Tag: deVere

  • INTERNATIONAL ADVISER’S GLOBAL FINANCIAL SERVICES AWARDS 2025 By Gary Robinson

    INTERNATIONAL ADVISER’S GLOBAL FINANCIAL SERVICES AWARDS 2025 By Gary Robinson

    Gary Robinson of International Adviser celebrates global undisclosed commissions on June 25th 2025.

    Gary Robinson,  journalist and filmmaker, now heads up International Adviser. IA poses as a financial services news magazine. In reality, it is a rag for promoting the products of the life offices (more accurately known as death offices) such as Utmost International, RL360, Hansard and Investors Trust. This enriches the commission-hungry firms – such as DeVere, Guardian Wealth Management, Holborn Assets and Mondial in Dubai.  (See victims’ reviews below).

    Gary Robinson, also MD of Money Map Media, pictured above promoting Nigel Green of DeVere, claims:

    “Really exciting to bring back the IA Global Financial Services Awards 2025 where the shortlist is solely decided by our advisers, brokers and wealth managers.”

    Death Office Quilter - now Utmost - set to win awards for misrepresentation and undisclosed commissions.
    Death Office Quilter – now Utmost – set to win awards for misrepresentation and undisclosed commissions.

    But Gary’s “excitement” is disingenuous as he knows full well that the advisers, brokers and wealth managers are at the receiving end of the fraudulently-concealed commission machine operated by the death offices. This leads to sales of inappropriate and risky investment products. And the word “adviser” is grossly misleading as the majority of the firms don’t sell advice – they sell products for fat and destructive commissions.

    Gary’s predecessor was Kirsten Hastings.  In 2020, Hastings handed out awards to her paymasters to rapturous canned applause:

    “And the winner of international life group non-UK is Quilter International. Congratulations!”

    “And the winner of International Portfolio Bond is Quilter International.  Congratulations!!”

    “And the winner of Digital Proposition is Quilter International. Congratulations!!!

    Hastings said that Quilter had been “overwhelmingly nominated by the advisers”.  Hardly surprising since that’s where their juicy, fraudulent commissions come from.

    Kirsten Hastings of International Adviser gushing over Quilter International (now Utmost International).

    These undisclosed commissions come in two layers: 7% or 8% on the portfolio bond itself.  Then commissions of up to 19% or more on the toxic, high-risk assets on the investment platforms provided by the death offices. So the “advice” to get sucked into these products is certainly not “independent”.

    Five years later, the 2025 IA awards not only target the death offices but also the rogue jurisdictions which act as enthusiastic incubators for so much international financial crime.  IA Nominations for International Financial Centre of the Year include:

    Hong Kong, Guernsey, Jersey and the Isle of Man. 

    All of which have harboured fraud, negligence and mis selling – with little or no intervention by the regulators.  

    Hong Kong is not as popular among fraudsters as Malta, Gibraltar and the Isle of Man.  However, in 2014 a group of conmen in Hong Kong – including Neil Masters, Michael Foggo, Mark Wearmouth and Chris Beale – launched the GFS Superannuation Scheme 2 occupational pension.  They then operated a multi-million-pound investment fraud in partnership with Czech broker Planet Pensions (aka Aktiva and Square Mile). 

    Neil Masters - Mastering the art of investment fraud.
    Neil Masters – Mastering the art of investment fraud.

    Hundreds of UK-residents were then conned into transferring their pensions to GFS in Hong Kong.  They lost everything in toxic, unregulated, high-commission investments.  Convicted criminals Mark Donnelly and Gordon Couch of Brite Advisors then tried to take over the scheme using Donnelly’s Hong Kong company Tribune – set up jointly with Nigel Green of DeVere.  Donnelly then bought Planet Pensions for £650,000 using money stolen from his Brite Advisors clients.

    The Hong Kong regulator did at least deregister the scheme when it realised it had been used for investment fraud – but then took no criminal action against the perpetrators.

    Guernsey and Jersey have also been involved with various investment scams over the past decade.  These include the 💲100 million unregulated collective investment EEA Life Settlements scam based in Guernsey and the £40 million Privilege Wealth payday loans swindle used as 100% investments in pension portfolios in Jersey.

    The Isle of Man hosts some of the World’s worst facilitators of fraud – including Hansard, Utmost, Quilter, Friends Provident International and RL360.  These firms have been responsible for the destruction of billions of pounds of life savings and are currently standing trial in the Isle of Man for misrepresentation and undisclosed commissions in two claims for £400 million worth of losses for hundreds of victims.  And these death offices have for many years paid millions of pounds in secret commissions to the worst of the commission-driven “advice” industry.  

    Hopefully Gary Robinson will give the audience, at the awards ceremony on 25th June, details of the crippling losses caused by Friends Provident International and Quilter International (now Utmost).

