Tag: PENSIONS REGULATOR

  • Alan Kentish of STM Groups delivers news of record profits for 2017

    Alan Kentish of STM Groups delivers news of record profits for 2017

    Pension Life Blog - STM Group record profits - Alan Kentish delighted, however no mention of compensation for the vistims of previous pension scam Trafalger Multi AssetQROPS provider STM Group’s Alan Kentish, is delighted to deliver reports of record profits for 2017. I wonder how delighted the victims of his previous scam, the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund, are to hear this. I think we’d be more delighted to hear that Kentish planned to pay all the victims of this investment fraud (currently under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office) full compensation for their losses.

    The company, STM Fidecs, which has recently moved its head office to the UK from Gibraltar, says its annual profits grew last year by 43% after the introduction of a new SIPPS.

    Kentish went on to say,

    “Moving into 2018, we have a solid recurring revenue platform on which to look to launch new products and to expand our distribution network as part of a strategy to make our business even more robust.”

    Pension Life Blo9g - STM Group announce record profits - Beware of Alan Kentish´s broken track recordIn our opinion, there is nothing robust about Kentish and his various dodgy products.   And the Gibraltar regulator shares our opinion as well as our concerns.  In a letter dated 6.11.2017, the GFSC wrote to the directors of STM Fidecs about their concerns following a series of onsite visits:

    “COMPLIANCE: effectiveness and oversight of the company’s internal compliance functions; high turnover of staff in compliance officer and money laundering regulatory officer roles; general suitability and experience of compliance staff.

    PROFESSIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES: level and nature of due diligence when accepting new QROPS business and whether legal and regulatory obligations were being met; nature of investments e.g. the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund linked to serious customer detriment and fraud”

    The Gibraltar regulator appointed three partners of forensic investigators CVR Global LLP to inspect and investigate the affairs of STM Fidecs.  The deadline for completion of this inspection is end of March 2018 and the GFSC has warned that:

    • a person who wilfully makes a statement or furnishes information knowing it to be untrue;

    • a person who refuses to supply information or cooperate with an inspector

    is guilty of an offence and is liable on conviction to imprisonment.

    I wonder if any of STM’s fat profits will be used to help balance the heavy losses made by the company’s past “mistakes”. At the height of the success of the Trafalgar Multi Asset investment scam, STM Fidecs was accepting more than £1 million a month from UK residents (none of whom should have transferred into a QROPS at all) and allowing it all to be invested in XXXX XXXX’s illegal UCIS.

    I find it very hard to swallow that Kentish can continue to offer his “products” to unsuspecting future victims – given his murky past record. Kentish has stated “I look forward to updating the market on our developments during the year.”  But has he updated the Trafalgar victims about the development of their lost funds being recouped? No he has not. He has just scraped his past misdemeanors under the carpet and hoped they will be forgotten.

    Pension Life Blog - The crooked clowns of the STM Group board - Alan Kentish - reports record profits for 2017 - no mention of the Trafalgar Multi Assett Fund pension scam

    After his arrest in October 2017, Kentish was released without charge and was fully backed by the STM board. (They are obviously a load of crooked clowns who are no better than Kentish himself).  He has, also, been given the green light to further his venture into offering legal SIPPS wrappers to clients, that have the potential to contain high-risk, toxic investments. The results of which may well leave even more unsuspecting victims’ pension funds in tatters.

     

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    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.

     

     

  • Better Protection Against QROPS Pension Scams from PLIG

    Better Protection Against QROPS Pension Scams from PLIG

    Pension Life Blog - STOP THE SCAMMERS - PLIG launch new code of practice to protect retail investments placed in SIPPS and QROPS - Pension scams

    Here at Pension Life, we are well aware of QROPS and SIPPs providers being a favorite of the serial pension scammers and are very pleased to report that there is positive news of better protection against this, on the horizon.

    Three years ago the Pension Liberation Industry Group (PLIG) launched a code of practice to protect retail investors from serial scammers. Whilst the code of practice managed to help towards the eradication of the big occupational scams, the serial scammers altered their gameplay and continued to score. Serial scammers are focusing on using SIPPS and QROPS providers as a way to lure unsuspecting victims into toxic, high risk investments. Legal “envelopes” with corrupt contents.

    Fortunately, the PLIG has finally recognised this change of tactic and has now announced that it will be updating the code of practice to reflect the new tactics of scammers, with the hope of reducing the number of pension scam victims.

    Pension Life Blogs - James Hay Partnership - Toxic SIPPs Providers - PLIG launched a code of practice to protect victims from poor SIPPS and QROPS pension investments

    Despite this welcome positive news, I still can’t shake the idea that this updated code of practice by PLIG, is possibly too little too late.  The situation with James Hay springs to mind. James Hay – the UK´s largest SIPP provider – has announced losses in 2017. James Hay was also involved in the pension liberation scam with Elysian, in which around 500 clients put £55m into Elysian Bio Fuels. The business failed in 2015.

    The business failed in 2015 after SIPPS – including James Hay – had already been misused to lure in pension scam victims. This is just one of many such scams (off the top of my head).  Believe me, there are many, many more similar to this – that have scammed unsuspecting victims out of millions of pounds’ worth of pension funds and into crippling tax charges.

    Darren Cooke, a chartered financial planner at Derbyshire-based Red Circle Financial Planning, launched a petition to the government to ban cold calling in 2017, argued that it wasn’t new that Qrops had been “a favourite” of pension scammers.

    He was quoted as saying: “The new Qrops legislation that was introduced in the budget [last year] has reduced scams a bit. So, to some extent, revisions are a little behind the curve. I actually think scammers are switching back to using SIPPS and [small self-administered schemes] SSAS again.”

    We welcome this new code from the PLIG, however we can’t agree more with Darren Cooke who also stated, that the FCA needs to regulate the products and not just the advisers.

    “As soon as the FCA [starts] regulating the product, it would stop regulated advisers recommending unregulated products. That would stop 99 per cent of scams.”

    A small step in the right direction, where a huge leap needs to be made.

    Dear FCA,

    If you really want to stop pension scamming in its tracks:Pension Life blogs - Pension life calls for a ban on cold calling to help prevent pension liberation scams and protect victims from poor SIPPS and QROPS investments

    BAN COLD CALLING

    REGULATE THE PRODUCTS

    PROSECUTE THE SERIAL SCAMMERS – ALL OF THEM!

    Many thanks

    Pension Life

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    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.

     

     

  • OMI complaint

    OMI complaint

    Pension Life blog - CWM pension scam victims - continually charges fees despite the massive decline in their funds - pension scams

    COMPLAINT TO OMI, THE ISLE OF MAN FINANCIAL SERVICES AUTHORITY, THE CENTRAL BANK OF IRELAND, FINANCIAL SERVICES AND PENSIONS OMBUDSMAN AND THE ASSOCIATION OF INTERNATIONAL LIFE OFFICES

    ATTENTION:

    Martin Middleton, CEO

    Michael Hampson
    Complaints Handler | Complaints Team | Old Mutual International

    T: 44 (0) 1624 655451 | Int Ext: 75451
    F: 44 (0) 1624 611715
    E: omifmcomplaints@ominternational.com | W: www.oldmutualinternational.com

     

    Isle of Man Financial Services Authority
    PO Box 58
    Finch Hill House
    Douglas
    Isle of Man
    IM99 1DT

    info@iomfsa.im

    GeneralMailbox.ATG@gov.im

     

    Central Bank of Ireland:

    enquiries@centralbank.ie

     

    Financial Services and Pensions Ombudsman

    Lincoln House, Lincoln Place, Dublin 2, D02 VH29. Tel: (01) 567 7000 Email: info@fspo.ie Website: www.fspo.ie

     

    AILO – Association of International Life Offices

    secretariat@ailo.org

     

    COMPLAINT REGARDING OMI’S NEGLIGENCE, FAILED GOVERNANCE AND FACILITATION OF FINANCIAL CRIME – European Executive Investment Bond (EEIB)

     

    OMI has facilitated financial crime over a period of many years; stood by while innocent victims’ retirement savings were destroyed; paid huge commissions to an unlicensed (and illegal in Spain) firm of scammers; continued charging crippling fees while victims’ funds dwindled away; extorted early exit penalties from victims unfairly and unreasonably; failed to take any action to stem the torrent of huge losses of millions of pounds’ worth of retirement savings for many years.  And now it is failing to uphold the victims’ complaints.

     

    OMI has been in receipt of a number of complaints (and will be in receipt of numerous further ones) regarding their negligence and facilitation of financial crime in offshore financial services.  OMI has not upheld these complaints – and indeed has neglected to grasp the extent of their own multiple failings and errors.

     

    The existing complaints do relate to serious regulatory breaches and fraud – as well as failing to adhere to OMI’s own terms and conditions.  Much of the fraud was caused by the financial advisory firm: Continental Wealth Trust (which traded as Continental Wealth Management).  However, the firm’s fraud was only successful because OMI facilitated it.

     

    The complaints submitted to date include:

    • That investments were made into high-risk professional-investor-only funds. Many of these failed and caused huge losses to victims’ funds.
    • That OMI paid commissions/fees to CWM who not only held no investment licence – but also held no license of any kind.
    • As a result of the huge, un-disclosed commission paid to CWM – an unlicensed firm – OMI imposes crippling early surrender charges on the victims.

