Tag: Spectrum IFA Group

  • Armed Against Pension Scams in Spain

    Armed Against Pension Scams in Spain

    Knowledge is power in the fight against pension scams in Spain and all British expat jurisdictions. Be warned! Be armed!

    In the past decade, millions of pounds of pensions and life savings have been destroyed in Spain. Much of this has involved insurance bonds (OMI, SEB and Generali) – as well as all other popular expat countries. Only by benefitting from lessons learned so painfully by those who’ve already been scammed, can new potential victims arm themselves against the scammers.

    Pension scams always start with a so-called “financial adviser” or “wealth manager” or “retirement consultant”. Sadly, it is almost always British “advisers” which scam British expats.

    Potential victims need to understand what to look out for – and avoid. Here are the essential “must haves” for proper, professional financial advisers (in other words people who sell advice, not products):

    • LICENCE – The firm must be licensed – both for insurance and for investment.
    • QUALIFICATIONS – The adviser must be qualified – and a link to proof of the qualification clearly visible on the firm’s website.
    • LEGACY – There must be no legacy of previous scamming within the firm.
    • INSURANCE – There must be a professional indemnity insurance policy in place.
    • NETWORK – If the firm is an agent of a network, there must be an up to date copy of the agency agreement freely available.
    • INSURANCE BONDS – The firm must not sell insurance bonds illegally.
    • UNREGULATED FUNDS AND STRUCTURED NOTES – The firm must not invest clients’ funds in unregulated or esoteric funds, or structured notes.
    • COMPLIANCE – There must be a proper compliance function in place.
    • MANAGEMENT AND TEAM – All members of the team must be clearly visible on the website – along with details of who is in charge and responsible for the firm’s activities and compliance.
    • COMMISSION POLICY – The firm’s policy on undisclosed commissions must be clearly visible.

    When I Googled the term: “Financial Adviser Spain” just now, the top results that came up for me were:

    Blacktower Wealth Management

    Blevins Franks

    Finance Spain – Patrick Macdonald

    Spectrum IFA

    Chorus Financial

    Abbey Wealth

    Alexander Peter

    Axis Consultants

    Logic Financial Consultants

    Harrison Brook

    Seagate Wealth

    When I changed the search term to: “Pension Advisor Spain” or “Wealth Advisor Spain” I also got the following:

    • deVere Spain
    • Mathstone Financial Management
    • Pennick Blackwell
    • SJB Global
    • United Advisers Group
    • Indalo Partners
    • Trafalgar-International
    • Fiduciary Wealth Management

    And one firm which won’t come up at all, no matter how hard you search, is:

    • Roebuck Wealth – run by Paul Clarke

    Plus one which only comes up if you know what to search for:

    • Callaghan Financial Services

    And, of course, the two which have closed down:

    • Continental Wealth Trust – aka Continental Wealth Management
    • Premier Pension Solutions

    So let’s take a look at some of these firms to see what we can learn from their websites and see if there are any warning signs for potential victims:

    Blacktower Wealth Management – Always look at the bottom of a firm’s website to read the small print and see how the firm is licensed. Blacktower is licensed by the Gibraltar Financial services Commission for both insurance mediation and investment advice. Why Gibraltar? Why not Spain? Gibraltar has a long history of facilitating and licensing scams and scammers and the Commission even employs one itself. The website claims to have “Consultants throughout our offices in Europe” – and this worries me. What is a “consultant”? Why not talk about advice, not consultancy?

    Looking at the directors and “international financial advisers” of the firm, there are quite a few. Associate Director Tim Govaerts claims to be qualified with the Chartered Institute of Insurers up to Level 3. But the CII register says they’ve never heard of him. Richard Mills claims to be qualified with both the CII and the CISI, but both registers say they’ve never heard of him. Quentin Sellar claims to be qualified with both the CII and the CISI, but only the latter has heard of him. Clifford Knezovich also claims to be qualified with the CISI but does not appear on the register. Lucia Melgarejo is another member of the team who also claims to be qualified. I met her a few years ago, when a colleague of hers had cold called me, and she told me that she was too busy selling to get qualified.

