police report for British Steel victims at the hands of the various scammers who targeted, stalked and scammed them, here is my suggested report for OMI victims to make to the police and the regulators.  Naturally, this will work equally well for victims of Generali, SEB, RL360, Friends Provident, Hansard, Investors Trust etc.

    OMI must be sanctioned for facilitating financial crime
    OMI must be sanctioned for facilitating financial crime

    ‘I was advised to transfer out of my personal/occupational (delete as appropriate) pension scheme and was lied to when I asked about how much money would be taken from me. I think, over time especially, I will lose/have already lost many tens of thousands of pounds (probably, hundreds of thousands of pounds) in fees which were hidden from me.

    This will bleed my pot dry, leave me exposed to poverty in old age and create a burden on the local council.

    I was specifically told there would be no penalties or lock-in periods.

    Can you help me please, I would like to make a formal statement and help you bring charges against those who did this, and those who helped them’.

     

     

     

  • Ex Continental Wealth Scammers – where are they now?

    Ex Continental Wealth Scammers – where are they now?

    Pension life highlights the ex CWM employees involved in the pension scams have fled to different countries and are still being employed by advisory firmsWhen a pension or investment scam implodes (as they always do), it is important to keep tabs on where the scammers go next, what they are doing next and who is helping them.

    In the case of the Continental Wealth Management scam – headed up by Darren Kirby and purported to be the “sister” company to Stephen Ward’s Premier Pension Solutions – some of the scammers simply fled to Australia or other far-flung countries.  But, sadly, some of the scammers are now employed by other advisory firms.

    We need to keep an eye on this situation to make sure that neither the scammers nor the firms for whom they now work get any business until the scammers are put back on the street/in prison where they belong.

    These scammers have, between them, destroyed the retirement savings of hundreds of victims – costing them millions of pounds’ worth of pension savings.  Until and unless every last one of them is put in prison and the key thrown away, we all need to be vigilant of the scammers themselves and also the firms who are harbouring them.

    One firm, Beacon Global Wealth, had inadvertently been harbouring ex CWM scammer Richard Peasley.  But when I advised them of his background, they sacked him within hours.  No argument; no hesitation.  I hope all other firms employing these vicious scammers will do likewise.

    EX CONTINENTAL WEALTH MANAGEMENT SCAMMERS

    Darren Kirby – allegedly hiding in Australia.  Let’s hope he turns into a kangaroo and never gets a chance to scam any more victims out of their pensions

     

     

     

    Richard Peasley – employed by Beacon Global Wealth but immediately sacked when they realised how many lives he had destroyed.  Congratulations to Beacon and their CEO David Vacani for doing the right thing so decisively!

     

    Pension life shows an image of Dean Stogsdill - referred to as "Dogkill" by some - is an expert on how structured notes can decimate a pension fund. another pension scammerDean Stogsdill – referred to as “Dogkill” by some – is an expert on how structured notes can decimate a pension fund

    Pension life shows an image of Neil Hathaway - referred to as "Hadaway" by some - is another expert on the structured note scam on pension and investment scamsNeil Hathaway – referred to as “Hadaway” by some – is another expert on the structured note scam

     

     

     

    Antony Poole – employed by Woodbrook Group but sacked when he emailed all the ex CWM clients and tried to sign them up as Woodbrook Group clients

    I will be updating this blog constantly as new information comes in regarding ex CWM scammers and where they are working now.

  • BEACON GLOBAL WEALTH MANAGEMENT EMPLOYS EX CWM SCAMMER

    Richard Peasley
    Richard Peasley

    I am very pleased indeed to announce that on 6th December 2017, Beacon Global Wealth Management terminated Richard Peasley’s employment.  There was no hesitation, no argument.  Beacon’s David Vacani is also responding to numerous Continental Wealth Management victims who have complained about Richard Peasley’s employment with Beacon.  I have no doubt David Vacani will correspond with them professionally, courteously and with great empathy – as he has done with me.  Very well done David!  A good day for the financial services profession.

    Beacon Global Wealth Management  had been employing former Continental Wealth Management pension scammer Richard Peasley.  I found it hard to believe that any firm would take on such a man when he is well known for being one of the leading advisers at CWM who lied, scammed, defrauded and conned dozens – if not hundreds – of victims out of their pensions.

    I am familiar with Beacon, and have spoken to Jennie Poate and know that she is acutely aware of the world of scammers.  However, I now learn that Beacon had not been aware of the extent of Richard Peasley’s involvement in the Continental Wealth Management scam.

    Richard Peasley, during his time at Continental Wealth Management, put his victims into high-risk, professional investor only structured notes, within hugely expensive insurance bonds.  He also put his name to dealing instructions with forged signatures.  Peasley then lied to victims about their huge losses – claiming they were “only paper losses” and that the pitifully low values were only “secondary market” values and that the notes would recover at maturity.  (They didn’t).