    Pension Life blog - Old Mutual International - scammed pensions

    OMI has responded that they are “very sympathetic to victims’ concerns” and has responded that it appreciates what a very worrying time this must be for those who have lost such huge amounts of their life savings.

    OMI has also stated that the roles and responsibilities of all the parties involved with this fraud have got to be clarified.  However, OMI claims – entirely disingenuously – it does not want victims to get the feeling it is trying to distance itself from the grievances.

    In order to address what it refers to as “concerns”, OMI has attempted to “explain” matters.  The use of the word “concerns” is obviously a really crass clanger on the part of OMI, since the victims are absolutely not just CONCERNED – they are furious, terrified and devastated at their dreadful losses.  Some victims are suicidal, and many have had their health seriously compromised.

    OMI has described the EEIB as being held by the trustee for the benefit of a member of their pension scheme, enabling policyholders to hold a “wide range of investments in one tax-efficient product wrapper”.  OMI goes on to claim that policyholders and their investment advisers “have complete flexibility over the investments they place inside the EEIB”.

    Some or all of the above may be true.  However, that does not make it right that OMI has allowed unlicensed advisers to place clearly unsuitable investments inside their wrappers.  Further, it does not make it right that OMI then stood by and watched the investments fail for many years AND DID ABSOLUTELY NOTHING EXCEPT KEEP ON TAKING FEES BASED ON THE ORIGINAL VALUE – AND NOT THE REDUCED VALUE OF THE FUND.

    OMI claims that it reviews all investments to ensure they meet Irish regulatory requirements, and their own administration requirements.

    If this is indeed true, it is a very serious indictment of the Irish regulator if their requirements are so appallingly lax.  What OMI seems to be claiming is that both the Central Bank of Ireland and OMI have such low standards that they will allow low-risk pension savers to have their retirement funds invested purely in high-risk, professional-investor-only structured notes.  If this is true, then the regulator is as bad as OMI in condoning an investment strategy which has no regard for suitability, liquidity, diversity and risk tolerance.

    In fact, the Central Bank of Ireland has stated that it carried out a review of suitability requirements in 2017 and found that: “governance structures for the identification and treatment of vulnerable clients were absent or ineffective”.  The CWM victims were about as vulnerable as it was possible to get – as their retirement savings were systematically and inexorably destroyed.  And OMI’s governance structure was about as absent and ineffective as it is possible to get while it stood by and didn’t even bother to raise a red flag on the whole disaster as it unfolded.

    There was no jangling of alarm bells as OMI watched millions of pounds wiped out.  There was no expression of concern that the same toxic structured notes which had failed in earlier years were bought again and again by the same unlicensed scammers.  There was no governance to protect new vulnerable victims from having their funds destroyed from 2015 onwards in the same way hundreds of victims had suffered in previous years.

    OMI has claimed that customers/their appointed advisers are responsible for the suitability assessment and selection of the investments held in the policy – and that “it is important that customers read the prospectus/offering documents of investments carefully, before making any investment decisions”.  However, OMI watched wholesale destruction taking place inside its own wrappers and took no action.  Had OMI asked a few simple questions they would have found the following:

    1. The victims were being advised by a known firm of scammers which had been involved in cold calling in the Evergreen pension liberation scam in 2012
    2. The victims were being advised by a firm which was not licensed at all – for anything
    3. The victims had ALL insisted they wanted either low risk or no risk investments as they could not afford to lose any part of their retirement savings
    4. The victims had no idea their retirement savings were being invested in high-risk, professional-investor-only structured notes
    5. The victims’ signatures were repeatedly forged on the dealing instructions
    6. The victims were duped into a false sense of security when losses started to be reported on their statements by the scammers claiming these were not genuine losses but only “paper losses”
    7. The victims had no idea how high the charges and commissions were as these were not disclosed either by the scammers or by OMI
    8. The victims were not consulted as to whether they wanted or needed an entirely useless and exorbitantly expensive insurance bond
    9. The victims were unaware that tied agents are illegal in Spain
    10. The victims were unaware of the huge fees and commissions which were concealed by both the scammers and OMI

    OMI claims that term 12 of the EEIB policy terms states that it is the policyholder who bears the risk of investment. But then OMI goes on to assert that the policyholder was the trustee who would be classed as a professional investor.

    So OMI has got to make up its mind – it has already stated that: “customers/their appointed advisers are responsible for the suitability assessment and selection of the investments held in the policy”.  So who is the customer?  The victim or the trustee?  And whom did the adviser advise – the customer or the trustee?  Or OMI?

    OMI goes on to refer to term 11.4 of the policy which confirms that it may allow investment into professional or experienced investor funds because it owns the investments held within the EEIB, rather than the policyholder.

    So, who gave the advice and to whom?  OMI can’t seem to make up its mind who the customer is: the victim; the trustee or OMI itself.  If OMI is the customer, why is it charging the victim fees?

    OMI goes on to quote policy term 11.4.1 – which apparently clearly highlights that professional-investor-only funds carry a high degree of risk. So who is taking the risk?  The victim, the trustee or OMI?

    Let us ask ourselves, where did the original funds come from?  Not the trustee; not OMI; but the victim.

    Pension Life blog - Customer of OMI had the blame passed back and forth - was it OMI, CWM, the trustee or the customers fault.

    OMI then procedes to claim that it will “only accept applications via regulated financial advisers”.  But Inter-Alliance was not licensed to provide investment advice – or indeed insurance advice.  CWM was not licensed either.  So why did OMI accept applications from unlicensed advisors (who were also known scammers)?  Also, OMI failed to identify that tied (insurance) agents are illegal in Spain – so it shouldn’t have been dealing with them at all – let alone paying them huge commissions.

    OMI states that CWM was a member of Inter-Alliance WorldNet, and obtained their authorization to act via that membership. But this is not true – Inter-Alliance was not licensed and therefore neither was CWM.  The application form may, in some cases, have confirmed the appointment of CWM as investment adviser with full discretion – but why didn’t OMI check that CWM was licensed?  In fact, most of the victims were under the impression that they would be consulted on the investments and that their risk tolerance would be respected – but this never happened in any of the cases.

    OMI goes on to claim that CWM was able to submit investment instructions directly to OMI, without consulting the trustees.  But that isn’t true either: dealing instructions were sent to the trustees first, and then the trustees sent on new instructions.  How can OMI not even know how its own internal systems work?

    OMI concludes that it is sorry the complaining investor is “disappointed with the performance of some of the investments selected by CWM” and then goes on to claim the investments “met the criteria for a permitted asset under the EEIB policy terms”.

    So who at OMI was responsible for writing and updating EEIB policy terms?  Did this person not notice the losses repeatedly decimating the funds?  Did this person not see the same investment failures repeating in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017?  Did this person not question whether the policy terms ought to be revised somewhat?  The answer to these questions is, inevitably, a resounding and disgraceful “NO”.

    OMI is now refusing to refund or waive early withdrawal charges on the basis that CWM was an appointed investment adviser.  This is because OMI initially paid a big chunk of commission to CWM – an unlicensed adviser and known scammer.  If a victim wants to get out of the toxic, pointless insurance wrapper, in order to put a stop to the exorbitant fees taken quarterly out of the fund – and based on the original value rather than the decimated value of the fund – he basically has to refund the commission OMI paid to the scammers.

    The victims remain dissatisfied with OMI’s response, and the complaint is now being referred to the Irish Financial Services and Pensions Ombudsman. OMI has deliberately misunderstood and overlooked every aspect of the victims’ complaints and failed to address even the most basic issues surrounding OMI’s failures and negligence.

    OMI has facilitated financial crime over a period of many years; stood by while innocent victims’ retirement savings were destroyed; paid huge commissions to an unlicensed (and illegal in Spain) firm of scammers; continued charging crippling fees while victims’ funds dwindled away; extorted early exit penalties from victims unfairly and unreasonably; failed to take any action to stem the torrent of huge losses of millions of pounds’ worth of retirement savings for many years.  And now it is failing to uphold the victims’ complaints.

  • Be safe with PensionBee!

    Be safe with PensionBee!

    Pension Life blog - PensionBee - Pensions made simpleHaving focused very much on bad pension investments, pension scams and how to avoid them, I´d like to talk a bit about PensionBee, a relatively new pension provider.

    PensionBee offers the service of consolidating all your pension funds into one online fund. You are able to check your balance at any time and have a personal “Bee keeper” assigned to your account. The firm’s annual fees range from only 0.5% – 0.95% – significantly lower than the industry average.

    Pension Life blog - PensionBee - Pensions made simple a sample of their app

    Having explored PensionBee´s website, they are bright, modern and have a 9.2 out of 10 on trust pilot – not bad! You can use the PensionBee pension calculator to set a retirement goal and top up your savings to get on track. In our fast-paced, ever-changing online society, this is ideal for the busy working person.

     

    Sounds great doesn´t it? Unfortunately, other pension providers wouldn´t agree, and it seems Aegon (formerly Scottish Equitable) isn´t impressed by their new competitor. Henry Tapper’s blog, ´PensionBee stands up to the bullies´ address the issue that Aegon are taking 38 days for a pension transfer to PensionBee. (The standard transfer time should be just 12 days). Fortunately, PensionBee is taking none of it, check out their video on “how to transfer your pension away from Aegon”.