    The member of the Blacktower team which worries me the most is Terry Tunmore – as he was one of the scammers at Stephen Ward’s Premier Pension Solutions. Tunmore certainly soils the reputation of this firm, and should not be employed by any firm holding itself out to be professional and to have integrity.

    Under the Licensing section of the website, the firm is immediately getting potential clients warmed up to insurance bonds and “wrappers” – and states that it has permission to recommend them and provide investment advice on the underlying portfolios. This should worry any potential client – and ring loud alarm bells – as this indicates a clear intention to use bond providers such as Quilter, SEB, Generali or RL360 – and earn hidden commissions. These products are deemed to be invalid under Spanish law, and are routinely sold illegally in Spain.

    Blacktower’s website makes no mention (that I can find) of compliance or their professional indemnity insurance policy. It also worries me that Blacktower has so many “agents” – and without hard evidence of a robust compliance function, I think there is a risk that some of these agents could well be acting as unsupervised “feral” salesmen, rather than bona fide financial advisers.

    Blevins Franks – Well-known firm with offices in Spain, and other European countries. The team in Spain all have titles such as Partner, Private Client Manager or Regional Manager – and there is no mention of any of them being genuine financial advisers. In Spain, Partners Christopher McCann, Brett Hanson, Paul Montague, Andrew Southgate, Henry Rutherford and David Bowern all claim to be qualified with the London Institute of Banking & Finance, but none of them appears on the member register. Steven Langford claims to be CII qualified but does not appear on the register. With so many members of the team claiming – falsely – to be qualified, this should ring loud alarm bells with any potential victims. We know that Blevins Franks routinely puts all clients into a Lombard insurance bond – which means they are committing a criminal offence in Spain.

    Insurance bonds are illegal and invalid for the purpose of holding investments in Spain, and the usual manner of selling them is also a criminal offence. An insurance bond provides no benefits or protection for investors – and should never ever be used inside a pension (QROPS). Blevins Franks also has a close tie with Russell funds – and routinely invests their clients’ funds in Russell. There’s nothing bad about Russell – but there’s nothing good about them either. A portfolio should always be a well-spread mixture of funds from the whole market – not a narrow selection of investments from one provider. I can’t see any information on the Blevins Franks website about their professional indemnity insurance, compliance or commission policy. All in all, I think there are too many risks with this firm and it should be avoided.

    Finance Spain – Patrick Macdonald – This firm comes high up the Google rankings, so obviously spends a lot of money on SEO and/or Google Ads. The “Regulation” bit on the website states the firm is “part of a group who are regulated by the Financial Services Commission in Gibraltar”. But which “group” is it talking about? There’s a link to the GFSC website, but no evidence as to how the firm is licensed. The website also claims to consist of “qualified and regulated international wealth managers and members of the Chartered Institute for securities and Investment (CISI) in the UK”. But who are these so-called wealth managers? The only one named on the website is Patrick Macdonald – and the CISI register shows him as being employed by Blacktower. But the firm Finance Spain does not appear on the GFSC register as being one of Blacktower’s agents – so how is this firm licensed?

    What worries me most about this website is that it is openly flogging insurance bonds. It promotes “Spanish Portfolio Bonds” – which are routinely sold illegally by the scammers. It claims these bonds are a “tax beneficial home for investments”. But that isn’t true in Spain, as the so-called tax benefits only work for UK residents. In the “Wealth” section of the website, you are met with a brazen offer of insurance bonds from Prudential, Old Mutual and SEB. The section on pension transfers is also very worrying as it gives misleading comparisons between UK pension providers and EU-based QROPS providers; it fails to provide warnings against transferring final salary pensions and – worst of all – states “There is greater investment choice”. This so-called choice is what so many scammers in Spain (in the past ten years) have used to destroy victims’ pensions with high-risk, high-commission, unregulated investments such as structured notes.

    Ironically, the Finance Spain website has a section called “Top 5 Warnings” about pension scams. It recognises that the industry is rife with scammers and warns about cold calling, cashing in pensions, pension reviews and the promise of high returns. But it ignores the fact that Finance Spain is itself heavily promoting insurance bonds – which have been the biggest single cause of pension scams in Spain in the past decade. With no clear information about licensing, compliance, insurance or commission policy – and no idea who the firm is or by whom it is managed – I think it is safe to say this is one to avoid.

