Tag: Optimus Retirement Benefit Scheme No. 1

  • Blackmore Global pension scam victim who cares

    The following blog was written by Stephen Sefton: a Blackmore Global Victim who cares about pension scams.

    Stephen Sefton scammed by David Vilka of Square Mile International Financial Services.

    Stephen was scammed by David Vilka of Square Mile International Financial Services around six or seven years ago.  Vilka, who had neither qualifications nor a license to provide pension or investment advice, arranged the transfer of Mr. Sefton’s substantial final salary pension.


    Stephen’s pension was transferred to the Optimus QROPS in Malta
    . It was placed in an Investors Trust offshore bond in the Cayman Islands. Then it was invested in high-risk, high-commission, unregulated funds. One of these was Blackmore Global.


    A determined fight on the part of the tenacious Mr. Sefton did eventually result in the recovery of a large part of his funds.  But his case was a rare exception.  He was, indeed, very fortunate that he didn’t lose the whole lot.  Most victims suffer total loss in such circumstances.

    It is now looking very likely that Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh’s Blackmore Global Fund is going to be as worthless as their other investment scam: Blackmore Bond (now in administration).

    Pension Scam victim Stephen Sefton writes:

    Finally, after two months of radio silence, Angie Brooks once again pens an article. It’s about time!

    It’s an interesting title: Who cares about Careys and the world of pension scams?”

    I care. I don’t know why I should but I do. Maybe because I am seeing a media frenzy over the recent collapse of mini bonds in the UK. Especially LC&F and Blackmore Bonds plc to name just two. Meanwhile, victims of pension scams from the last decade are being forgotten and swept under the carpet. Much to the delight of many of those that oiled the wheels of the scams and helped them to happen – especially the QROPS and SIPPS!

    Interconnected web of pension scammers

    There are many (especially the scammers) that really don’t like me. This is why they tried to offer me a paltry £6000 to silence me. Seriously?

    There are many that don’t like my rhetoric and I regularly get blocked on Twitter, or thrown off Facebook. Here, I get to tell it like it is, however unpalatable the truth may be.

    What I have learned over the years is that there’s an intricate web, woven around these scams. This interconnects a number of players whose names just keep on cropping up.

    Malta was clearly the jurisdiction of choice for many pension scams. It seems to have hundreds, if not thousands, of victims. Many of these are not yet even aware that they face financial ruin in their retirement.

    In my opinion, Malta has much to answer for and really should clean up its act. Journalists rarely focus their gaze on the real facilitators of pension scams: the Mickey Mouse jurisdictions that turn a blind eye and allow them on their patch.

    Why are they not aware? QROPS Scheme Administrators are sending out fictitious statements implying members’ pensions are still intact. One member of STM Pensions Malta was sent a statement in Sep 2020 showing his pension still intact just one month after STM wrote to members invested in Blackmore Global – Nunn & McCreesh’s offshore unregulated collective – that in fact they (STM) have no idea what the value is!

    As it happens, STM did manage to get Nunn & McCreesh to publish the underlying assets for Blackmore Global, in May 2020 (over 6 years since the fund was launched). Even with this list, there is little idea what the fund is worth because the underlying assets are themselves useless, opaque, private ventures in yet more Mickey Mouse jurisdictions. One offshore fund is already being pursued by Dalriada as part of other failed pension schemes from early in the last decade – but Dalriada are getting nowhere with it.

    I am not convinced that “The Adams v Carey case is likely to herald a flood of similar claims …”.

    Manita Khuller won her appeal against Guernsey-based trustee FNB International
    Courageous Manita Khuller in front of the Guernsey courthouse

    The Ombudsman case that went in favour of Mr. N against the Northumbria Police Authority (PO-12763) in July 2018, was also a landmark case against a negligent UK pension provider that had a tick box culture. The ceding provider transferred Mr. N’s pension without due regard for the Pensions Regulator’s requirements of 2013 for extra due diligence when handling transfers.

    That decision doesn’t appear to have “herald[ed] a [likewise] flood of similar claims” three years on.

    Also, the landmark appeal, Khuller v First International Trustees Ltd (Guernsey) (“FNBIT”) that was won by Manita Khuller, hasn’t seen any likewise “flood of similar” cases.

    Why not?

    The reason, in my opinion, is twofold:

    Firstly, the victims were targeted by scammers because they were “ignorant”. That’s not meant to be derogatory.