    In fact, Henry writes, ´Since 8 June 2017, customers wishing to transfer out of Aegon to PensionBee have faced barriers to switching, including multiple discharge forms, telephone calls and repetitive requests for information that has already been provided. There are various other steps that impede the customer’s right to switch pension provider easily (please see here). The average transfer out of Aegon for completed transfers now takes c.54  days – although the true scale of detriment remains unknown, since many people have been unable to overcome the barriers placed in front of them by Aegon in their attempts to switch or have simply given up.´

    Upon doing some more digging I found that Professional Adviser, reported that nearly 900 customers were in fact ´stuck´ between Aegon and PensionBee. Going on to say, “So far, the longest transfer that has successfully completed is 176 days, or nearly six months.”

    What we at Pension Life are struggling to grasp is, Why now?

    Pension Life blog - Action Fraud website logo Logo - Scam Proof Your Pension - Don´t get stung - Pension Scams

    Since 2011 big pension companies such as Aegon, Standard Life, Scottish Widows etc, have made transferring out of their pension scheme relatively easy. Even after the Scorpion campaign, which raised awareness about pension scams, these pension providers continued to release funds to bogus schemes. They have enabled the pension scammers to profit whilst the victims ended up being financially ruined.

    In the Capita Oak scam – distributed by XXXX XXXX, promoted by Phillip Nunn and administered by Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions – Aegon was one of the leading offending ceding providers.  Aegon handed over at least 13 transfers totalling £263,271.71.  Then, in the Westminster pension scam, Aegon was still up there with the worst offenders, facilitating a further eight transfers totalling at least £253,305.63.

    In neither Capita Oak nor Westminster, did Aegon question why both schemes had the same sponsoring employer: R. P. Medplant (Cyprus).  Nor did Aegon establish whether the schemes were genuine occupational schemes.  They just handed over the transfers without heed to the Pensions Regulator’s dire Scorpion warning.

    But now Aegon appears to be resisting genuine, bona fide transfers.  When victims complained to Aegon about the callous and negligent manner in which pensions were handed over to the scammers, Aegon failed to uphold the complaints and refused to pay any compensation.  And this despite the fact that many of the transfers were made AFTER the publication of the Scorpion warning.

    I wonder – is this change due to a weight on their conscience or do they realise that PensionBee could possibly be the new long-term market competitor? A real threat to their business. PensionBee is modern, clear, fresh and online – appealing to the technology savvy generation. With the introduction of pension freedoms in 2015, savers are looking to find new alternatives with their new choices.

    FTAdviser reports:

    Figures published by Mercer in April showed that as much as £50bn has been pulled from final salary pension schemes in the last two years.

    Fortunately, the Pensions Administration Standards Association (PASA) is aware of these issues and has created a work group to enable transferring members a faster outcome. This will hopefully make transferring pensions to legitimate schemes much easier.

    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.

  • What is a Pension Scam?

    What is a Pension Scam?

    Pension Life blogs - Don´t let scammers lead you down the yellow brick road - avoid pension and investment scams - pension scamThere are many different types of pension scam – just as there are many types of genuine pension scheme.  This can sometimes make it difficult to tell the difference so we are her to help you inform you about, what is a pension scam.

    Fortunately, there are some common tell-tale signs that mean you could spot a scam and avoid it:

    • Cold calling: always be suspicious of a cold caller. This can come as a text, phone call, email or even a smart-looking individual at your door!
      • Some cold callers may even imply that they are from the government or another government-backed organisation.
      • THIS WOULD NEVER HAPPEN!Pension Life blog - Cold calling - Some cold callers may even imply that they are from the government or another government-backed organisation. - This would never happen - pension scammer - What is a pension scam - pension liberation scam - pension scam - pension victim
    • Hard sell: when your smart-looking/sounding “adviser” won’t take “no” for an answer and pressurises you into an on-the-spot decision
    • No land-line contact phone number: the only contact they give consists of an email, mobile or PO Box address
    • Use of words like ‘pension liberation’, ‘loan’, ‘loophole’, ‘free pension review’ or ‘one-off investment’
    • Unrealistic claims:
      • You can unlock your pension before 55
      • Promises of tax advantages
      • investment is ‘unique’, ‘overseas’, ‘environmentally friendly’, ‘ethical’ or in a ‘new’ industry
    • Low risk but high return investments (THEY DON’T EXIST!!)

    Pension Life blog - Beware of copycat websites - Pension Life blog - Cold calling - Some cold callers may even imply that they are from the government or another government-backed organisation. - This would never happen - pension scammer - What is a pension scam - pension liberation scam - pension scam - pension victim

    Pension Life Blogs - Pension scams advisers act like sharks - Pension Life blog - Beware of copycat websites - Pension Life blog - Cold calling - pension scammer - What is a pension scam - pension liberation scam - pension scam - pension victimWhat the scammers don’t tell you is that taking any part of your pension early (before 55 years of age) DOES result in tax charges. These charges can be up to 55% of the amount you take – even if you were told it was a “loan”.

    With HMRC on your back for this tax demand, it will be hard to remember the pleasure of the money you received. Plus, whilst you are distracted with your tax demand from HMRC, it is likely that the rest of your pension fund is taking a nasty tumble.

     

    Pension scams can involve various types of pension arrangements from QROPS and QNUPS to occupational schemes and SIPPS.  These arrangements are not, in their own right, bad.  However, if they are used for unsuitable investments, they most certainly can be. Know about these investments means you will know about what is a pension scam.

    Pension Life blog - Beware of pension schemes containing toxic investments - Cold calling - pension scammer - What is a pension scam - pension liberation scam - pension scam - pension victimThe investments inside the schemes can range from high-risk, professional-investor-only structured notes to toxic, illiquid, risky UCIS funds (Unregulated Collective Investment Scheme – illegal to be promoted to UK residents). Whilst these types of investments are not illegal in their own right, they are only suitable for certain people with deep pockets and sound investment experience. Or, alternatively, they are totally unsuitable for pension funds – full stop.

    When taking advice on transferring your pension fund you should always ensure the adviser you choose is either based in the UK OR in the country you reside/plan to reside in.  Alternatively, you must make sure the adviser is regulated and qualified for pension and investment advice in the jurisdiction where you reside.

     

    Some of the pension scams that we are aware of are Ark, Capita Oak, Evergreen QROPS, Henley Retirement Benefit Scheme, Westminster, Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund, Continental Wealth Management (CWM), London Quantum. The underlined scams are being investigated by the FCA.

    The 5 pointers from the Pension Regulator are:

    Pension Life blog - Beware of pension schemes containing toxic investments - Cold calling - pension scammer - What is a pension scam - pension liberation scam - pension scam - pension victim

    1. If you think you’ve been scammed – act immediately
    2. Cold called about your pension? Hang up!
    3. 3.  Deals ‘too good’ to be true
    4. 4.  Using an adviser? Make sure they’re registered with the FCA
    5. 5.  Don’t let a friend talk you into an investment – check everything yourself

    For more details please see their web page

    Pension Life blog - Action Fraud website logo Logo - Scam Proof Your Pension - Don´t get stung - Beware of pension schemes containing toxic investments - Cold calling - pension scammer - What is a pension scam - pension liberation scam - pension scam - pension victim
    Image from https://www.actionfraud.police.uk/news/scamproof-your-savings-mar15

    If you’ve already signed something you’re now unsure about, contact your pension provider straight away. They might be able to stop a transfer that hasn’t taken place yet.

    If you think you’ve been targeted by an investment scam, please report it to the FCA using their reporting form.

    If you have lost money to a suspected investment fraud, you should report it to Action Fraud on 0300 123 2040 or online at www.ActionFraud.police.uk.

    The FCA has launched a new campaign ScamSmart.

    If you have doubts about what to do, ask The Pensions Advisory Service (TPAS) for help. Call them on 0300 123 1047 or visit the TPAS website for free pensions advice and information.

    Beware of being targeted in the future, particularly if you lost money to a scam. Fraudulent companies might take advantage of this and offer to help you get some or all of your money back.

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    With out due diligence and knowledge you often won´t realise that you are the victim of a pension scam until its too late. Its best to have the knowledge so you can tell what is a pension scam and what is a genuine pension scheme.

    Therefore, Pension Life has written a series of blogs about pensions, pension scammers and how to safe guard your pension fund from fraudsters. Please make sure you read as many as possible and ensure you know everything you should about your pension fund. If we can educated the masses about pension fraud we can stop the scammers in their tracks – worldwide.

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    Here at Pension Life we are noticing a new type of pension scam – Fractional Scamming – please read our blog about this type of scam.

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

  • Why are so many working people losing their pension funds?

    Why are so many working people losing their pension funds?

    Pension Life blog - Debbie Abrahams questions why so many hard working UK employees face massive losses to their pensions - pension scamsDebbie Abrahams takes a stand in parliament, raising the question of, “how many more pensions scandals does she (Esther McVey, Secretary of State, Work and Pensions) need before she introduces the robust regulatory oversight needed to protect peoples’ pensions for the future?