    CWM Sharks
    CWM Sharks

    Richard Peasley comes from a stable of scammers which includes:

    • Alan Gorringe
    • Anthony Bishop
    • Antony Downs
    • Antony Poole
    • Darren Kirby
    • Dawn Kirby
    • Dean Stogsdill
    • Jody Kirby
    • John Owens
    • Louise Kilic
    • Marco Floreale 
    • Mark Davison
    • Neil Hathaway
    • Patrick Kirby
    • Paul Clark
    • Paul Taylor
    • Phil Kelman
    • Phil Pennick
    • Rob Clark
    • Rory Foster
    • Sandy Eftekin
    • Sandy Jones

    If I have left anybody out, I apologise unreservedly.

    Richard Peasley was responsible for the destruction of £millions and the prospect of many people facing poverty in retirement after working hard all their lives to build up a pension pot.

    I have made a mistake by including the below dealing instruction and reporting that it was forged.  In this particular client’s case, this instruction did have a genuine signature.  However, all the other dozen or so were forged.  What Richard Peasley and the other scammers at Continental Wealth did was to ask many of the victims to sign one blank dealing instruction, and then they would photocopy it over and over again to buy and sell high-risk, professional investor only structured notes.  In other cases, Peasley and the others just copied and pasted signatures from another signed document and used that instead.

    Richard Peasley is not someone who can be trusted with innocent people’s pensions – as many of his victims will be happy to testify publicly.  I hope he will never work in financial services again, as there is no place in the profession for people who so deliberately and callously destroy victims’ life savings.

    As always, Pension Life would like to remind you that if you are planning to transfer any pension funds, make sure that you are transferring into a legitimate scheme. To find out how to avoid being scammed, please see our blog:

    What is a pension scam?

    Follow Pension Life on twitter to keep up with all things pension related, good and bad.

  • CONTINENTAL WEALTH MANAGEMENT – PREMIER PENSION SOLUTIONS’ SISTER CO

    CONTINENTAL WEALTH MANAGEMENT – PREMIER PENSION SOLUTIONS’ SISTER CO

    Continental Wealth Management financial advisory firm closes 29.9.17
    Continental Wealth Management closes 29.9.17

    Continental Wealth Management (CWM) was a financial advisory firm based on the Costa Blanca in Spain.  Headed up by Darren Kirby, there were – until earlier in 2017 – 35 people working at the firm.  The firm claimed to have £50 million worth of assets under management and around 500 clients.  The firm closed down on 29.9.2017.

    During 2016/17, numerous clients of CWM began to realise that their pension and investment funds – managed by CWM – were shrinking in value dramatically.  In fact, many clients had seen alarming losses being reported on their valuation statements and had asked CWM for an explanation.  CWM had assured the distressed clients that these were “just paper losses” and advised them not to worry.

    It has now become clear that in fact many clients have indeed suffered catastrophic losses and there is a very great deal of concern.  One victim was taken into hospital on 25.9.17 with a brain hemorrhage and her husband fears that the distress of this situation has contributed to this life-threatening condition.

    It is feared that up to 40% of CWM’s clients may have been affected by this situation.

    BACKGROUND TO CWM

    CWM "advisers" acted as sharks
    CWM “advisers” acted as sharks

    In mid-2011, Stephen Ward’s Premier Pension Solutions (PPS) lost the lucrative Ark pension liberation scam when the Pensions Regulator placed the scheme in the hands of Dalriada Trustees.  Ward had advised 160 victims to transfer £10m worth of secure pensions into this scheme on the promise of having 50% of their pensions paid to them in cash.  He also assured them these payments would not be repayable or taxable and that the pensions would be invested in “high-end London residential properties”.

    In the event, neither of these assurances turned out to be true.  Dalriada is now making claims to recover the 50% liberations and HMRC has issued tax demands at 55% of the cash received (and the tax will still be payable even if the liberations are repaid).  The High Court called the Ark scheme a “fraud on the power of investment”.

    Having ruined 160 lives, and made up to £1 million profit out of the Ark victims, Ward immediately turned his attention to his next scam: Evergreen New Zealand QROPS and his Marazion “loans”.  Having seen how easily victims could be duped into transferring their safe pensions with the promise of 50% liberation, Ward appointed CWM as “introducers” to the scam.

    Here is an actual account by one of the Evergreen/PPS/CWM victims of what happened to her:

    Mrs. A: “I was first cold called by CWM in 2011. I first met Phil Kelman of CWM in January 2012. I was told only positive things about transferring my pensions and to be able to take 100% of my pension funds.

    This, however, changed after the first meeting and I was then told that due to the government closing loopholes I would only be able to get 50% of my pension fund and that the other 50% would be in the Evergreen QROPS earning enough interest over the 5 years to cover the 50% that I could withdraw (before the age of 55) – a win win situation!