    The IA Award nominations for best international pension provider include Momentum Pensions in Malta.  This is astonishing as Momentum has the most Arbiter complaints of all the QROPS providers in this ineptly-regulated and corrupt jurisdiction.  The Malta Arbiter’s website clearly contains details of nearly 100 serious complaints against Momentum – most of which were upheld.  The Arbiter found that Momentum had failed to comply with the Malta financial services regulations and to have failed in its fiduciary duty to the scheme members.  And yet still the Malta regulator – despite the Malta Arbiter’s damning condemnation – has still not shut down Momentum (or STM for that matter – which came a shameful second to Momentum).

    Momentum Pensions had allowed millions of pounds’ worth of investments in toxic, high-risk structured notes by unregulated Spanish firm CWM.  Most of these failed, wiping out hundreds of members’ pensions.   The sole director of CWM has recently been convicted of fraud and sentenced to four years in prison.

    Momentum Pensions was not the only QROPS provider in Malta to facilitate investment fraud by rogue brokers.  This is borne out in detail through serious complaints published on the Malta Arbiter’s website also include Dominion Fiduciary Services, STM, Optimus, ITC and Mark Donnelly’s MC Trustees.  All these firms negligently allowed high-risk, high-commission, unsuitable investments by unscrupulous brokers (resulting in total loss for the victims).

    These Malta-based pension providers open the gateway to the death offices in the Isle of Man – who host the high-risk investments and facilitate the illegal commissions.  The Asset Review Team at Quilter International had reported concerns about this a decade ago:

    “Commerzbank and Leonteq structured products appear to be risky and not good value due to relatively high commissions.”

    The Asset Review Team also described the undisclosed commission arrangement operated by Nigel Green’s DeVere:

    “DeVere’s model is that they take 4% for advice plus an arrangement fee of 4%.  The 4% advice fee is disclosed.  The arrangement fee is not disclosed to the customer.  The client pays 104% for a structured product with an issue price of 100%.  If the client tried to exit the product on day 2 they would receive 96% for something that they paid 104% for.”

    (And let us not forget that this is just DeVere’s commission on the investments – they also receive up to 8% on the insurance bonds as well).

    Former IoM regulator Peter Kenny – as MD and CEO of Quilter International – did accept liability in 2018 for facilitating the CWM fraud.  He agreed to compensate the victims.  But then he realised this could compromise the £200 million claim against rogue structured note provider Leonteq – and reneged on the agreement.

    So, Gary Robinson, Head of International Adviser, before you start popping the champagne corks and handing out awards to firms which have facilitated fraud, why not announce a minute’s silence to remember the victims.  Describe the misery they have suffered; the poverty; the loss of a lifetime’s work to build up a pension; the broken marriages; the lost homes; the distress and depression.  And don’t forget the deaths.  NEVER FORGET THE DEATHS GARY.

    Gary Robinson of International Adviser celebrating global financial services fraud
    Gary Robinson of International Adviser celebrating global financial services fraud

    DeVere Reviews

    de Swaan 30 Mar 2025

    Rated 1 out of 5 stars

    Stay away from DeVere at all cost

    A few weeks ago I wrote a review of the pathetic service that, for four years (from 2020 to 2024) I received from the Mexican subsidiary of de Vere Group. Today I received a message from Trustpilot informing that my review was removed for “containing possible defamatory accusations”. I have expressed to Trustpilot my absolute willingness to present the evidence for each of the arguments contained in that message, which I summarize below.

    1. de Vere Group is the typical financial company that will approach you with a lot of kindness and good treatment in the first meetings, but then it will basically disappear and it will be up to the customer to chase it to be served.
    2. de Vere Group has the highest personnel rotation you’ve ever seen in a company. In four years I had five financial advisors, which basically leaves the client in an absolute state of defenselessness, because there is no institutional strategy and invariably the advisor in turn will blame the previous one for the decisions and poor performance of your portfolio.
    3. De Vere Group has no incentive for its clients to do well (and it shows) because its commissions are totally unrelated to the financial performance of its clients. Always look for advisors whose fees are related to the performance of your financial boards.
    4. After the departure of each advisor, with de Vere Group it will be up to the client to pursue the company to be served again and it is impossible to demand that there be the slightest continuity in the strategy because the new advisor will start the relationship as if you were a new client and promote new strategies criticizing his predecessor.
    5. When they retire, each advisor will seek to get you to maintain the relationship with him or her by talking badly about the company they are leaving (and I don’t blame them)

    I have dozens of emails that can prove every word of what I expose here. I wish de Vere were as good a financial advisor as he is to accuse defamation.