    They knew diddly squat about pensions, regulations, investments – nothing! They trusted the “adviser” – the con man persuading them to transfer their pension. For a con to be successful you need the essential skill of gaining people’s trust. Scammers have this skill in abundance. The ignorant fall for it every time.

    Angie Brooks' Blackmore Bond and Global Fund Facebook Group

    Victims not only knew nothing about pensions and investments, they didn’t even know how to spot they were being conned. They were the perfect mark for scammers. They didn’t know what they didn’t know. Like taking candy from a baby – although a baby knows it is being robbed and often screams quite loudly (so maybe not the best analogy).

    Secondly, even if victims have now discovered they have lost their pension, they have absolutely no idea what next to do about it. The ones I have come across are like fish out of water. Completely at a loss of where to go.

    On Angie’s facebook group, one person recently told of their father’s loss of pension to Nunn & McCreesh’s Blackmore Global. In an attempt to do “something” the person went to the FCA on behalf of their father only to be told that investing in unregulated funds on the advice of unregulated advisers bars them from the compensation scheme and Ombudsman service. The FCA suggested looking into the Malta compensation scheme – which is a joke! That was the extent of help from the FCA. As useful as a chocolate teapot.

    It hadn’t occurred to this person that either the ceding provider is guilty of maladministration for the transfer in the first place, AND/OR the receiving scheme in Malta is in “breach of trust” because it too is bound by legislation controlling its activities.

    So the best next step is to pursue one or other side of the transfer – or both.

    Manita Khuller went after the receiving trustee through the courts and eventually won. However, such legal action isn’t for the faint hearted. It cost her huge sums of money, which she took out loans to fund. Losing was not an option. On top of already losing her pension. It was a nightmare for her. I know – I was with her every step of the way since 2018 when we were introduced by a journalist. This was her only option because the Mickey Mouse jurisdiction, Guernsey, had no “Ombudsman” service. Moreover, the incestuous nature in Guernsey meant law firms declined to represent her. She had to go it alone for the first trial, adding a layer of stress no person should be subjected to. There are few victims with this determination or courage willing to take this course of action – so they don’t, even though she has paved the way.

    Mickey Mouse Incestuous Jurisdiction of Guernsey

    We in the UK, at least, have the Ombudsman and now – relatively recently – Malta also has one (the Office of the Arbiter for Financial Services (“OAFS”)).

    Guernsey is a backward, biased, Mickey Mouse, incestuous jurisdiction – which is why scammers love it.

    The Scheme administrators on both sides of the transfer will fight tooth and nail and argue the victim is wholly to blame for their losses. Many victims just have no idea how to go about presenting their case.

    There is no “free” professional service available to help victims navigate this minefield. Mr. N (referenced earlier) paid lawyers £25k to make his case. But the Ombudsman did not award costs – saying that it is not necessary to engage lawyers. However, it is not easy to fight a pension scheme that will employ a top notch law firm to present its defence. So by and large, the victims I have come across are at a serious disadvantage because they have no idea how to seek justice and have nowhere to go and don’t know how to present their case. That’s why they were targeted by scammers in the first place. They were (and still are) easy pickings.

    In the article above, Ms. Brooks quoted from the appeal. I will do same. A more appropriate section, §115(i),

    “… while consumers can to an extent be expected to bear responsibility for their own decisions, there is a need for regulation, among other things to safeguard consumers from their own folly.”

    Carey Olsen staff in shorts
    Members of Staff (in shorts!) from Carey Olsen

    These victims are indeed victims of their own folly, but they never realised what they were doing. On both sides of the equation (ceding providers and the receiving schemes) there were duties of care designed to protect these victims “from their own folly”. In all cases I have come across, neither side fulfilled those duties of care. On the UK side there was contempt for the Pensions Regulator’s requirements of 2013, despite growing industry concerns for pension scams. On the receiving side, the QROPS didn’t (and still don’t) care about their members – period. And neither did the authorities in these Mickey Mouse jurisdictions. It was the perfect match and thousands of vulnerable victims are paying the price.

    Carey Pensions was started in 2009 by the Carey Group. The Group is controlled in Guernsey by ten partners and ex-partners of the Law Firm Carey Olsen. This is an amusing coincidence in my opinion. Carey Olsen, perhaps the top law firm in Guernsey, represented FNBIT against Manita Khuller – and LOST at appeal by the way.