    Debbie Abrahams (pictured) has been a Member of Parliament for Oldham East and Saddleworth since her by-election victory in January 2011. Debbie was a member of the Work & Pensions Select Committee from June 2011-March 2015 , where she led the call for an independent inquiry into the Government’s punitive New Sanctions Regime.  In June 2016 she was appointed Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions.Pension Life blog - Debbie Abrahams - Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions asks how many more pensions scandals does she need before she introduces the robust regulatory oversight needed to protect peoples' pensions for the future?"

    During Work & Pensions Questions, Debbie stated “100´s of 1000´s of ordinary working people have lost half of their retirement income.” Mentioning British Steel Pension Schemes (BSPS), Carillion, BHS and Capita, she goes on to highlight the government´s failure in tackling pensions governance.

    Pension Life blog - BSPS was put into the hands of Pension protection fund in December 2017

    BSPS were pushed into the Pension Protection Fund, the government lifeboat for failed schemes in December 2017. 122,000 members were given just months to make the decision of where to go with their precious pension funds. They had the choice to stay with the scheme, join a new one with reduced benefits set up by Tata Steel, or transfer to a personal pension plan. The Guardian reports further on this stating that, “those who do not make a decision will default into the PPF.”

    The Independent released an article about the collapse of Carillion: Carillion was put into liquidation in January 2018 after racking up debts of around £900m and a pension deficit thought to be at least £587m.

    The collapse of Carillion has left hundreds of workers redundant and their pension funds in tatters.

    BHS had 19,000 members and a combined £571m deficit when the company went into administration in April 2016. Again reported by The Guardian, we can at least be thankful that:
    Domonic Chappell is being prosecuted by The Pensions Regulator (TPR) in the latest fallout from the demise of BHS, which he bought for £1 from retail tycoon Sir Philip Green in 2015.

    With all this pension turmoil, the path is paved with gold for the serial pension scammers, such as ex CWM employees

    Pension Life blogs - Don´t let scammers lead you down the yellow brick road - avoid pension and investment scams

    The Financial Times reported that: The Financial Conduct Authority is investigating allegations that steelworkers at Tata UK’s plant in Port Talbot were being targeted by unscrupulous pension transfer advisers. British Steel pension fund trustees have received requests for around 11,000 quotes for pension transfers. With promises of low risk and high returns on the investments, who knows how many peope have fallen victim to these vultures already?Pension Life blog - The vultures are circling in British Steel workers looking to transfer their pension funds - pension scams

    We at Pension Life would also like to know why the government has not put in place tighter regulations on pensions to combat pension scammers. New laws need to be introduced so hard working and trusting citizens aren’t left with decimated pension funds.

    We can at least be thankful that the SFO and the Pensions Regulator are pushing forward at the High Court and bringing some pension scammers to justice.

  • BBC 4’s You & Yours Exposes Blackmore Global Pension Scam

    BBC 4’s You & Yours Exposes Blackmore Global Pension Scam

    BBc you & yours logo on Pension life blog

    BBC Radio 4’s You & Yours reports on three victims of a pension investment scam called Blackmore Global, two of whom were cold called by David Vilka of Square Mile International Financial.

    The three victims were persuaded to transfer their funds from secure company pensions into QROPS (Qualifying Overseas Pension Schemes).  The victims have since struggled to track or recoup their investments in the Blackmore Global fund.

    Pension Life shows Stephen Sefton a victim of the Blackmore Global pension and investment scam
    BBC´s You & Yours image of Stephen Sefton

     

     

    Stephen Sefton, a driving instructor from Milton Keynes, was the main focus of the You & Your´s program. Most of his pension fund had been invested through the overseas pension scheme into a fund called Blackmore Global. The rest had gone into an investment fund in Malta. A year later disaster struck.

    Pension life - Financial conduct authority and Blackmore Global Pension Scam

    Stephen became a member of Pension Life after he was unable to track and evaluate his overseas pension investment. Upon calling the City regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), he was informed that his adviser – David Vilka of Square Mile International Financial – was not regulated to give investment advice. Furthermore, the fund in Malta was a professional investor fund only and was not suitable for a retail investor like him.

    Stephen, taking advantage of the new pension rules, had transferred £415,000 of his company pension scheme into a new pension in 2015. He wanted to access his money early and give some to his children. He had found the advisory firm online; seen the company’s FCA registration number of David Vilka’s firm (Square Mile International Financial based in Prague) at the bottom of the firm’s letters.  What he did not realise, was that the firm was only regulated for insurance mediation, and not investment advice.

    Stephen, managed to get most of his money back after pursuing his case for many months.  However, he lost £30,000 of his investment as the fund in Malta dropped in value at the time of withdrawing his money.

    Pension life-Cash bribe offered to silence Blackmore Global Pension scam victim.Having succeeded in recouping a good chunk of his money, he received an email from Square Mile International Financial offering him a bribe of £6,000 to cease all contact with outside sources. This included regulatory authorities and Action Fraud!

    David Vilka, one of Square Mile International Financial’s directors, claims this to be incorrect. Instead suggesting the amount was a goodwill gesture to close the matter amicably.

    Unfortunately Stephen Sefton’s recovery of his money is a minority case, many other victims of the Blackmore Global Pension Scam are finding it difficult to recover their money.

    Pension life reports BBC's You and Yours about Blackmore Global pension scams, despite being reported to Action FraudDavid Vilka insists that Square Mile International Financial is a completely legitimate firm. He claims the firm has been “inspected and verified in full by numerous regulators”. Furthermore, Stephen’s reports to Action Fraud were returned saying it had not identified any leads to follow up.

    The BBC also reported about another victim called Paul (not his real name):

    “Paul”  agreed to have his £100,000 pension fund transferred into another pension scheme and then invested in the Blackmore Global fund.  This was after being cold-called by another company called Aspinal Chase who offered him a free pension review.

    The small print stated investments were locked in for 10 years, which was way beyond Paul’s 60th Birthday. This was not mentioned to Paul when he made the transfer. Fortunately he managed to escape the lock-in, however he has still been unable to access his funds.

    Pension life - Blackmore Global pension scam locked pension funds for 10 years

    Paul told You and Yours “I’ve got three grandchildren. I’d like to take them all to Disneyworld in America. I want to spend the money I’ve earned over the years. A bit of that money would pay off the last bit of my mortgage, so that is a big chunk of my future. I feel as though I’ve let the family down.”

    The perpetrators – Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh – are listed as Blackmore Global’s directors in a fund document seen by Radio 4’s You & Yours program, which shows they each earn salaries of £20,000 a year.

    David Vilka was also the financial adviser for Paul and also for the third victim reported, Jacqueline. Another cold-call victim of Aspinal Chase, Jacqueline has had no access to her funds.

    Blackmore Global’s directors have refused to release the £50,000 she invested.  You & Yours quoted, Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh: who said, only allowed redemption´s in exceptional circumstances to “protect the integrity of the investment for its other stakeholders”.

    Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh deny that their company, would engage in cold calling or pension advice. They claimed that any advice must have been given by separate, regulated financial advisers.

    Nunn and McCreesh also say they have no financial relationship with David Vilka or Square Mile International Financial. In fact, they state they are totally independent from them!  However, there has to be a good reason why Vilka has invested so many of his victims’ pension funds in the Blackmore Global fund – and risked criminal prosecution because Blackmore Global is a UCIS (Unregulated, Collective, Investment Scheme) which is illegal to promote to UK residents.

    Pension life - BBC´s You & Yours expose the connection between David Vilka´s Aspinal Chase company and the Blackmore Global pension and investment scam by Nunn and Mcreesh

    Pension Life is aware of a further 38 victims cold called by Aspinal Chase, Nunn & McCreesh´s firm. Originally being advised to transfer their funds into a Hong Kong QROPS, the victims´ funds finally made their way to the Blackmore Global fund. The total amount of funds scammed from these UK resident victims amounts to nearly £1,000,000!

    To listen to the broadcast on the BBC’s website, click here. 

    To read the news story based on the You & Yours report, click here. 

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    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.

  • DALRIADA V ARK VICTIMS: “ABUSE OF VULNERABLE MEMBERS”

    DALRIADA V ARK VICTIMS: “ABUSE OF VULNERABLE MEMBERS”

    The Ark victims’ QC rolls over as he is quashed by Dalriada’s counsel

    DALRIADA V ARK VICTIMS: “ABUSE OF VULNERABLE MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC”

    The Beddoe proceedings of Dalriada (tPR-appointed independent trustees) v Goldsmith (representative beneficiary for the Ark members) kicked off on 20th June 2017 in the High Court.  It was a sweltering day in central London – humid and dusty at the same time.  The Ark victims were about to discover that the warning about anomalous and unjust outcomes made by Justice Bean in the High Court in November 2011 was going to be ignored.

    Dalriada and their solicitors, Pinsent Masons, and their QC Fenner Moeran sat on the left in the airless courtroom.  Mrs Goldsmith and our solicitors, Trowers and Hamlins and QC Keith Bryant, sat on the right.  Justice Asplin sat on the bench and prepared to rule on whether 348 Ark victims would have to repay their MPVA loans – and whether Dalriada could use the members’ funds to pay for the recovery proceedings.  A group of Ark, Capita Oak and Salmon Enterprises victims and I sat at the back.  The only thing we all had in common was that everybody was sweating profusely from the heat.