    Date of experience: 30 June 2024

    Joe Dobert 24 Feb 2025

    Rated 1 out of 5 stars

    Avoid

    They have possibly up to 10% markups on their structured notes and their advisors are not even aware of this. My recommendation: always compare with other providers.

    Date of experience: 24 November 2024

    David 15 Apr 2025

    Rated 1 out of 5 stars

    I have lost more than 80 % of what I invested in cash more than 18 years ago.invested USD 103,000 in a collective…

    I invested USD 103 000 in a collective investment bond with this company in Qatar in 2007. I was promised quarterly meetings with the advisor for him to give me advise. Subsequently, the company closed their Qatar office, closed their Dubai office, closed their Oman office, closed their South African office etc. As of 2025, My investment is worth USD 21000 and I am battling to get the money out of a company Utmost in the Isle of man. They are making me jump through hoops to provide them with all sorts of information before they will pay out. I have received no advice in 18 years, the bond has been handled by several organisations over the years and I have made several attempts to stop the constant fees. I hold De Vere totally responsible for the losses. What they are doing is destroying peoples lives by hiding behind their lawyers, the small print in their systems and collusion with other corrupt financial organisations.

    Date of experience: 15 April 2025

    Guardian Wealth Management Reviews

    R Reames 6 Nov 2023

    Rated 1 out of 5 stars

    Poor communication

    Poor communication. Happy to take their fees but with no portfolio management. Allowed my investment to lose almost 40% with no intervention.

    Date of experience: 06 November 2023

    Martyn Kilburn 30 Sept 2023

    Rated 1 out of 5 stars

    #leavemealone

    I would have not even bothered writing a review but skybound wealth keep hassling me about my investment. I looked on website reviews and they are all 5 stars. I can only imagines they have been left by the friends and family of skybound wealth. For me the whole investment thing was a bit of a mummer’s farce. I can only describe it as imagining you had two uncles visiting your house. 1. Uncle skybound wealth/uncle jimmy saville and 2. Uncle guardian wealth/ uncle rolf harris. Either way they seemed alright at the beginning but in the end violated you financially.

    Date of experience: 30 September 2023

    Holborn Assets Reviews

    Chad Kassis 17 Dec 2024

    Rated 1 out of 5 stars

    Save Your Money And Go Somewhere Else

    Holborn Assets has been one of the most disappointing companies I’ve ever dealt with. A few years ago, I entrusted them with a significant investment, expecting the typical services of a reputable asset management firm, regular updates, performance reviews, and professional portfolio management. Unfortunately, none of these expectations were met. Most of my emails went unanswered, their performance was subpar, and their high annual fees were completely unjustifiable. I was paying 3% annually for literally nothing! I initially thought the issue might be with our manager, but even escalating concerns to his superiors and their superiors proved futile. In reality, Holborn Assets seems to function more as a glorified sales operation than a legitimate asset management firm. If you’re looking for a trustworthy investment partner, a company that does the bare minimum of customer support, I strongly advise looking elsewhere. Save your money and your peace of mind! I will be writing an in-depth blog and video posts to document and share this awful experience!

    Date of experience: 15 December 2024


    Steve Poll
    10 Nov 2024

    Rated 1 out of 5 stars

    Verified

    Lost over 40% in a moderate risk fund over 7 years

    We invested a lump sum with Holburn Assets in 2017 with a risk profile of moderate (so, not high risk). By 2023 we had had enough of the fund depreciating in value each year. Having requested early exit from the scheme, it took 10 months to get our remaining monies transferred out. Whenever we or our new financial advisor provided information required to complete the exit, yet another request for even more information would suddenly appear.

    By the time we paid the early exit fees our investment had depreciated by over 40% (and that’s before you allow for inflation).

    When we complained to Holburn Assets we were told that the low amount of monies we got back was due to the exit fees. While these exit fees were high, most of the losses were from their poor investment and high annual fees. At no time did they suggest we move the monies into another fund.

    Our new financial advisor (who has performed well so far) summed up our experience with Holburn Assets very well – excessively high annual costs and extremely poor performance.

    Date of experience: 10 October 2024

    Verified

    Mondial Reviews

    M Robinson 8 May 2025

    Rated 1 out of 5 stars

    Beware!!!!!!

    Beware. Mark Donnelly owns a large stake in this company. Mark is a convicted criminal in the UK. He oversaw the collapse of Brite Advisors which was forcibly liquidated by Australian regulator because of massive irregularities – Mark then quickly left Australia to come to the UAE.

    Date of experience: 09 May 2025

    15 May 2024

    Be Careful!

    Be Careful!
    A major Owner of this business was the owner of the firm of advisors that managed my retirement savings. Margin loans were raised by the firm of advisors, using our retirement assets (which were supposed to be held in trust) as collateral. Money went missing and the loans were not repaid. The firm has been placed in receivership by Australian Authorities. Our retirement assets are now frozen.