    STM acquired Carey Pensions in 2019.
    STM also had/has victims of the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund scam which collapsed in 2016
    STM announced its purchase of Harbour Pensions with some 1600 members. Some are invested in Blackmore Global.

    At least one was invested in The Resort Group according to this money marketing article.

    Justin Caffery of Harbour Pensions ironically teaching stress relief
    Justin Caffery floating in the sea while preaching stress relief

    Harbour Pensions was started by Justin Caffrey, in 2013 and says in the STM announcement, “Harbour was always a five year plan…”. Justin made his money and now runs meditation classes (seriously?). He should meditate on the misery, caused by Nunn & McCreesh, of hundreds – if not thousands – of vulnerable victims of Blackmore Global that he allowed into his pension scheme, in my opinion, willingly and knowing the consequences of such an unsuitable investment. He permitted 100% allocation of one member’s pension into a fund that has never published audited accounts. At the material time, knowing the fund was opaque and unregulated, Harbour (and other QROPS) were happily permitting transfers and 100% allocations.

    The fund’s offer document, which Harbour had, says the investment has a ten year lock-in. That condition, which the QROPS knew and willingly accepted, effectively locked Harbour (and subsequently STM) into an asset they knew nothing about – and still don’t – for ten years, with absolutely no knowledge or control of what Nunn & McCreesh were doing with the money.

    The Scheme administrators in these QROPS in Malta were, and still are, completely at the whim of Nunn & McCreesh – who could misappropriate the pensions as they wish and the administrators could do absolutely nothing about it. The QROPS effectively abdicated all powers they had to run the scheme and mitigate risks in the interest of members, to Nunn & McCreesh. They have been passive bystanders to the destruction of their members’ pensions ever since. This is, in my opinion, in breach of the Malta Trust and Trustees Act. They are also willingly and knowingly in breach of trust.

    All this really begs the question whether STM go looking for dodgy pension schemes or are they just plain stupid? What on earth is going on and why hasn’t the MFSA taken them to task? They seem to attract scams like flies to a pile of dung.

    Blackmore Global Victim who cares about pension scams – says victims are being forgotten

    Victims are being forgotten by the media and authorities. Victims had no idea what they were doing or how to seek restitution. They are guilty of nothing but ignorance and ALL the actors in these scams have gotten away with it. They have ALL dipped their hand in the pension pots and kept the spoils – and now moved on, leaving the pension pots empty.

    This is frustrating in the extreme because I see no evidence of any “flood of similar claims”. The victims are, for the most part, still ignorant and there is no one “helping” them. This site (Pension Life) once purported to “help” victims but I am not at all convinced it has done much and now has long periods of radio silence. The newbies in this scam space, the journalists claiming to be the heroes that “blew the whistle” or warned the FCA, are just chasing big headlines for their editor on today’s flavour of the month: mini bonds. Soon the mini bond victims will be forgotten just like the victims of Defined Benefit Pension transfers. The blood sucking journalists will move on to the next headline. I have no time for these insincere upstarts because they don’t stay in it for the long haul.

    Victims are on their own by and large and still ignorant. No one seems to care and there is no help from any quarter. They face a retirement with a significantly reduced standard of living and that’s the hard truth of the matter. There will be no “flood of similar cases”.

  • Blackmore Bond – yet another failed investment?

    Blackmore Bond – yet another failed investment?

    Blackmore Bond – yet another reason why only regulated advisers should be used for investment advice.

    The clear link between the recently-failed LCF Bond and Blackmore Bond through Surge Group remind us how important regulated investment advisers are.

    IPension life - Blackmore Global - failed fundsn the news again is the troubled Blackmore Group. This time we read that they have ‘temporarily’ closed their bond – the Blackmore Bond – to new business.  Just a few weeks ago, Blackmore Bond changed the wording of the sales material on this product.

    This new transparency revealed costs of 20% and the high risks involved in the bond. Prior to this, these details were well hidden in the small print.

    The Blackmore Bond transparency was not due to Blackmore Group having a yearning desire to be honest with their victims. It was all down to new FCA rules for being “clear, fair and not misleading” whenever an investment is promoted.