    To put this into context, the Ark victims did indeed all sign loan agreements.  However, the loans were intended to be paid back out of the members’ 25% tax-free lump sums available at age 55 – so the term of each loan agreement was calculated to be for the number of years it would take each member to reach 55.  By which time, the pension was predicted to have grown by at least 8% per year and would be sufficient to repay the loans.  Or so the story went.

    Conspicuous by their absence were the various introducers and advisers who sold the Ark schemes and accompanying MPVA (Maximising Pension Value Arrangements) “loans”.  By far the most assertive and prolific of these was Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions who sold over £10 million worth of transfers to more than 160 victims.  Ward was followed by those who aspired to be as successful as him and these included:

    Julian Hanson £5.3m

    James Hobson (Silk Financial) £2.3m

    Jeremy Dening £2.2m

    Michael Rotherforth £961k

    Richard Davies £805k

    Geoff Mills £794k

    Andrew Isles £584k

    Amanda Clark £227k

    Many of these went on to operate further pension liberation scams – some of which are now also in the hands of Dalriada Trustees.  Andrew Isles of Isles and Storer Accountants is still in practice.  Stephen Ward still authors the Tolley’s Pensions Taxation Manual.

    The definitive pensions taxation manual by leading pension liberator Ward

    Interestingly, Stephen Ward, who used Ark to launch a whole series of further pension scams – including several currently under investigation by the SFO and in the hands of Dalriada – claimed in 2014 that “The Ark thing is history now and my involvement with that was administrative”.  Of course, neither of those statements was true: Ark is far from being history as, in the wake of the Beddoe proceedings, a whole new chapter of wretched challenges for the Ark victims has only just begun.  Ward was the leading promoter, evangelist and advisor to Ark.  He had sold over a third of all the transfers – with a total transfer value of more than £10 million.

    In fact, Ward and his herd of “introducers” he had recruited from up and down the country (including FCA-registered Gerard Associates which went on to collaborate with Ward in the London Quantum pension scam) – also now in the hands of Dalriada – often assured the victims they would never have to repay the loans.

    Fenner Moeran QC, for Dalriada, opened with the lusty confidence of a dashing matador – and who could possibly have failed to be charmed by his persuasive, eloquent, star quality?  He reminded me of an actor at the Oscars who knew he was the favourite to win.  With his extravagant hand gestures and polished, word-perfect performance, he got into his stride and stayed there – holding court for the whole day with barely a feeble squeak out of our QC.

    Moeran’s confidence, however, veered a little too close to cockiness, and he strayed occasionally into the realms of being callously offensive to the Ark victims when he talked about using a “sharp stick” to beat them into submission with threats of bankruptcy.  At that moment, he stopped looking like a polished QC and started to look like a mere back-street bully.  In fact, it was astonishing that the judge didn’t pull him up on that “foot and mouth” moment, but she appeared to be far too mesmerised by his charming performance to notice – or care.

    While I was taking notes, it was really interesting to watch the players’ body language.  One can tell an awful lot about what is really going on in people’s heads by what they do with their various body parts.  When Moeran was on his feet, Justice Asplin was coquettish, smiley, full of chuckles and did this wiggly thing with her shoulders (like we women do when we are trying to get a bra straight).  But when our QC Keith Bryant was on his feet, she sat as still as a statue and peered down at him with a combination of indifference and pity as if he was a dying bull in the afternoon sun.

    Mrs Goldsmith sat quietly and showed not a shred of distress as Moeran referred to her and all the other Ark victims as though they were just names on a list, as opposed to human beings – or indeed anything with a pulse.  Knowing her well, I am sure she will have felt profound pain and anguish during the whole three days, but not once did either her composure or her dignity slip.

    So here is my transcript of the notes I took on what the various parties said during the proceedings – with my comments in bold.

    The last thing I personally want to say on the matter, is that something good has to come out of this and my fervent hope is that all those involved in the promotion, sale, administration, introduction, advice, purchase of assets, execution of loans and various other functions will now face justice sooner rather than later.  And here, I am actually grateful to my learned fiend’s suggestion of a sharp stick and would propose something more akin to what Vlad The Impaler would have done to these criminals.

    TRANSCRIPT OF MY NOTES AT THE HEARING

    DAY ONE

    Never forget that legal proceedings are nothing to do with justice

    Justice Asplin opened with the words “This was a tragedy and an abuse of vulnerable members of the public”.  That got us off to a really good start, but curiously the following day she vehemently denied ever having said it.  She also denied ever having mentioned Ark and didn’t even seem to know that collectively, the six schemes (Tallton, Grosvenor, Woodcroft, Cranbourne, Lancaster and Portman) were the Ark schemes.  Bearing in mind she had had – and been paid for – a whole day’s reading, one would have thought she would have been a little better prepared.

    Ark’s Craig Tweedley was quoted as having made a statement that Ark was “designed to unlock amounts of money from people’s pensions in a way which was not taxable”.  This is perfectly true – but it went further: it was promoted to the public (both introducers and potential members alike) as an innovative structure which was lawful and tax free.  And the principal promoter and recruiter was Stephen Ward.  Ward is also a CII Level 6 qualified former pensions examiner and government consultant on pensions and QROPS – so who wouldn’t have believed him?

    One of the Ark schemes’ assets – the South Horizon land option in Larnaca, Cyprus – was brought up and reported as having been purchased by Ark for £4 million.  But what was not mentioned was that the option had originally been purchased by two football celebrities for £1.1 million and then sold on to Ark for £4 million.  And that this pair had gone to accountant Andrew Isles of Isles and Storer to get advice on how to procure further investors in the Cyprus land project.  Isles had introduced them to Craig Tweedley and Stephen Ward.  In fact, Isles subsequently introduced at least eleven cases to Ark.

    It was stated that Craig Tweedley’s associates Andrew Hields and Julian Hanson had purchased all the assets of the schemes and that the sales documentation claimed that some of the funds were “guaranteed “funds and protected by “re-insurance”.  Hields and Hanson may well have purchased some of the assets but they will certainly have benefited from handsome investment introduction commissions along the way. 

    It was also reported that one of the other Ark assets, Freedom Bay, the St. Lucia timeshare development, is now in administration and that none of the investments made met the statements and claims made in the sales documentation.  In fact, it did not come out that few – if any – of the victims were ever shown the sales documentation.  Most of Stephen Ward’s victims were told the assets would be “high-end residential London property”. 

    The matter turned to the recovery effort.  It was reported that Tweedley had been pursued for the 5% fees taken from scheme members and that although Dalriada had won their claim, of the approx. £1.5 million taken in fees, they only ever actually managed to recover about £20k.  This does beg the question as to just how successful Dalriada will actually be in recovering the £9 million in MPVA loans. 

    In taking steps to recover the loans, it was reported that Dalriada intends to consider the cost vs benefit situation and decide on the approach on a case by case basis, taking each individual case on its merits.  It was acknowledged that the chances of recovery were slim and that the costs could be disproportionate to the likely return.  The judge asked how many members had received MPVAs and it was disclosed that 348 had and 138 had not.  However, nobody raised the question of why such a large number of members had not received an MPVA loan – had they done so it ought to have been disclosed that a significant proportion of transfers were not rejected after Dalriada were appointed.

    It was at this point, while examining the possible avenues to recovery, that Moeran’s confidence bubbled over into bald cockiness and he started bragging about using the threat of bankruptcy as a “sharp stick with which to beat the victims into paying back their MPVA loans”.  In fact, by now the judge seemed to be very firmly on his side and stated that the members had already agreed to repay the loans and that their only loss was having to repay early.  It seemed clear that neither Moeran nor the judge understood – nor had made any attempt to understand – how the loans were sold to the victims.  They were told, by Ward and all the others involved in promoting the scheme, that the loans would be repaid out of their pension pots and not out of their own funds.  In fact, some people were told they would never have to repay the loans and that each person on either end of the loan transaction would simply agree to tear up their “IOUs”. 

    Moeran then went on to claim that by repaying the loans, members could avoid the tax charge.  Perhaps the HMRC fairy had whispered this in his ear?  Or perhaps he was deliberately ignoring the fact that it is HMRC’s position that the loans will remain taxable even if they are repaid.

    Towards the end of day one, it was clear that Moeran was confident they were going to win and that the judge would clearly find in favour of Dalriada and against the members.  It was also clear that he had the full support of the judge.  In fact, Moeran even went so far as to pretty much read out what our QC, Keith Bryant, would be arguing and told the judge what she ought to find against the case he would be putting forward.  At some point, I wondered whether Moeran and the judge would be swapping places.

    Moeran talked about the methods and costs of taking recovery action against the Ark members.  He itemised three issues to take into consideration:

    • Merits of taking recovery action
    • Cost vs benefit of taking recovery action
    • Consequences of not taking recovery action

    He then went on to report that Dalriada had 144 signed Standstill agreements and said that Dalriada was intending spending £2,925 per member on court recovery action.  The judge declared that that was on the low side as that cost could only happen if the claim was uncomplicated and resulted in a quick and easy repayment.  She also said she was not confident that bankruptcy proceedings were necessarily appropriate.