    Date of experience: 15 May 2024

    Useful3Share

    MU

    12 May 2024

    Rated 1 out of 5 stars

    My UK offshore retirement fund (QROPS)…

    My UK offshore retirement fund (QROPS) is now frozen, until the Receivers of Brite have figured out where the missing funds went and how much is left of retirement investors Assets. These assets (supposedly held in trust) were used by Brite as collateral for margin loans, to expand their portfolio of clients and to buy luxury cars. Brite stopped paying the loans, were placed in receivership and investors assets were frozen. The owner of Brite is a major owner of Mondial Dubai, think twice before investing there.

    Date of experience: 12 May 2024

    British Expat in Colorado

    8 May 2024

    Rated 1 out of 5 stars

    AVOID

    I don’t know about how Mondial operated previously, but recently I understand a certain Mark Donnelly acquired 75% controlling ownership. He had previously led Brite Advisors globally which was shut down by regulators in Australia early in 2024 after reporting issues and a significant hole was ‘discovered’ in client’s pensions Assets under Management – I would NOT recommend getting involved with ANY company associated with him.

    Date of experience: 01 May 2024

  • Fraud in Spain – Julius Baer

    Fraud in Spain – Julius Baer

    Spain is, sadly, the World’s capital of wealth scamming.  For more than a decade, wealth planning has been perverted and converted into a commission-laden fraud.  This financial crime has relieved thousands of victims of their pensions and life savings.

    Originally a private Swiss bank, Julius Baer now wants to diversify into the Spanish wealth market.  Hopefully, this is very good news.  To date, Spain has been dominated by the dross of the commission churning machine.  Some genuine, professional, qualified, fee-based financial advice in Spain would be welcome and also essential to clean up this crime-ridden territory.

    Julius Baer has created a new team which includes Claudio Beretta and Claudia Linares.  So just to give them a few friendly, helpful tips, here’s my message to them – which I hope they will accept in the spirit in which it is given.

    If this newcomer to the Spanish market can bring proper fee-based financial advice to British expats in Spain, Julius Baer could change financial services the World over. The absurdly-stupid EU regulator: ESMA allows firms with only an insurance-mediation license to provide investment advice on portfolios held within insurance bonds. This, of course, facilitates most of the financial crime in Spain and the rest of Europe.

    This widespread fraud – encouraged and handsomely rewarded by the death offices – oils the wheels of the illegal commission machine. These freely-spinning wheels result in herds of unqualified “advisers” (including drug addicts, convicted killers, prostitutes and fraudsters) conning thousands of victims out of their pensions.

    Julius Baer proudly reports that it has created a new team, headed by Claudio Beretta and Claudia Linares, which includes Jorge Saavedra Doménech and Carlos Navarro Sabán.

    This team is looking to provide services in the fields of wealth planning and wealth management. Julius Baer reports this constitutes;

    “the overall Bank’s strategic conviction to further strengthen their presence in Western Europe and particularly in Spain.”

    Hopefully, Julius Baer will avoid death offices and unlicensed spivs. And, even more essential to the fraud-saturated Spanish market, Julius Baer must make it clear there will be no secret or half-secret commissions involved – and concentrate purely on proper fee-based advice which is qualified and truly independent.

  • RL360 and FPI – ’til death (or poverty) do us part

    RL360 and FPI – ’til death (or poverty) do us part

    RL360’s acquisition of Friends Provident International may be set to ruin even more investors internationally. It will certainly increase competition with Quilter (or Skandia, or Ann Summers or whatever OMI are calling themselves this season).

    RL360's toxic acquisition of FPI will be a marriage made in hell, unless David Kneeshaw pays compensation to FPI's victims.  Thousands of FPI policy holders have lost their life savings due to being invested in high-risk, unsuitable investments.

    The biggest question – and one which International Adviser’s Kirsten Hastings forgot to ask RL360 David Kneeshaw when she interviewed him on 16.7.2020 – is:

    Why on earth RL360 wanted to buy a company which is being sued for £millions after thousands of FPI victims lost their life savings in a high-risk fund mis-selling scandal?

    During the International Adviser 12-minute video, Kirsten never brought the subject up once. Forgetfulness? Deliberately avoiding the issue? FPI is being sued alongside Quilter – main sponsor of International Adviser.

    Kneeshaw seemed like an amiable fellow in the interview as he proudly announced that “all good things come to those who wait” (a sentiment with which thousands of death bond investors would strongly disagree). Kneesup also proclaimed that he is glad to be able to integrate the businesses and that the marriage has produced a “good, strong, stable company”.