    Spectrum IFA – Oh dear, where to begin! There are so many alarm bells here, it’s like being inside a busy fire station. No investment license, but openly giving investment advice, and flogging insurance bonds: “efficient investing (using Insurance wrappers”. And that’s just the home page. The website openly boasts: “Our internationally qualified, professional advisers make certain you receive the best possible advice for the following areas:  Investment Advice in Spain – Pension planning in Spain. That’s a bold claim to make for a firm with no investment license.

    The website goes on to boast: “All our advisers live in Spain, are experienced and qualified.” But who are they? What are their qualifications? One “financial adviser” is Dennis Radford who claims to be qualified with the CISI – but does not appear on the register. Aside from lying about his qualifications, he is one of the former Continental Wealth Management scammers responsible for defrauding many victims out of their pensions and life savings. I have brought this to Spectrum’s attention before, but they obviously don’t care – as Radford brings in a lot of business and commission (on illegally-sold insurance bonds and high-risk, inappropriate investments).

    There is one adviser who is qualified with the CII – John Hayward. I believe he is a decent bloke – so what on earth he is doing with Spectrum is beyond me. Spain may be full of inadequately licensed firms which do nothing but flog insurance bonds to victims who don’t need them and can’t afford them, but there are some (admittedly not many) decent firms he could join.

    Abbey Wealth – This firm has been around a long time – flogging insurance bonds to unsuspecting victims. The firm was an agent of well-known scammers Inter Alliance – the “network” of which Continental Wealth Management was also a member. Abbey Wealth is now licensed by the Central Bank of Ireland. If you’ve ever wondered why so many firms like Ireland, it’s because regulation there is as flaccid as a marshmallow. Another reason why Quilter International is so active there with its insurance bonds – so beloved of so many pension scammers. Abbey boasts a flock of “advisers” who claim to be passionate about financial services – including Ben Noifield who states he is CII qualified (the CII register says otherwise). The rest of the sorry team are an assortment of unqualified salesmen masquerading as advisers.

    No mention of professional indemnity insurance, and no reference to their murky past as part of the Inter Alliance shambles.

    Alexander Peter – No information about if or how the firm is licensed; who the advisers are and whether they are qualified; who is in charge, what professional indemnity insurance they hold.

    Harrison Brook – This firm claims to be a member of the Nexus Global network. But there is no access to the agency agreement and no link to any professional indemnity insurance details or information about who is in charge and who the “advisers” are (and whether any of them are qualified). The question also has to be asked: why don’t firms get their own license rather than joining a network? Ding dong!

    Seagate Wealth – No information about how (or if) this firm is licensed. It states on the website: “We work in conjunction with fully regulated and authorised companies”. So presumably that’s an admittance that they are not regulated or authorised. There’s no information about who controls and is responsible for the firm, and nothing to state how any of the team members are qualified. Perhaps one of the biggest alarm bells about this lot is that they are mostly ex AES International and stole the Spanish client book back in 2015.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • Halloween ghouls and scammers

    Halloween ghouls and scammers

    Happy Halloween – but do watch out for scary monsters. ESPECIALLY PENSION SCAMMERS!

    The scariest monsters at Halloween (or, indeed, at any time of the year) are the bad guys in financial services.  As my dear old Mum used to say: “It’s not the dead you should be afraid of – it’s the living”.

    Never mind ghouls, ghosts and monsters; beware the death bond salesmen who will try to destroy your life savings.  

    Death bonds – be they from OMI, SEB, Generali, Lombard, Prudential International or Friends Provident – all do the same job: nothing.  Except pay huge commissions to the scammers who flog them.

    First ghoul to watch out for is Dennis Radford of The Spectrum IFA Group. The firm itself is not regulated at all: not for insurance; not for investment; not for trimming a witch’s cat’s nails. It seems to have an association with a Spanish insurance firm called Baskerville Advisers S.L. which claims to have an insurance license. But this does not mean that either Baskerville or Spectrum can provide investment advice legally. If Spectrum does provide investment advice, it is committing a criminal offence.