    There was no mention of the 50% being given as a loan until much further down the line.  This was supposed to have taken 6 weeks at the most, but it actually took nearly 10 months. I was told that the “loan application” was a paper exercise just to cover things – I obviously have no proof of these conversations! Due to the fact that in the beginning it was not a “loan” there was no talk of a 55% tax charge, also as it was QROPS I was told it wouldn’t have incurred a tax bill.

    I was not given any opportunity to say what the consequences of losing my pension or gaining an extortionate tax bill would be – either in the short or long term.  If I had known of the huge risk of losing everything then obviously I would not have gone ahead. I did not state that I was willing to risk everything to get the “loan”.

    I was told that Evergreen was a safe place for my pension to be as Evergreen was “approved”.  I was given a graph to show how my pension would not only make the 50% back up but make more on top of it.”

    Marco Floreale - former CWM "adviser" - now MD of Carrick Wealth
    Marco Floreale – former CWM “adviser” – now MD of Carrick Wealth

    Mrs. A’s case was handled by CWM’s Marco Floreale (now Managing Director of Carrick Wealth) who claimed to be the managing director of CWM.  Her secure, final salary, £100k Royal Mail pension was transferred to Evergreen and she was forced to sign a five-year “lock in” before receiving her “loan”.  The loan agreement issued by Stephen Ward included annual interest at 8.5% compound which would mean that her £50k loan would have increased to £75k at the end of the five-year term.  She was also charged more than £10k in fees.

    There are now around 300 victims trapped in Evergreen as they are not allowed to transfer out.  Ever.  Between them they have lost £10m worth of pensions.  The CWM personnel involved in this scam claimed that PPS was their “sister” company and have offered no help or compensation for the victims’ losses and terrible distress.  One victim died of cancer in February 2017 and her husband is convinced that the stress of the Evergreen situation brought on the disease.

    Phil Kelman, Jon Meek, Robert Pearl, Gemma Broad and Anthony Downs were among the CWM personnel who assured the victims that the transfers were in their interests as well as safe and prudent.  It was, of course, later discovered that the Evergreen fund was invested in illiquid, high-risk, toxic funds – including personal, unsecured loans.  Evergreen was removed from the QROPS list in November 2012 and the victims have now been told they can never transfer out.

    It is not known how many other Stephen Ward/Premier Pension Solutions scams CWM was involved in, but when Evergreen got shut down CWM started acting as “advisers” to British expats in Spain and France.  They were still working with Stephen Ward of PPS who provided the transfer advice.  It is now thought they advised more than 500 people and that around 40% of these have suffered crippling losses to their investments.

    I do not know whether CWM ever disclosed their previous involvement with Stephen Ward’s scams to the clients – although it is doubtful that any people would have felt comfortable using CWM had they known they had been responsible for the 300 Evergreen victims.  Certainly, CWM did not disclose their past activities to either Trafalgar International or Momentum Pensions – had they done so they would never have been given terms of business by either firm.

    From 2013 onwards, CWM invested hundreds of low to medium risk clients’ investments in high-risk, illiquid assets.  CWM completely ignored the suitability issue and paid no heed to the clients’ preference for safe, low-risk investments.  Clients’ signatures were repeatedly copied and once the losses started to appear, CWM assured them that there was nothing to worry about and they were “only paper losses”.

    When asked why so many clients were put into professional-investor-only investments, CWM replied that the investors themselves were not the clients; but the insurance companies were the clients.  When I showed CWM evidence of forged signatures on dealing instructions several months ago, there was no response then and no further communication from them subsequently.

    In mid-September, it was reported that Darren Kirby and Anthony Downs had both resigned from CWM and on Friday 29th September 2017 the firm closed down altogether.  CWM is rumoured to have tried to become a tied agent of a Cyprus-based firm called Woodbrook.  But it is further suspected that Woodbrook has finally come to the conclusion that such an alliance may not be prudent.

    The most important thing now is the restitution of the victims’ funds.  OMI, Trafalgar and Momentum Pensions, have come to the table to try to find a solution and restore of the victims’ pensions and investments.  If we can achieve an equitable settlement, this will be a first in European financial services.  However, the parties who have not come to the table are life offices Generali and SEB, as well as other pension trustees including Concept, Sovereign, Pantheon, Elmo and STM.  It is no surprise that STM have not come to the table, because they pulled up the drawbridge in the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund scam, run by XXXX XXXX – now under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office.

    I would like to thank all the victims for their patience so far.  But it has now finally run out – unsurprisingly.  The mood has darkened and victims want action.  A valuable information and commentary resource is the Repdigger forum.  One interesting post recently reminded contributors that it was Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions who provided the initial transfer advice.  Nothing changes.

    Stephen Ward is also connected to Capita Oak.

    pension-life.com/top-10-deadliest-pension-scammers-hmrc/