    But the question hung in the air like a fart in an elevator: what about the £100m+ worth of high-risk funds which were “entirely inappropriate for unsophisticated investors” (International Adviser’s words – not mine). And why didn’t Kirsten mention it? And why didn’t Kneesup explain what provision he has made to compensate thousands of FPI’s victims?

    Kneesup confirmed that RL360 paid £259 million for FPI (£209 million in cash and £50 million in deferred cash). So has he kept back another hundred million or so to settle FPI’s liabilities to its victims who have lost their life savings?

    Victims staring financial ruin in the face will want to know why RL360 didn’t just pay – say – £159 million for FPI and keep back £100 million for the victims. Or perhaps the £50 million in “deferred cash” is being put aside for that?

    Or maybe, FPI should have paid RL360 to take the company away and sort out the toxic and destructive mess which has ruined thousands of policy holders.

    Kneesup went on to proclaim that the future of FPI “is secure and can carry on as normal”. Well, I bloody well hope not! “Normal” has been an absolute disaster which has resulted in a catastrophe of epic proportions. FPI was giving terms of business to hordes of unlicensed, unscrupulous, unqualified “advisers” (in reality, just bond salesmen).

    These “Chiringuitos” (as the Spanish regulator refers to them in their warning about financial scams) have destroyed £ millions in their relentless quest for commission.

    The deeply iniquitous practices – so enthusiastically facilitated by life offices – included charging victims fees, plus an 8% commission on the (entirely unnecessary) insurance bonds, plus further commissions on the toxic investments offered by the life offices.

    Another “hot” topic that Kneesup failed to mention was how the RL360/FPI “marriage” intends to compete with Quilter in the “race to the bottom” of offshore financial services. Of course, it won’t exactly be difficult since Peter Kenny – CEO of Quilter/Ann Summers – will deal with any old “advisers”. Kenny certainly isn’t fussy: the sole director of one of his leading “clients” from 2010 to 2017 was a former prostitute and porn star (whose firm destroyed much of the £100m placed in insurance bonds and invested in structured notes).

    However, I really do like to give people the benefit of the doubt. Assuming that Kneesup does have at least a few honourable intentions, here are some friendly suggestions as to how the RL360/FPI marriage could help clean up this toxic “death bond” industry:

    • Don’t deal with advisory firms which don’t have a license
    • Don’t deal with advisory firms which don’t have an investment license
    • Don’t deal with advisory firms whose “advisers” aren’t qualified
    • Don’t deal with advisory firms who have a history of investing their victims’ life savings and pensions in toxic crap (high-risk, professional-investor-only funds and structured notes)
    • Don’t pay commissions – if the insurance bonds are any good, and the clients genuinely need them, the products will sell themselves
    • Don’t tie investors in for fixed terms – give them the flexibility to get out whenever they want or need to
    • Don’t offer investments – the industry has shown it is incapable of performing asset reviews and weeding out toxic rubbish
    • Keep the fees in proportion to the fund value – allow flexibility/drawdown without unnecessary “drag” on the funds
    • Only allow advisers to sell insurance bonds when they are actually needed (which is hardly ever)

    But the biggest friendly suggestion of all to the amiable Mr. Kneesup with the fringe on top is:

    RL360's acquisition of FPI has the potential to increase financial scams Worldwide.  Either David Kneeshaw can help clean up this toxic landscape, or become just another scammer like Peter Kenny of Quilter.

    Address the elephant in the room: pay compensation to the thousands of FPI and RL360 victims who have lost their life savings and are facing financial ruin.

    In his euphoria at the completion of the acquisition of FPI, Kneesup must remember that the insurance bond is the World’s biggest cause of offshore financial crime. Insurance bonds have been ruled by the Spanish Supreme Court as being invalid for the purpose of holding investments. Virtually all insurance bonds ever sold in Spain have been done so illegally – it is a criminal offence to sell insurance bonds outside the precise stipulations of the Spanish insurance regulations in Spain.

    I really hope that the elephant in the room will be dealt with. David Kneeshaw has a golden opportunity to help reform the offshore financial services industry. He can emerge from the appalling news of this marriage made in hell as a hero in shining armour – or just another sordid perpetrator of scams and financial crime. He can put Quilter’s Peter Kenny to shame, or become just as bad as him. The World will be watching. Let us hope Kneeshaw chooses wisely – and becomes “Kneesup” rather than “Kneesdown”.

    A number of “advisory” firms are now facing criminal proceedings for fraud, disloyal administration and falsification of commercial documentation – all of which involved the illegal sale of Quilter, RL360 or FPI insurance bonds. Kneeshaw now has a choice: help tackle this widespread crime, or keep on facilitating it.