    She did, however, firmly declare that the Ark members had all shared the “mistaken belief” that the MPVA loans were valid, non-taxable and only repayable by the end of the originally-agreed loan term.  She broke this “mistaken belief” down into four points:

    The members’ “mistaken beliefs”:

    1. The trustees had the power to make the loans
    2. The loans were capable of being made valid
    3. The trustee could transfer beneficial ownership of these monies
    4. The loans were not unauthorised payments and would not trigger a tax charge

    The judge appeared to consider that somehow the members had come to these conclusions all on their own.  The reality was, of course, that this was exactly what they were told by Stephen Ward and the herd of introducers and advisers – including a couple of FCA-registered ones.  But reality did not seem to concern either the judge or Moeran overly. 

    The last thing that Moeran said on Day One was to make reference to the revised Standstill agreement – the focus of which was to ensure that criminal proceedings are now taken against all those who were involved in defrauding the Ark victims.  The judge read the document herself, giving us a welcome rest from listening to Moeran.  

    As the first day came to a close, I was beginning to wonder whether I had dreamed the fact that a High Court judge had clearly stated in the High Court that Ark had involved an abuse of members of the public.  Her statement had been made in front of a dozen or more witnesses and she had then gone on to deny that she had ever said it in front of the same witnesses who all clearly heard her words.  Moeran and the judge had both agreed the Ark sales documentation was false and yet I heard neither of them conclude spontaneously that criminal complaints were now essential. 

    DAY TWO

    Moeran opened with: “We are in the process of agreeing six test cases at the First Tier Tribunal” in relation to the personal tax appeals resulting from HMRC’s treatment of the loans (whether repaid or not) as unauthorised payments.  The judge questioned whether members put forward for this role might not be happy.  Moeran confidently assured her that there had already been five volunteers.  I am not aware that any of these purported volunteers have come from the Class Action.  Also, at the last meeting that Mrs Goldsmith, Mr Walters (Salmon Enterprises) and I had with HMRC, we agreed two Ark test cases – one with a loan and one without.  Moeran did not appear to be aware of this.

    Skating quickly over the tax issue for the members – and studiously ignoring the fact that according to HMRC the tax will remain payable even if the MPVA loans are repaid – Moeran and the judge got back to pondering recovery measures.  The judge expressed reservations about bankruptcy proceedings because she said that that would merely release members from liability to the scheme rather than help recovery.

    Moeran and the judge then started to discuss which members might not be worth pursuing at all for a variety of reasons.  Between them, they concluded that those with very small MPVA loans should be ignored and that they might also have to ignore those outside the jurisdiction of the UK.  Moeran reported that there were four members in Northern Ireland; 22 in Scotland, 24 in the EU and four outside the EU – USA, Jersey, Bulgaria and Australia.

    Neither Moeran nor the judge were sure whether Bulgaria was in the EU (in fact, of course, it is an EU member).  The members and I having complained in the strongest possible terms about Moeran’s use of the term “beating the victims with a sharp stick” the previous day, Moeran then went on to publicly apologise for that statement.  To be fair to him, he made a good job of the apology and I am sure that Mrs Goldsmith and other members present appreciated it. 

    I really don’t remember whether our QC said much or anything at all that day – if he did it was not very memorable, or perhaps I couldn’t hear him terribly well because he muttered apologetically and miserably rather than speaking in Moeran’s strident voice.

    The MPVA loans were summarised thus:

    50 members with loans between £5k and £9,999

    124 members with loans between £10k and £19,999

    132 members with loans between £20k and £44,999 (totalling £4m+)

    40 members with loans of £50k upwards (totalling £3m+)

    The judge opined that the bigger the loan, the bigger the original pension must have been, and therefore the wealthier the member was likely to be.  She concluded that these would be the easiest targets for recovery.

    Then the judge handed down her judgement.  She summarised the claim by Dalriada for Beddoe relief (money to be taken from the members’ funds) for the recovery of the MPVA loans and also to challenge the scheme sanction charge in the Tax Tribunals.  She approved both of these, but did not agree that Dalriada should use funds to help the members with their individual tax appeals.

    She reported that 152 claims had been written to date and that 12 consent orders had been received.  She declared that she believed the claims were strong but expressed reservation as to whether the members were in reality good for the money.  She reminded the court that there were 138 members without loans and that Dalriada had a duty to protect their position by recovering loans from as many of the other 348 members as possible.

    She determined that it was appropriate that the trustees should be granted the relief they sought – albeit not the entire amount sought.  She advised Dalriada to take stock of each individual situation and use their discretion as to whether it was appropriate to continue with the action.  She also urged them to take into account relevant factors including the aggressive stance being taken by HMRC and to act as a reasonable trustee.

    Finally, she said Dalriada should bear in mind that the individual cost of recovery per member would rise from £2.9k to £3.6k (plus VAT) if bankruptcy proceedings were issued and that those with the very smallest loans ought not to be pursued because of the disproportionate cost of doing do.  She said it was difficult to decide where exactly the “watermark” might be and reiterated that bankruptcy might not be appropriate and should not be the first refuge sought and could be used as a “second string to their bow”.  She suggested that further directions might need to be sought by Dalriada.

    Regarding the scheme sanction tax charge appeal matter, she said it was appropriate to give the relief sought and for Dalriada to take steps to challenge the assessments.  She recommended a “ceiling” on the amount to be spent and said that to challenge the £4m in tax sought by HMRC, the amount of £350k + VAT was appropriate.

    On the question of paying a further £50k to fund legal representations for members against personal tax assessments, she recommended that the scheme sanction charge and the personal tax appeals should be coordinated.  But she expressed a reservation about granting this relief to Dalriada as she felt it was excessive “because of the vagueness of what might take place”.  She did not consider that for them to pay a barrister was necessarily a reasonable step to take.  Therefore, she did not grant the relief sought.

    In summary, therefore, the judge’s determination was as follows:

    • Yes to recovering the MPVA loans from as many of the members as possible/practicable
    • Yes to paying for the recovery costs out of the members’ funds – at the ideal rate of £2.9k + VAT per member (possibly rising to £3.6k + VAT per member if bankruptcy proceedings were issued)
    • Yes to taking £350k + VAT out of the members’ funds to pay for the appeal against the scheme sanction charge
    • No to paying £50k + VAT towards the members’ personal tax liability appeals

    At the start of the proceedings, Moeran had reminded the court that Dalriada, as the trustee, already had the legal right to recover the loans if they chose to.  But they were seeking the necessary relief and directions to do so from the court to protect their position.

    DAY THREE

    The final day was all about the nitty gritty of how the recovery costs should be apportioned between the six schemes.  Moeran and Bryant put forward different suggestions as to whether this should be done on the basis of the value of the assets or the value of the MPVA loans within each scheme, and whether this should be done equally or on a pro rata basis.

    The members at the back of the court were by now numb and none of them really paid much attention to what was basically “housekeeping” in terms of internal accounting procedures by Dalriada.  One of the judge’s last points seemed to be that Dalriada should take all and any reasonable steps to recover the MPVA loans – but that the only question was what was reasonable.  She cautioned that some options should not be taken, but stopped short of saying what they were.

     

     

     

  • AWT’S NEXT CHALLENGE: NEGLIGENT CEDING PROVIDERS – STARTING WITH LGPS

    AWT’S NEXT CHALLENGE: NEGLIGENT CEDING PROVIDERS – STARTING WITH LGPS

    Shedding a tear or two at the departure of tPR’s Head of Willy Waggling

    Bye bye Tinky Winky.  Good luck and have fun at LGPS!

    His next challenge will be to lead by example and ensure negligent ceding providers compensate their victims whose pensions were transferred into scams.  And he can start with LGPS as a shining example so the rest can follow.

    As Tinky Winky sails off into the sunset and leaves his regulatory willy waggling duties behind, his first mission is to understand the other side of the coin: the transfer of £millions from secure pensions into the trousers of the scammers.  He will now see with a fresh pair of eyes how ineffective tPR has been – and how negligent the ceding providers were.

    Winky is going to have quite a mess to clean up when he gets to LGPS – so he had better make sure he takes Noo Noo with him.

    Will probably need more than 1 Noo Noo – in different sizes for all the mess at LGPS

    And I am sure he is going to be cheerfully looking forward to working even more closely with me from now on.

    On June 19th, the Secretary of the Ark Class Action – Mrs. G – will be in the High Court as the Representative Beneficiary for the Ark victims challenging Dalriada Trustees’ Beddoe application.  Dalriada, appointed by tPR in May 2011, have already spent around 15% of the £30 million Ark fund.  They are now seeking the court’s permission and directions to use even more of the victims’ funds to take legal action against them to recover £11 million worth of liberation loans. This will result in financial ruin for most of the victims – many of whom will lose their homes.  HMRC say the loans will remain taxable even if they are repaid so there is the real possibility that members will face two sets of crippling proceedings.

    Mrs. G and the other Ark victims – originally 487 of them but now significantly fewer as some have died (some as a result of taking their own lives) – became victims because HMRC and tPR took way too long to take action to suspend the schemes.  Also, the schemes were registered negligently in the first place – tPR allowed fourteen occupational Ark schemes to be registered by the same person without there being evidence of any intention or chance of the sponsoring employer being a bona fide employer.