    Dennis Radford – quoted on the Spectrum IFA Group website as being a specialist in “All areas of Wealth Management” – claims to provide tax-efficient retirement planning and Spanish-compliant investments. This means he is breaking the law as he cannot advise on investments as the firm is not licensed. It is also clear that by mentioning “tax-efficient” and “Spanish-compliant” he is referring to death bonds. Ergo, he is merely a bond salesman flogging expensive, pointless bonds to victims who don’t need them and can’t afford them.

    Dennis Radford: Halloween Ghoul or just an unqualified, ex CWM scammer?

    Radford has another problem: he purports to be a member of the Chartered Insurance Institute. It is possible that he might have passed an exam in the past, but that he has now let his membership lapse. Either way, he is NOT qualified.

    But, Radford’s biggest problem of all is that he is an ex Continental Wealth Management scammer. Along with all the other unqualified, unscrupulous scammers – such as Darren Kirby, Dean Stogsdill, Anthony Downs, Neil Hathaway, Richard Peasley and Marco Floreale – Radford was flogging death bonds from OMI, SEB and Generali and putting his victims into toxic structured notes.

    Pension Life already investigated Spectrum IFA Group last year and found the firm to be full of unqualified “advisers”.

    Evidence strongly suggests that Dennis Radford is vigorously selling insurance bonds. The DGS has already ruled that the way pointless, expensive insurance bonds are sold is illegal. ILLEGAL as in a criminal offence. The Spanish Supreme Court has ruled that life assurance policies used to hold investments are INVALID.

    Of course, Dennis Radford is not alone. Another ex Continental Wealth Management scammer is Phill Pennick. He now runs a firm called Pennick Blackwell and continues to flog death bonds. Pennick claims to be a qualified mortgage broker, but quotes no qualifications as a financial adviser. He is not listed either on the CII or CISI register. Which means he is not qualified to provide financial advice. In fact, he is just another death bond salesman.

    Pennick put one of his victims recently into an Old Mutual International bond (which was a pointless exercise – other than to pay Pennick a fat commission) and then invested the whole pension into one single fund. This was undoubtedly for a further fat (undisclosed) commission.

    Pennick Blackwell (well-known for cold calling) is an amusing firm – it seems to consist of three unqualified idiots: ex CWM scammer Phill Pennick himself; an ex-barman called Kris Taft (who obviously can neither spell Chris not Daft) who claims to have a “genuine desire to help people”. If this were true, Taft (or Daft – or whatever his real name is) wouldn’t be aiding and abetting Pennick in flogging death bonds.

    The worst of the Halloween ghouls are, undoubtedly, the death bond providers themselves. Firms such as Old Mutual International, SEB, Generali, RL360, Hansard, Lombard, Friends Provident and Prudential International, give terms of business to unregulated scammers (such as Continental Wealth Management).

    Just after Halloween, there’s a “Finance Tour” roadshow on the Costa Blanca. Old Mutual International’s Ryan Perkins – Area Sales Manager responsible for flogging these toxic products throughout Europe – had been due to attend. This would have been good as he could have apologised personally to some of the many hundreds of victims of OMI whose life savings have been destroyed. OMI’s business model is to give terms of business to unlicensed firms, known scammers and unqualified “advisers” who are only after the fat commissions. OMI knows perfectly well that the victims who get put into these bonds will be conned into investing in expensive, risky assets which pay even more commissions to the scammers.

    However, it seems Perkins has pulled out of the roadshow. Perhaps he was worried about how many CWM victims would be attending and demanding to know what OMI intends to do about their losses. Clearly a coward, Perkins will have to find other ways of meeting his sales targets by taking the scammers out to lunch – away from the glare of existing victims.

    Perkins – and lily-livered CEO of OMI Peter Kenny – could have perhaps promised to make a donation to CWM-victim Mark Davison’s family at the roadshow. Mark – whose pension was placed in an OMI death bond – died a miserable death after his entire pension was destroyed after being invested in toxic structured notes offered by OMI such as Commerzbank, Royal Bank of Canada, Nomura and Leonteq.

    Anyone who is interested in this event (advertised in last week’s Euro Weekly News – once so beloved of serial scammer CWM joint-founder Paul Clarke) will be able to attend in Camposol, Los Alcazares, Orihuela Costa, Quesada, Calpe and Javea.