  • Long-Term Savings Pig

    Long-Term Savings Pig

    Long-term savings plans by Friends Provident, Generali, Zurich, Hansard and RL360.  These have been around for years and are typically mis-sold by seedy, unregulated advisory firms.  Why don’t we come up with an alternative? THE LONG-TERM SAVINGS PIG!

    Roughly speaking, the con artists at Friends Provident, Generali, Zurich, Hansard and RL360 structure these products so that for every two pounds saved, one pound goes to the life office and the spiv who sold the plan to the victim in the first place.

    The adviser earns a packet by selling these useless plans and few victims continue saving for more than a few years – long before the end of the term.  Pretty quickly, the con artists’ clients realise they’ve been scammed and that they’ve inadvertently signed up to an expensive, unworkable plan with no flexibility.  They really would have been better off sticking their money under the mattress.

    So here’s my suggested alternative: the LONG-TERM SAVINGS PIG:

    You see, the problem with most long-term savings plans is that you are locked in and there is no flexibility.  Plus there are heavy penalties and half of what you save goes in fees and commissions.

    Imagine being able to save what you want, when you want, for free!  All you have to do is be strict with yourself and save as much as you can, regularly and generously.

     

    The problem is, of course, that so many offshore advisory firms sell products – rather than provide advice.  Advisers earn huge commissions from mis-selling these appalling long-term savings plans – and ruin their clients in the process.

    After as little as a year or two, the victims realise they’ve been conned and that they are simply pouring their hard-earned money into the pockets of the adviser and the life office.

     

     

    In a perfect world, these dreadful products should be banned.  All the advisers who have conned so many victims into believing they are paying into a flexible plan which is good value for money should be prohibited from ever working in financial services again.  And the rogue life offices should be brought to justice and made to refund the victims’ money.

    The reasons why these savings products don’t work are:

    • Few people can guarantee they will be able to save the contracted amount each month for the agreed period.  People’s earnings do fluctuate and circumstances change.
    • Few people actually realise what they are signing up to.  The advisers don’t tell them how expensive and inflexible the plans are.
    • Few people understand that half of what they save will be eaten up by fees and commissions.
    • Most people who get conned into these plans end up abandoning them and writing off what they have lost.

    Remember, it’s your money and your life.  Don’t get conned into giving half your savings to the scammer and the life office.

    Just to make things crystal clear, if you sign up to a 25-year savings plan with one of the leading life offices, you will pay the following amount of fees over the life of the plan:

    46.64% Friends Provident Premier 
    47.80% Generali Vision 
    48.07% Zurich Vista 
    51.28% Hansard Vantage 
    51.68% RL360 Quantum 

    So, if you save a total of £366,600 over 25 years with RL360, you will pay them (and your adviser) £189,460 in fees and commissions.

    BE SMART.  BUY A PIGGY BANK – YOU CAN GET A GOOD ONE FOR UNDER A TENNER WITH 100% BUYER SATISFACTION.

    Risky illiquid  investments from Katar Investments.

    Katar Investment Weapons

     

     

  • International Investment interview with Pension Life´s Angie Brooks

    International Investment interview with Angie Brooks, founder of Pension Life this week. This blog is written by Kim, Angie´s Assistant. Here´s the interview video which explains how Pension Life works to help victims of pension and investment scams. The interview also raises the question as to why pension and investment scams are so prolific – despite Angie’s hard work to bring them into the public eye – and bring scammers to justice.

    As Angie states in the video, Pension Life was originally founded to help victims of the ARK pension scam with their tax liabilities.  However, four years on and Pension Life has evolved. Angie is now involved in helping 34 different groups of victims of pension and investment scams.  Angie regularly goes to the regulators and ombudsmen in different jurisdictions and makes complaints on their behalf.

    Pension Life Blog - Pension and investment scams take place worldwide - International Investment interview with Angie BrooksPension Life is based in Spain, and Angie works with clients all over the world. Pension and investment scammers have no boundaries or borders and will weave their evil mischief wherever they can find British expats.

    Angie offers her members a fixed membership fee, meaning “people know exactly what they are going to pay in advance”. Using privately-funded solicitors can be pricey and sometimes even non-starterer. Angie has, over the past four years, educated herself in pension and investment scams – how they work and how they are (constantly) evolving. Members can rest assured that they are being represented by a leading expert in the area of pension and investment scams.

    If it were up to Angie, the people and firms responsible for pension and investment scams would all be sent to jail and the keys thrown away. With her weekly blogs and videos on the Pension Life website, and with the use of social media, Angie is hoping to get the word out there and warn both the public and the industry.

    Pension Life Blog - International investment interview with Angie Brooks of Pension Life - Pension and investment scams Angie stands up for the masses, where their single complaints are lost in a pile of excuses by the firms responsible for the destruction of their funds. She meets and speaks to as many victims as she can.  Each victim has his or her own tragedy – often involving serious health issues and terrible financial hardship as a result of being scammed out of their life savings.