    Between August 2010 and August 2011, dozens of personal and occupational pension providers cheerfully handed over £30 million to the scammers with utter incompetence, no due diligence and complete disregard for all the dozens of warnings which had been put out by HMRC and tPR for many years.

    In particular, these negligent ceding providers ignored this one issued by tPR Chair David Norgrove on 13.7.2010 just before Ark was launched:  “Any administrator who simply ticks a box and allows the transfer, post July 2010, is failing in their duty as a trustee and as such are liable to compensate the beneficiary.”

    I shall be looking forward to my next meeting with Tinky Winky because he will be able to bring a wealth of first-hand knowledge and experience to the table.  I will probably be bringing Mrs. G to the meeting with me.  Because guess who her negligent ceding provider was?  Yep, you guessed – LGPS.

    BACKGROUND TO THE NEGLIGENCE OF CEDING PROVIDERS SUCH AS LGPS:

    The Ark schemes were launched in 2010 by – among others – Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions S.L. and Premier Pension Transfers Ltd.  The six Ark schemes had been registered by HMRC and the Pensions Regulator with no due diligence by either to establish whether the schemes had been set up with the specific purpose of operating pension liberation; whether they were bona fide occupational pension schemes set up by a sponsoring employer which intended to trade and provide employment; whether there was a competent trustee and board of trustees in place; whether there was a clear Statement of Investment Principles or whether there was ever any realistic prospect of the schemes providing member benefits.

    At around the same time, a multi-million pound occupational pension scam was being vigorously promoted by James Lau of Wightman Fletcher McCabe while the administrators/trustees of the scheme, Andrew Meeson and Peter Bradley, were under criminal investigation for cheating the Public Revenue (and were subsequently jailed).  Also, former barrister, solicitor and porn star Paul Baxendale-Walker was promoting a whole series of liberation scams unhindered by the authorities – despite having been firmly in the spotlight since 2007 as a passionate advocate of liberation.  And KJK Investments/G Loans was a further liberation scheme flourishing at around the same time, having been started in 2009.

    By the time Ark was getting well underway, tPR (formerly OPRA) was fully aware that liberation scams were proliferating and that the feeble warnings they had made back in 2002 about scams which had been operating as far back as 1997 had reached neither the public nor the industry effectively.  In 1999, tPR had been investigating two scammers – Stephen Russell and William Ferguson – for a £6m pension fraud.  The pair were jailed for five years in 2003.

    In fact, tPR were fully aware that since 1999 pension scams were on the increase, and yet did not make it clear to ceding pension trustees what their statutory obligations were in respect of transferring victims into scams. On 13.7.2010, tPR Chair David Norgrove stated that: “Any administrator who simply ticks a box and allows the transfer, post July 2010, is failing in their duty as a trustee and as such are liable to compensate the beneficiary.”  But pension trustees claim they never read that message (let alone heeded it) and that it was neither publicised nor distributed.  Further, in the same year Tony King, the Pensions Ombudsman, reported that he had “found that pension trustees failed in carrying out serious fiduciary responsibilities to others in circumstances in which the law specifically states that they should not be protected from liability.”  And still tPR did nothing.  And the Pension Schemes Act 1993 was not amended to reflect the urgent need to protect the public.

    The Scorpion Campaign was launched by tPR in 2013 after fifteen years of failing to warn the public sufficiently, and omitting to make it clear to trustees what their statutory obligations were to pension scheme members.  During this period, the pension scam industry matured into a deadly serious and well organised large-scale operation in the UK, with many new “players” coming into the arena having been trained by Stephen Ward and other founders and pioneers of early scams.

    It was – by the time Scorpion dribbled weakly and ineffectually into the arena – well known to tPR what the typical characteristics of pension scams were and what phrases and claims were habitually being made by the scammers to dupe their victims into signing over their gold-plated pensions into worthless, toxic schemes and being financial ruined.  Among the many key phrases (such as “your pension is frozen”; “tax-free loan”; “guaranteed 8% returns” etc.), was the most powerful of all: “the scheme is HMRC approved”.  There was, of course, no such thing as HMRC were as guilty of lazy, box-ticking negligence as the culpable ceding provider trustees.  But to this day, tPR has done nothing to dispel this myth, and in fact even continues to help the scammers by using the same incorrect phrase on its own website: If you are required to register a scheme with TPR that does not require HMRC approval, please contact us.”

    Even by the time tPR had published the feeble Scorpion campaign in February 2013, the scammers acknowledged this was having a negligible effect on their various scams, and merely moved the goalposts a little to avoid detection.  Capita Oak, Henley and Westminster continued to operate successfully beyond February 2013, but only a few ceding pension trustees either noticed Scorpion at all or took any steps to put into practice the minimal due diligence suggested by Scorpion.

    In the full knowledge that Stephen Ward was one of the most prolific pension liberation scammers, tPR took no action to suspend any schemes in which he was involved.  As a consequence, in August 2014, a Police officer was scammed out of his Police Pension by Ward’s Dorrixo Alliance and into the toxic London Quantum scheme.  In fact, far from having any widespread effect, the multitude of scams continue to this day unaffected by tPR’s dismal attempts to protect and inform the public.

    PENSIONS REGULATOR’S OBLIGATIONS AND OBJECTIVES:

    According to their own website, tPR’s statutory objectives are set out in legislation and include promoting and improving understanding of the good administration of work-based pensions to protect member benefits.  These objectives are detailed below with notes in bold.

    • to protect the benefits of members of occupational pension schemes tPR has failed to do this and as a result of repeated failures over a period of more than fifteen years has facilitated the scamming of thousands of victims out of millions of pounds’ worth of occupational pensions and into millions of pounds’ worth of tax liabilities
    • to promote, and to improve understanding of the good administration of work-based pension schemes tPR made no effort to work with administrators and trustees of schemes such as Royal Mail; local authorities; the NHS, the Police etc., to help them improve their understanding of how to avoid transferring victims into scams
    • to reduce the risk of situations arising which may lead to compensation being payable from the Pension Protection Fund (PPF) Through multiple failings over a period of more than fifteen years, tPR has exposed the PPF to huge amounts of compensation claims. This is paid for by the ethical, compliant sector of the financial services industry who are understandably deeply unhappy that they have to bear the cost of tPR’s negligence and omissions
    • to maximise employer compliance with employer duties and the employment safeguards introduced by the Pensions Act 2008 tPR has done nothing to ensure that occupational pension schemes have a bona fide employer that either trades or employs anybody – or even exists at all

    One thing which tPR omits to state as being one of its obligations or objectives, is to take action to prevent pension scams in the first place by carrying out due diligence on the trustees, administrators or sponsors of a scam before registering it.  In fact, it is clear from evidenced facts, that what should have been simple common sense in terms of basic, obvious vigilance and diligence, was not done.  No questions were asked; no checks were made; no basic suspicions were raised.  There is no evidence that anybody at tPR ever had the intelligence to ask questions such as whether schemes repeatedly administered by Stephen Ward or his accomplice Anthony Salih and registered to 31 Memorial Road posed any risks to the public.

    Over the past couple of years, numerous “whistle blowing” reports have been made to tPR by members of the Class Action but they have been studiously ignored.  At a meeting in April 2015, tPR were invited to work with (rather than against) the Class Action, but this too was ignored.  Also at this meeting, the Capita Oak case was discussed.  The Insolvency Service subsequently wound up the trustee of Capita Oak, Imperial, but tPR has taken no action to protect the members’ interests and has left 300 victims facing the loss of £10.8 million worth of pension transfers which were 100% invested in Store First store pods (now arguably worthless).  The Henley and Westminster victims are facing a similar fate with zero intervention by tPR.

    In 2014, evidence of Stephen Ward’s pension scam portfolio was handed to HMRC – including numerous occupational schemes and a pension trustee company: Dorrixo Alliance (registered at 31 Memorial Road, Worsley).  However, neither HMRC nor tPR carried out any due diligence to see how many scams were under the trusteeship of Dorrixo and the toxic London Quantum scheme slipped through yet another gaping hole in the net, leading to dozens of victims losing £ millions of pension funds (including final salary ones).

    Reverting back to 2010 when the most damning of tPR’s multiple failings started, hundreds of people were left to be scammed into the Salmon Enterprises scheme with no warnings by tPR that the administrators were under investigation for fraud, and thousands of people were left to be scammed into the various Baxendale-Walker and KJK Investments schemes.  Along with Ark, 2010/11 alone accounted for well over a quarter of a billion pounds’ worth of pension fund losses and crippling tax liabilities.  And this excludes the dozens of scams still being run by Stephen Ward to this day and which tPR continues to ignore.  In fact, it has recently been reported that pension scams are by now accounting for over £10 billion worth of losses so the 2010/11 figure may well be substantially higher in reality.

  • THE PENSIONS REGULATOR’S PLANS TO FINE PENSION SCAMMERS

    THE PENSIONS REGULATOR’S PLANS TO FINE PENSION SCAMMERS

    The Pensions Regulator’s plans to start regulating

    The Pensions Regulator has sent out a clear message in the Johnsons Shoes case where an employer failed to comply with its legal obligations regarding workplace pensions:

    Our message is clear: fail to comply with the law and you may be fined.

    This was clearly the right course of action for the regulator to take and will both encourage some employers to be compliant and discourage others to avoid compliance failures.