    Recently, there has been a lot of media coverage on high-cost, high-risk bond investments failing. One of these is London Capital & Finance (LCF). This unregulated bond collapsed and went into administration earlier in 2019. £236 million had been invested into it.  But investors had not been warned of the costs and risks involved.  Of this £236 million, over £50 million was paid to Surge Group for promotional and marketing services.

    1,200 victims duped into investing in the LCF bond

    have lost at least 80% of their money

    Fortunately for investors in the Blackmore Bond, it is still active. However, with such high promotional and marketing costs, the bond needs to be very successful indeed to overcome the initial 20% charges – most of which were paid to Surge.

    In relation to the closure of their bond, Blackmore Group state on their website:

    We have achieved our fundraising goals for this tax year and are not currently taking in new investment.  We will be introducing our next offering in the following tax year, so please watch this space for future announcements.

    Pension life - Blackmore Global - failed fundsAnother questionable investment from the Blackmore Group is the Blackmore Global Fund.

    The Blackmore Global Fund has been heavily criticised and also featured on BBC 4 You and Yours. The fund saw 1,000 victims conned into this expensive, illiquid and high-risk UCIS. It is illegal to promote UCIS funds to retail investors in the UK. They are certainly not suitable investments for a pension fund.

    David Vilka of Square Mile International Financial Services was one of the promoters of the Blackmore Global Fund. Vilka invested many of his UK-resident clients into this unsuitable fund. Undoubtedly, he was paid fat commissions for these investments. Unregulated and unqualified, Vilka was no doubt lining his own pockets, instead of doing what was best for his clients.

    Vilka lied to his clients, claiming to be fully regulated.  He transferred his UK-based victims’ pensions into the Optimus Retirement Benefit Scheme No.1 QROPS.  Much of this money was invested into the Blackmore Global fund.

    The connection between Blackmore Group’s Bond and London Capital & Finance (LCF) is Surge – a marketing agent. The LCF bond was promoted by Surge until it collapsed in December 2018.

    After LCF collapsed, Surge went on to promote the Blackmore Bond.  This promotion was done using ISA-rating websites.

    London Capital & Finance is not the only failed investment in recent years. Other failures include Axiom with £120m worth of investors’ funds (£30m of which was with life offices FPI and OMI); LM £456m (£90m with FPI and OMI); and Premier New Earth (NERR) £207m (£62m with FPI and OMI).

    The new transparency demanded by the FCA is much needed.

    Unfortunately, it won’t change the fact that well over one billion pounds have been lost between LCF, Axiom, LM and NERR. We are still left wondering why the regulators have not taken a tougher stance on restricting the promotion of such UCIS funds. The FCA’s limp stance is especially worrying when the promoters of these high-risk bonds and funds are targeting UK retail investors.

    All these failures and losses should remind both regulators and consumers that only regulated firms should be used for investment advice.

  • TRUSSED BY A QROPS TRUSTEE?

    Image result for qrops

    Philip Hammond’s surprise 25% tax on QROPS transfers will leave many advisers and trustees floundering as the industry tries to make some sense of the long-term consequences for expatriates and their pensions.  The uncertainty of the “five-year” change of circumstances rule will leave a huge question mark over the offshore landscape.

    But while the industry ponders the fall-out of the Hammond organ, the “elephant in the room” is far more sinister: offshore trustees who have accepted business from scammers.  This has been a serious problem since at least 2011, and the fall-out is £ millions of pounds’ worth of pension losses and sometimes tax liabilities for the thousands of victims.

    Regulators, ombudsmen and financial crime units are now being sent detailed reports on thousands of cases where trustees have either been in league with the scammers or simply turned a blind eye to obvious scams – putting profit before due diligence (either accidentally or deliberately).  The distinction between the varying shades of grey is sometimes somewhat subtle, but it always has the same outcome: pension losses for the victims.

    The jurisdictions affected include New Zealand, Guernsey, Malta and Gibraltar principally (although not exclusively).  Whatever problems there may be with Hammond’s 25% blow job, the culpability of rogue trustees will hopefully now become a hot issue – and victims will stand a better chance of obtaining redress for their losses.

    In Guernsey, from 2010 onwards, Concept Trustees was routinely accepting business from Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions. Although Concept was warning some victims that Ward had provided no evidence of regulation or professional indemnity insurance – and refusing to communicate with him – this did not stop Concept from accepting transfers and dealing instructions from Ward.  Concept should never have been offering members investments in toxic, high-risk funds such as EEA Life Settlements and Connaught Property Loans.  In fact, the FSA had issued warnings about EEA in February 2010, but Concept continued to offer this to low-risk, cautious investors in the full knowledge that it was an entirely unsuitable investment for a pension fund.