    Some of Angie´s blogs are very hard hitting towards the firms and advisors who condone the use of pension and investment scams. The role Angie plays in uncovering the crooks of the industry is not without risk and often her outspoken words attract negative attention. Angie often receives threats of being sued by the lawyers who represent the companies she blogs about.

    Angie states, “But If I was frightened I wouldn´t do it.”

    Its not just solicitors who bombard her in outrage about the clearly-evidenced facts that Angie reports, she also has a herd of internet trolls who target her incessantly.

    Angie says with reference to her blog trolls:

    “TPension Life Blog - International Investment interview with Angie Brooks of Pension Life - Pension and investment scams - internet trollhere is a reason why I write my blogs.  Firstly to warn the public and expose the things that go wrong in the financial services industry – to try to help new people avoid falling victim to scams, negligence and mis-selling; secondly to bring firms to the table to negotiate a solution to a problem where a client has suffered losses in their pension or investment portfolio.  Few people have funds to instruct lawyers to sue firms to force them to pay redress for clients’ losses, so it is much better and cheaper to get the firm to volunteer to do so amicably and in a non-contentious manner.
     
    But my blogs do upset the scammers and they regularly post negative comments.  I have recently been accused of ‘being in cahoots with’ deVere and other companies and individuals.  It is being claimed that I am being paid not to write about them, and to attack their competitors.  It will come as no surprise that those who are now attacking me and accusing me of all sorts of things are the ones whose firms’ questionable practices I have been blogging about recently.

    Pension Life Blog - International investment interview with Angie Brooks of Pension Life - Pension and investment scams deVere logoI have in the past had very public spats on social media with deVere AND its CEO, Nigel Green, as well as the others who I have been accused of not writing about. And, if I need to have spats again in the future, I will not hesitate to do so.  Like most firms, deVere has indeed made some serious mistakes in the past.  However, I do not have any live, unresolved client complaints against the firm.  

    But this is all just rubbish from scammers who are trying to deflect attention from the main issues that I am writing about.  The commenters ignore the facts I am reporting about – i.e. real scams which destroy victims’ life savings – and pick away at me personally.  That is absolutely fine, because I am more than happy to be criticised and lied about – because it says more about the writer than it does about me.  The people who matter know the truth.

    Regular readers of my blogs may notice that sometimes my blogs quietly disappear with no public explanation.  There is a reason for that too.  The blogs often bring firms to the table and we get stuff done.  Sometimes firms even preempt matters and make contact even before I get a chance to do a blog.  

    If I call a firm to discuss a problem and they enter into helpful and constructive dialogue over how to solve it, I don’t blog about it but keep the matter confidential.  There are firms who quietly sort things out without making a fuss in a dignified and conscientious manner.  In contrast, however, there are firms that just pull up the shutters – such as OMI and STM Fidecs.  Hence why I keep blogging about them.

    DeVere is indeed one of a number of firms I don’t currently blog about.  So for the nice gentleman called Graham and another charming chap who calls himself “Innocent Bystander” who are accusing me of being partisan, don’t think just about what I do write, but about what I don’t write.  There are good reasons for both.  

     I will continue to expose the actions, practices and vulgar conduct of firms who continue to ignore my questions;  And I will tag all those who are stupid and irresponsible enough to keep on working for these firms and helping to fill these firms already bulging pockets.  In contrast, however, Holborn Assets and Guardian Wealth Management have engaged in relation to complaints, and so I have removed all blogs which mention the firm.”

    For the future, Angie hopes things will get better and that the war on pension and investment scams can be won.  However, much help is needed and Angie calls for the whole industry to get involved and make it their business to know what is happening to expats worldwide.

    Airing the problem is one of the best solutions and International Investment has taken a keen interest in the campaigning side of what Pension Life does.  It would be a really good thing if some of the media tried to educate themselves on what are the key issues and avoid barking up the wrong trees.

  • EYE ON DUBAI – GUARDIAN WEALTH MANAGEMENT AND HOLBORN ASSETS

    EYE ON DUBAI – GUARDIAN WEALTH MANAGEMENT AND HOLBORN ASSETS

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    GUARDIAN WEALTH MANAGEMENT AND HOLBORN ASSETS

    A TALE OF TWO PUZZLES

    Don’t you just hate it when you see a puzzling situation and can’t quite put your finger on what is behind it?  There are two firms in Dubai that have got me thinking these past few days and I reckon the “jungle drums” in the Gulf have finally confirmed my best suspicions.

    Guardian Wealth Management and Holborn Assets: two financial advisory firms HQ’d in Dubai with clear aspirations to become leading global players, but hampered by the skeletons rattling in their respective cupboards.  Both firms have recently poached rivals’ staff in a bid to increase sales.  But both have some pretty challenging hurdles to overcome before they can be taken seriously as contenders for the status of leading, award-winning, multi-national advisers.