    But here is a curiously anomalous situation: I can find no evidence that the company just fined £40k by the regulator has ever scammed thousands of victims out of millions of pounds’ worth of pensions and left them with crippling tax liabilities.  Many of these victims have had heart attacks and strokes as a result of the stress of being scammed. The employer, Johnsons Shoes, sanctioned by tPR, has been in business for 25 years and it is possible that one or two customers might have experienced the odd blister if the hand-made shoes were too tight.  But my search for skeletons, scams or scandals came up with nothing more serious than the fact that they can’t spell the word “paid” on their website.

    A little birdie has tipped me the wink that LaLa has had a quiet word in TinkyWinky’s shell like and told him that now he has got a taste for a spot of regulating, he really ought to up his game and sanction some of the outright scammers (i.e. criminals).  There is a touch of embarrassment now that a long-established family business has received such a high-profile and high-value fine, while the worst sanction that has ever been handed out to criminals is the odd flaccid waggle.

    Tinky Winky’s first dilemma is how to catch the scammers.  Shoe shops are easy because they don’t tend to fly away to exotic places like Gibraltar and Malta but stay neatly sandwiched between a travel agent and a book store.  The Insolvency Service very helpfully named 18 of the scammers in the Capita Oak, Henley and Store First SIPP investment scams which cost over 1,000 victims over £100 million worth of pensions plus tax liabilities.  And I am sure all these criminals will be relatively easy to find in their various magnificent country mansions.

    Once caught, the next dilemma will be to work out how much to fine them.  My suggestion would be to simply divide £100 million by 18 – interestingly that comes out to £5,555,555.55 each.  On top of that, the scammers should be made to pay the victims’ tax liabilities.

    Speed is now of the essence to avoid the embarrassment that it took the Pensions Regulator more than four years to ban 5G Futures trustees Williams and Huxley and that the only action ever taken against Stephen Ward was a “severe dressing gown”.

    If the shoe fits….

    Tinky Winky has got to realise why there is the word “Regulator” in the Pensions Regulator – and if the shoe fits, he has got to wear it.

    Another reason for the urgency of taking some long-overdue action against the criminals, is the part played in the financial ruin of so many thousands of victims by tPR itself.  14 Ark schemes, now in the hands of Dalriada Trustees, were registered by tPR; Capita Oak now in the hands of Dalriada Trustees, was registered by tPR; Westminster now in the hands of Dalriada Trustees, was registered by tPR (and tPR failed to spot that both Capita and Westminster shared the same non-existent sponsoring employer); London Quantum, now in the hands of Dalriada Trustees, was registered by tPR and its trustee was Stephen Ward who was behind Ark, Capita Oak and Westminster…….etc. etc.

    The Pensions Regulator has warned employers not to ignore their automatic enrolment duties.  It would be good to see the regulator’s duties clarified and restore some public confidence in the performance of this public body that is supposed to protect workplace pensions so that people can save safely for their retirement.

     

  • Pension Cold Calling Scammers

    Pension Cold Calling Scammers

    Just goes to show that there is no let up in pension scamming

    The Tonight programme “How Safe is My Pension” aired on Thursday 4th May.  An undercover “sting” exposed the operation of a pension cold calling scam.

    IFA Darren Cooke of Red Circle Financial Planning featured in the programme and spoke passionately about the dangers of cold calling.  He ran a successful petition to campaign for a ban on cold calling.  This attracted thousands of signatures in a short space of time and earned him widespread praise and respect from the financial services industry.  Hopefully, after the election, whatever government we end up with will get back to the serious business of cleaning up the pension scamming industry and putting the scammers where they belong – behind bars.

    WHAT MORE COULD THE PROGRAMME HAVE TOLD VIEWERS ABOUT PENSION SCAMS?

    However, while one victim’s tragic circumstances were highlighted, I think the programme could have done more to feature the extent of pension scams; how many there have been during the past seven years; how much has been lost (many £ billions); how many people’s lives have been ruined; how many scammers there are in the UK and offshore and how many £ millions they have earned out of ruining victims’ lives.

    The programme also missed two important regulation failings – cold calls are facilitated by the illegal sale of personal data – almost no victims understand this.  Also, the promotion of unregulated investments to ordinary savers is an offence. A country that can’t enforce its own laws is a failing state.  And enforcement takes far too long: it took the Pensions Regulator four years to take action to disqualify the shysters behind the 5G Futures pension scam – and there is still no news about them being prosecuted for scamming hundreds of victims out of £16 million worth of pensions which were invested in a plantation in Fiji.  This despite the Pensions Regulator’s Lesley Titcomb clearly stating that scammers are criminals.

    IFA Darren Cooke from Red Circle Financial Planning

    The whole purpose of Darren Cooke’s cold calling ban petition was to draw attention to the enormity of the pension scamming industry and get the government to finally take some action.  The regulators and the police have failed dismally to tackle the problem and address the point that the scammers are left free to operate scams over and over again.  The public need to know just how prolific the scams and scammers are.

     

    But this is the most tragic issue of all.  Serial scammers train and coach the next generation.  They teach the new boys the tricks of this filthy trade and then more scams spring up like rabbits on viagra.  The regulators and the police stand by and let the scammers just get on with their next lucrative operation.  And this is what must change – once and for all.  The victims need protection for the damage already done to them.  And new victims have to be warned of the dangers posed by the pension cold calling scammers as well as the introducers, administrators, promoters, distributors and trustees of various scams operating in the UK and offshore.

    Remarkably similar logos with both Marazion and Perpetual

  • MONEY DOESN’T GROW ON TEAK TREES

    Money doesn’t grow on trees – especially pension money and teak trees.  Teak plantations, eucalyptus plantations and truffle tree farms are traditional pension “investments” of the scammers.  One key example of such a pension investment scam was in May 2014 when the Pensions Regulator (tPR) banned the following scammers from being pension trustees for one year:

    Brian Kensington, Christopher Kensington, BPK & Associates Limited, Sanjay Gambhir, Kanwaljit Gambhir, William Donald-Adkin and Oliver Pyle.

    The pension schemes they had been running (listed below) were placed into the hands of independent trustees – http://www.itslimited.co.uk/.

    St George Structured Assets Limited Pension Scheme

    Wicker Shine Limited Pension Scheme

    Halfords Assets Limited Pension Scheme

    Bardwell Heights Limited Pension Scheme

    Five Rings Limited Pension Scheme

    Beausale Limited Pension Scheme

    Berkeley Securities Limited Pension Scheme

    How did the Schemes work?

    These pension schemes were basically set up as a vehicle to make a few individuals a lot of money.

    The schemes were set up between November 2011 and February 2013 – they each had a sponsoring employer with the same name, set up in the same time frame as the pension scheme. Not at all suspicious?

    The schemes were all registered with the Pensions Regulator by an individual at one company – this individual was neither a trustee nor an administrator of any of the schemes. In tPR’s Compulsory Review, this individual and the company are only referred to as AXXXX SXXXXXX of MXXXXXXX HXXXXXXX (AS of MH)– it would be incredibly handy to know more details of this individual to see if they are behind any more pension or investment scams.

    The “MH” company was registered at the same address as BPK & Associates, who were the trustees of the schemes. The director and 100% shareholder of BPK was Anthony Kensington; he and Christopher Kensington were the sole signatories for the bank accounts linked to the schemes.

    A total of £13.93million of victims’ pensions were invested in the schemes. The monies accumulated in the bank account until they reached £1 or 2 million, and they were then transferred into a single undiversified, unregulated, high-risk investment – completely inappropriate for a pension investment.  This investment was a teak plantation – set up by our anonymous friend AS of MH. The only investments into the teak plantation came from these fraudulently-run pension schemes.

    The majority of the funds were “invested in the teak plantation, and most of the remainder went in fees to – guess who – the handily-set-up company MH.  Some of these fees were paid to “introducers”, who, in an all too familiar scenario, approached members of the public offering them ways to ‘unlock’ their pensions – promising tax-free lump sums, and unrealistically high rates of return on their investments.

    Just when you thought it couldn’t get any worse – in November and December of 2013, the teak plantation account was closed, and the funds were transferred to a number of different companies, all with links to our friend MH. According to tPR this meant that the funds “had ultimately been paid to destinations which did not appear to be onward investments but included payments to individuals and commission payments and legal and marketing fees. The Regulator argued that there had been a deliberate and careful “layering” of the funds to allow for the gradual dissipation of the starting fund to a number of further destination accounts.”

    Some of the fees went directly to pay off individuals’ mortgages and pay school fees, or in one case to buy a Ferrari.

    So what now?

    Of the nearly £14 million initially invested, only £4.73 million was left in the bank when HSBC froze the account. The pension schemes are now in the hands of Independent Trustee Services Ltd. Individual victims are facing massive tax bills from HMRC for the amounts taken out of their pensions. They have no idea whether there will be any money left in their pension pots.

    The trustees were given a terrifying slap on the wrists and a one-year ban from acting as pension trustees.

    As far as we know our anonymous ‘AS’ of MH faced no prosecution whatsoever.

    http://www.thepensionsregulator.gov.uk/docs/DN2857403.pdf

    The question remains, if – as tPR’s Lesley Titcomb claims – scammers are criminals, where are the prison sentences?