    I hope that some of the victims of the CWM (and other) scams will go along to this event. That way they can help educate the industry, clean up the dross of financial services and get back to proper, regulated, qualified, fee-based, death-bond-free financial advice.

    Happy Halloween!

    (forget the ghouls – just watch out for the scammers!)



  • Qualified & registered? We do not need to be – we are offshore!

    Qualified & registered? We do not need to be – we are offshore!

    Pension Life followers will know that we have been conducting a series of blog investigations – “qualified & registered?” into offshore pension companies offering financial advice for retail pension investments. Some of the data we have collated is rather worrying – the purpose of this blog is to rank the companies in order of their scores.

    The blog series certainly seems to have caused a stir among these companies with one company stating that the CII is an old company and that if you work offshore you don’t need to be registered within the UK. They state that there are other qualifications that mean you are able to give pension advice.

    At Pension Life we believe that all financial advisers should be appropriately qualified as well as registered with the institute from which they gained their qualifications.  If they are a good, trustworthy FA then why would they object to these requirements? With so many rogues out there, and the figures of financial fraud totting up to millions, an honest FA should be proud for their name to appear on all the professional institutes’ registers to which they claim they are qualified.

    We feel strongly that even if your company is based offshore, if you are working with UK pensions then you need to be qualified and registered to UK standards – and nothing less.

    The three professional institutes’ qualifications needed to be properly qualified to advise on pension planning are:

    • CII
    • CISI
    • LIBF

    and the qualifications need to be at least level 4 – if not level 6.

    More information about these qualifications can be found in our blog Qualified or not qualified? That is the question. Whilst a person can obtain a qualification in financial advice, they must obtain a certain level to be able to advise on pensions.

    Belgravia Wealth – qualified and registered? 0%

    Callaghan QROPS Spain – qualified and registered? 0/2 – 0%

    Seagate Wealth Management Spain – qualified and regulated? 0/6 – 0%

    Square Mile International Financial Services – qualified and registered? 0%

    Robusto Asset Management – qualified and registered? 0%

    Woodbrook Group – qualified and registered? 1/26 – 3.8%

    Globaleye Dubai – qualified and registered? 3/15 – 20%

    Spectrum IFA Group – qualified and registered? just 4/16 – 25%

    and this is where we see the problems with fractional scamming: these companies use their unqualified financial advisers (who are more like blood sucking salesmen) to lure the customers in, then they stick them in an entirely unnecessary insurance wrapper AND then invest the victims in whatever toxic funds pay the highest commission.

    Each ‘adviser’ – qualified or not – creams their bit off the top of the pension fund.  Generally, this means that by the time the fund arrives at its final destination, a large chunc has been taken to cover the many fees and commissions for the various parties’ ‘hard’ work.  Also, we are increasingly seeing retirement savings having two ‘wrappers’, i.e. as well as the QROPS itself, there will be an insurance bond (which will pay the slick-talking salesman up to 10% – a commission which will be carefully concealed).

    Have a look at our blog 10 essential questions to ask your IFA, this blog was compiled with the help of Pension Life members who have fallen victim to pension scammers. They agree that if they had known the right questions to ask they may have avoided losing huge chunks of their pension fund.

    Blevins Franks Spain are top dog in this investigation, they have scored highly with 17/19 of their advisers appearing on at least one of the three registers.

    Blevins Franks Spain 89.5% qualified and registered!

     

  • Spectrum IFA Group – qualified and registered?

    Spectrum IFA Group – qualified and registered?

    If you have been following Pension Life´s blogs you will know that we have been conducting a series of investigations into qualified and registered financial advisers in various firms. Today is Spectrum IFA Group – qualified and registered?

    IFAs and their clients are invited to add to it, correct it, improve it. Here’s a link to the two registers if you want to double check:

    http://www.cii.co.uk/web/app/membersearch/MemberSearch.aspx

    https://www.cisi.org/cisiweb2/cisi-website/join-us/cisi-member-directory

    Please note that this data is correct as of 9am 29/06/2018

    edit: we have been informed that there is a third website we can check for qualifications, so this page is in the process of editing whilst we see if any names appear on the libf members website.

    https://www.libf.ac.uk/members-and-alumni/sps-and-cpd-register

    Pension Life Blog - Spectrum IFA Group - qualified and registered?