    At around the same time, Gower Pensions in Guernsey was accepting business from Dubai-based Holborn Assets. The firm was not licensed for pension or investment advice in Spain – or for any activity beyond wearing an expensive suit, regurgitating convincing, high-pressure sales patter and having an impressive leather-bound portfolio.  Despite several years of communication with both Gower and Holborn, a derisory amount of compensation for heavy pension fund losses has been offered (and refused).

    In 2012, New Zealand’s Evergreen Retirement Trust launched a pension liberation scam with Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions.  Three hundred victims – mostly Spanish residents – transferred their UK pensions (aggregate value of around £10 million) to Evergreen and obtained 50% “loans” from Ward’s Cyprus-based Marazion loan company.  The loans were financed by the assets of the scheme and the victims were tied in to both the loan and the pension scheme for identical five-year periods.  This particular chicken is coming home to roost later in 2017 and it will be interesting to see how the various parties in New Zealand and Spain who were behind this scam will try to escape liability and culpability.

     

    In the last couple of years, pension scammers have moved away from the bogus occupational scheme approach and into QROPS – which they find even easier to use, abuse and lose.  In 2015, Malta-based Integrated Capabilities started accepting transfers into their Optimus scheme from unlicensed scammers in the Czech Republic.  These same scammers were also the distributors/promoters of one of the toxic, high-risk UCIS funds being used as the assets of the scheme.  Despite Optimus having Lombard Bank (purportedly) as Investment Manager, there seems to have been an absolute lack of due diligence or transparency.  In fact, had Integrated Capabilities bothered to look a little closer at the scammers they were getting into bed with, they would have seen that one party had been a cold-calling operation behind the Capita Oak £10 million scam.

    But Gibraltar’s STM Fidecs probably takes the biscuit – or even the whole shopping trolley.  In 2014, STM started accepting transfers from UK residents by an unlicensed firm which had also been involved in Capita Oak and other scams.  This firm was not only the adviser but also the investment manager to the toxic UCIS fund that the victims’ pensions were invested in.  This fund – the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund – was invested entirely in German property development loans (which pay handsome introduction commissions to the introducers) and is now suspended and being wound up.

    While it is clear that Hammond hasn’t a clue about pensions in general or QROPS in particular, his 25% surprise may have had unintended consequences in that it will shine the spotlight firmly on negligent offshore trustees who facilitate financial crime – either through omission or commission.  Whether the regulators, ombudsmen and financial crime units in New Zealand, Guernsey, Malta and Gibralta will order these trustees to compensate their victims remains to be seen.  The survival of these offshore jurisdictions as “safe havens” for financial business depends on them cleaning up their act and outlawing unlicensed operators profiting from trustees’ lax approach to due diligence.

    The future of the QROPS may be uncertain, but the future of pension trustees such as Concept, Integrated Capabilities and STM Fidecs should be very clear: no dealings with scammers; no toxic UCIS investments; no failing to compensate victims who suffer pension losses through negligence and/or fraud.

     

     

  • Life at Pension Life Fighting Scams – Behind the Scenes

    nikki-behind-the-scenes

     

    My name is Nikki Mitchell.  Lets peep behind the scenes at life at Pension Life, fighting pension scams.  I’m the newest member of the team. I started in June 2016 – there was a lot to learn in six months.  I am PA to Angie, but most importantly I handle a wide variety of tasks.

    Angie has been defending people scammed out of their pensions since 2013.  My colleague Sue Halfyard’s role is member administration.  She completes all the essential documentation that we, HMRC, Dalriada Trustees and the solicitors need.  Sue also liaises with HMRC on the unauthorised payment tax appeals and helps Angie prepare for the Tax Tribunals. Elizabeth is our website and blog-writer and is currently on maternity leave.

    Our website is not only a place to inform people of the work we do, and how we can help people who have fallen foul of pension scammers, but it also serves as a platform to warn others about scammers, so that hopefully we can stop them losing their life savings.