    My guess is that Guardian is likely to win the race, and leave Holborn struggling with its own self-inflicted albatrosses.  And the guy who will lead Guardian to victory will be former deVere managing director, Mike Coady who jumped ship from deVere to Guardian a while back.  But what was puzzling me was why would a man at the top of his profession, earning an eye-watering £250k salary and heading up the World’s biggest financial services company, take a less senior, non-executive position with a small firm which is heavily in debt to the Welsh government?

    Coady’s gone from M.D. to “chief commercial officer” (and you can imagine the chorus of snorts that title caused throughout the industry) in the blink of an eye.  A huge disaster for his c.v.?  Or a golden opportunity perhaps?  I think the answer to that question may be contained in a quote from Coady just a couple of months ago: “there is something that money can’t buy, and that is experience”.

    At the beginning of 2016, Guardian poached three of deVere’s staff and paid them nearly a quarter of a million quid in (how should I phrase this?) “bonuses” – aka “golden handshakes”.  But only a few months earlier, Guardian had been exposed as having received a GBP 850k grant from the Welsh government for a venture which promptly collapsed, and then failing to repay the grant.  So, effectively British taxpayers were paying for the very “experience” which Coady was saying money couldn’t buy.

    A “little birdie” has tipped me the nod that Coady is going to rescue Guardian’s tarnished image, by forgoing his GBP 250k annual salary for two years, and forcing the three deVere poachees – John Green, Joe Woodhouse and William Burrows – to repay the GBP 250k “bonuses” they received.  And repay the Welsh government every penny they are owed.

    Interestingly, Coady has been joined by another ship jumper: Darren Jones of Old Mutual International.  I haven’t found out whether he is also going to forgo his previous  GBP 250k salary to help speed up the repayment of the Welsh debt, but I am sure somebody in the “jungle” will tell me sooner or later.

    Alas, Holborn Assets don’t have a Mike Coady to rescue them and give them a shot at the “crown”.  Despite also recently poaching a rival firm’s staff (Finsbury Associates’ Nicholas Thompson and a team of five salesmen), Holborn can’t shake off the disgrace of their adviser Paul Reynolds, now allegedly going under a different name to hide his past.  Fined GBP 300k and banned by the FCA for a series of misdemeanours (including falsification of documents- as confirmed by the FCA in the UK), Reynolds clearly knows where the body is hidden as he remains a prominent member of Bob Parker’s team.

    Funnily enough, I ran into Reynolds in Dubai last year when I had gone to Holborn Assets’ office to see Parker – who heads up the firm.  Parker had been dodging my calls and emails for months while I had been trying to get him to agree to compensate one of his victims whose pension had been decimated by Holborn’s pension investment “advice” in Spain – a jurisdiction where they had no licences.  The poor client had spent years watching the high-risk investments Holborn had put her pension into shrink alarmingly, while she discovered the huge commissions and fees Holborn had earned out of her misfortune.

    During my wait in reception at Holborn’s Al Shafar Tower office in Dubai, Mr. Reynolds had a visitor – and we had a very nice, interesting chat – not really relevant here or now (another time perhaps).  Then Mr. Parker’s charming executive assistant Chimaa Meftah took me to a pleasant(ish) meeting room and listened patiently and sympathetically to my account of how Holborn had ruined a victim’s pension and health.  Chimaa promised that Mr. Parker would contact me as soon as he got back from South Africa.  However, I fear he may have been mistaken for a missionary as he doesn’t appear to have returned to any part of civilisation which has either telephones or internet.

    So the puzzle is solved as the clever and canny Mr. Coady clearly knows something that Bob Parker doesn’t: you can’t move forward successfully until and unless you sort out the messes and disgraces of the past.  Coady has a coherent plan for repaying the Welsh government and restoring faith in the integrity of Guardian’s advisers – after all, who would want to listen to any advice, let alone financial advice, from people who have taken bribes paid for by British taxpayers.

    Mike Coady made a resounding prediction for deVere back in October 2016: “There’s a clear and definite trend that independent bodies, agencies and organisations are increasingly recognising our (deVere’s) high quality work, advice and service – and I am confident this will gain further momentum in 2017.”

    So here’s my own prediction for 2017: in the wake of the recent resignation of Guardian’s CEO David Howell, Coady will, before long, get a promotion and a significant stake in the business.  Money may not be able to buy experience – but it sure helps clean the skeletons out of the cupboards.  Perhaps, as Mr. Coady won’t be earning any salary for the next two years, he might like to offer his consultancy services and priceless experience to Holborn Assets in his spare time?