    The Spectrum IFA Group – qualified and registered? They have six Spanish offices, plus offices in France, Italy, Switzerland, Luxembourg, Belgium and the Netherlands.  They claim to have a presence in Portugal, but nobody seems to work there.

    In the Continental Wealth Management disaster, 1,000 victims had £100 million invested by unqualified scammers in “life bonds” provided by OMI, SEB and Generali – completely pointless and unnecessary except to pay fat commissions to the scammers; then invested in high-risk, professional-investor-only structured notes which were entirely unsuitable for pensions and resulted in crippling losses.

    The lessons have to be learned from the Continental Wealth scam, and it is really important that all advisory firms make it clear how their advisers are qualified and also make it easy for the public to check out their qualifications.  Let’s have a look at another European advisory firm: Spectrum IFA Group.

    ONE THING THAT WORRIES US ABOUT THIS FIRM IS THAT THERE IS NO EVIDENCE WHATSOEVER OF THIS FIRM HAVING ANY INVESTMENT LICENSES – ONLY INSURANCE LICENSES.  So, it is fine for their advisers to sell pet, car and house insurance, but certainly not to advise on pensions or investments.

    Spectrum IFA Group state – “Our internationally qualified, professional advisers are readily available to make certain you receive the best possible advice and superb service, bringing you peace of mind for the following areas: QROPS…Pensions in Spain.”

    Unfortunately, Spectrum doesn’t score too high on their staff’s qualified and registered status…we looked them up on the CII and CISI registers.  There are, of course, other institutes which can be used – but the firm should make it clear how their advisers are qualified – as well as to what level – and make it easy for the public to check this out.

    Barcelona

    Jonathan Goodman – CII registered Spain International – but not registered as Chartered so not qualified to give pensions advice –  not on libf.ac.uk -bu t  – 

    Paul Roberts – Not listed on either CII or CISI register – not on libf.ac.uk

    Richard Rose – Claims he holds an International Financial Planning Certificate – not on either CII or CISI register – not on libf.ac.uk

    Barry Davys – Not listed on either CII or CISI register – not on libf.ac.uk

    Cédric Privat – Not listed on either CII or CISI register – not on libf.ac.uk

    Chris Burke – Listed on the CII register for Spain – but not registered as Chartered – not on libf.ac.uk

    Costa Blanca

    Robin Beven – CII registered Spain international (but only Cert PFS which is Level 3 – the minimum required in the UK is Level 4, so this begs the question whether Beven should be allowed to advise on UK pensions) – not on libf.ac.uk

    John Hayward – CII registered Spain international – not on libf.ac.uk

    Annette Bowen – not on either CII or CISI register – not on libf.ac.uk

    David Hattersley – not on either CII or CISI register – not on libf.ac.uk

    Dennis Radford – not on either CII or CISI register – not on libf.ac.uk

    Mike Churchley – not on either CII or CISI register – not on libf.ac.uk

    Costa Del Sol

    Pauline Bowden – not on either CII or CISI register – not on libf.ac.uk

    Charles Hutchinson – not on either CII or CISI register – not on libf.ac.uk

    Murcia & Almeria

    Robin Beven – CII register Spain International (but how can he work here and also in the Costa Blanca office)

    John Hayward – CII registered Spain International 

    Dennis Radford – not on either CII or CISI register (ANOTHER duplicate employee works for Costa Blanca also?)

    Mick Churchley – not on either CII or CISI register (and yet ANOTHER duplicate employee works for Costa Blanca also?)

    Basically the Murcia & Almeria office just lists some of the Costa Blanca office employees – a cause for concern??? The two members of the team that we can find on the register are not qualified to give pension advice and no information as to whether the rest have a financial qualification at all

    Mallorca & Menorca

    Susan Worthington – not on either CII or CISI register – not on libf.ac.uk

    Madrid

    Chris Webb – Claims CISI – not listed on the register – not on libf.ac.uk

    edit: despite the libf register NONE of the Spectrum IFA group in Spain appear on it, this means the original score sticks.

    Spectrum IFA Group – qualified and registered? score just 4/16 so far (but we will see what the score is when we finish reporting on all the advisers in all the offices in Europe).

    ….and on to the rest of Europe…