    We are currently dealing with over 30 different schemes:

    Ark; Axiom UP; Barret and Dalton; Baxendale Walker; Capita Oak; Confiance; Continental Wealth Management; EEA/Concept Trustees; Elysian Fuels/SIPPS; Evergreen QROPS; Headforte; Henley; Holborn Assets/Gower Pensions; Holbrook Capital; KJK Investments; Ledger and Simmons; London Quantum; Malvern; Mendip; RL360; Hansard/Trafalgar; LM; Optimus Retirement Benefit Scheme No 1; Peak Performance; Pennines; Salmon Enterprises; Store First SIPPS; Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund/STM Fidecs; Tudor Capital Management; Westminster; Windsor Pensions.

    Sadly, most months we hear about new ones.

    Day to day work in the office consists of managing Angie’s crowded diary, keeping the accounts, liaising with members to keep them abreast of new developments, preparing scheme and member files for the legal teams, responding to the demands of HMRC and various trustees. I also work on campaigns to raise awareness of pension scams, or to campaign for changes in the law to protect pension investments.

    My first few weeks passed in a whirl of new jargon and abbreviations – UTR, Q10, MPVA EIS, PCLS, etc. Some days I spend the day designing and completing databases with members’ information for the solicitors.  Other days I’m number crunching the transfer and loan amounts for an individual scheme.  Some days we all have to change direction as there has been an urgent development. A recent example of this was the Standstill Agreements sent out by Dalriada – the trustees of the Ark Pension schemes. Our first member received an agreement in August 2016.  We have warned all the members that they will be receiving one, and worked with our solicitors to redraft the agreement to protect the members’ interests.

    Being a small, busy team in a hectic office, there is never a dull moment.  Aside from the daily nitty-gritty of the work, there are also the heart-breaking accounts of the members who have been scammed out of their pensions. Consequently, I have felt disbelief at the cruel contempt of the scammers. Reading members’ stories of how they were conned into investing their entire pensions or life savings into dodgy, illiquid schemes is utterly heart-breaking. Speaking to people who have lost everything – their homes, their marriages and their health – through the actions of these arrogant, greedy con-men fills me with horror.

    The greatest shock to me since joining Pension Life has been how the scammers have continually got away with fraud and theft for years.  Also, how ceding providers routinely transfer pensions with hardly even the most rudimentary checks. It has amazed me how so many different types of pension scams are allowed to be set up time and time again, with no thorough controls by HMRC or the regulators.  Moreover, I can’t understand why it takes so long for the scams to be shut down – long after they have been identified.

    We may be a small team here at Pension Life, but with the government’s recent realisation that cold calling needs to be outlawed and the consultation on pension scams:

    https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/pension-scams

    we are hopeful that there may finally be light at the end of the tunnel for existing victims and jail for the scammers.

  • “Action Fraud are nobody and have no authority”: John Ferguson, Square Mile Financial Services

    Action Fraud

    John Ferguson, Square Mile Financial Services

    http://www.lillywhiteint.com/about-us.html

    I am worried about the whereabouts of John Ferguson of Lillywhite International and Square Mile Financial Services (Czech Republic).  The last I heard he was boarding a long-haul flight on 23rd November 2016 to an unknown destination.  His solicitor assured me Mr. Ferguson would get back to me as soon as he landed to deal with a victim’s pension losses.

    Mr. Ferguson has invested a number of victims’ pensions in the Blackmore Global and Symphony funds and was asked to provide a copy of the audit for Blackmore Global which his firm has been promoting and which appears to have some questionable assets – described as “esoteric” and “alternative”.  He was also asked to provide evidence of his firm’s regulation to provide pension and investment advice.

    One victim had threatened to report the matter to Action Fraud when he discovered multiple irregularities with his pension scheme.  Mr. Ferguson had dismissed the victim’s complaint saying:

    “All fine as Action Fraud are nobody & have no authority. But does that now mean we don’t have to answer his formal complaint?”

    The factsheet for the Blackmore Global fund had falsely claimed a firm in Barcelona was the Investment Manager for the fund – robustly denied by the furious firm in question.  Mr. Ferguson clearly has questions to answer and the victims’ losses to deal with – so I do hope Ferguson is safe and well.  I am comforted by the fact that as recently as 26th November he was Tweeting about football https://twitter.com/thfcfancz so perhaps he just forgot my questions about audit and regulation?

    NOT SO SQUARE MILE – AND FAR FROM LILLY WHITE