Tag: Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund

  • UAE REGULATOR DOES A BIT OF REGULATING

    UAE REGULATOR DOES A BIT OF REGULATING

    Pension Life Blog - UAE REGULATOR DOES A BIT OF REGULATING - uae insurance authorityInternational Investment has written a jolly good article about the recent action taken by the UAE Insurance Authority – headed up by His Excellency Ibrahim Al Zaabi.  I quote from Gary Robinson’s article:

    “In a statement on the Arabic version on its website the IA has issued a circular confirming the suspension (of Holborn Assets) for a period of three months or until it is satisfied that the company has improved its performance.

    According to Dubai-based sources that International Investment has been speaking to, the IA has written to regulated insurance companies notifying them of their action.”

    I have no doubt that Holborn Assets will rise to the challenge magnificently and in a dignified manner – and will recognise the fact that it is time for the routine misuse of all insurance bonds in offshore financial services to come to an end.  I also doubt Holborn Assets will sell any more RL360 products.

    The Continental Wealth Management debacle must surely serve as a perfect example of how and why insurance bonds should not be used at all – and indeed how and why structured notes should be banned altogether.  And yet, despite the Malta FSC’s lukewarm change in regulations to ban advisers without an investment license and limit structured notes to 30% of a portfolio, useless/pointless insurance bonds and toxic structured notes are very much the norm across the offshore financial services landscape.

    The Eagle-eyed Sheikh Al Zaabi has obviously spotted something that regulators in all jurisdictions which affect British expats have turned a deliberate blind eye to.  Insurance products can, have been, and are routinely abused.  And the abusers often cause heavy losses to thousands of unfortunate victims.  His Eminence also obviously recognises that turning a blind eye damages not only the jurisdiction in question, but also the reputation of financial services in general.

    Quite frankly, it is shameful and embarrassing how many regulators behave (or rather fail to behave).

    The FCA takes no action even when their nose is rubbed into obvious fraud – and let the British Steel disaster happen under their very noses.  In fact it took public-spirited independent financial services professionals such as Al Rush, Darren Cooke and Henry Tapper to take it on themselves to try to rescue the steelworkers while the scammers hovered like vultures.  I would like to be proud to be British, but the FCA is a national disgrace and an embarrassment to all British citizens.  I wouldn’t mind if the FCA was just lazy, but it simply doesn’t care about the interests of those who get conned and scammed.

    The Guernsey FSC allowed many frauds, including trustees Concept Trustees to sell UCIS fund EEA Life Settlements even after the FSA “toxic” warning.  And, of course, EEA Life Settlements itself.  Then the stable door shut with a resounding clang as an ombudsman was brought in, but told not to hear any complaints prior to July 2013.  This effectively excluded all the worst scams which were being carried out in Guernsey by the likes of Concept Trustees – which took business from Stephen Ward’s Premier Pension Solutions which neither had regulation nor professional indemnity insurance.

    Pension Life Blog - UAE REGULATOR DOES A BIT OF REGULATING - uae insurance authorityThe Gibraltar FSC appears to actively encourage outright scammers such STM Fidecs – and when financial crime is brought to their attention they go fishing for a few small, wet fish.  Talking of fish, I think it is very fishy that Paul Garner, now of the Gibraltar FSC, used to work for scammer XXXX XXXX at Global Partners Ltd – the firm that “advised” hundreds of UK-resident victims to transfer their pensions to an STM Fidecs QROPS.  Then STM Fidecs allowed XXXX XXXX to invest 100% of 100% of these victims’ funds into his own UCIS fund: Trafalgar Multi Asset (now in liquidation).  I genuinely don’t know at which point Paul Garner moved over from Global Partners Limited to the Gibraltar FSC……but I have a feeling his leaving do will be an exceptionally (and uncharacteristically) lavish affair – and I am very much hoping to be invited.  I hear there will be something fishy on the menu and Garner’s good fortune will be toasted with something bubbly.  I have no doubt the cleaners will effectively brush all the crumbs under the carpet after the party.

    The Central Bank of Ireland will be put to the test when scammers SEB (formerly Irish Life) are put in the spotlight.  CBI has known for years that SEB – led by Peder Nateus and Conor McCarthy – has been facilitating financial crime.  SEB took £ millions’ worth of business from unlicensed scammers Continental Wealth Management and allowed the whole lot to be invested in toxic structured notes: “for professional investors only”.  These notes – including the fraudulent Leonteq ones (over which OMI is now suing Leonteq) clearly warned of the “danger of loss of part or all of your capital”.  And yet SEB sat there and watched while hundreds of CWM‘s clients’ victims’ life savings were destroyed – and did nothing.  This has left many victims in despair and poverty – with some contemplating suicide.

    Against this backdrop of extreme ineptitude and collusion amongst this collection of chocolate teapots, motorbike ashtrays and fishnet willy warmers, let us all hope that the UAE Insurance Authority shows all these no-hopers what effective regulation should look, smell and feel like.

     

     

     

  • STM Fidecs and the Gibraltar FSC – Evil lives on at the rock

    STM Fidecs and the Gibraltar FSC – Evil lives on at the rock

    Pension Life Blog - STM Fidecs and the Gibraltar FSC - Evil lives on at the rock - STM Fidecs and the Gibraltar FSC – Evil lives on at the rock

    I have read the report about what happened to the scammers at STM Fidecs in the wake of the Gibraltar FSC’s investigation and Deloitte’s so-called “expert report”.

    Frankly, I am stunned.  I have members who are victims of the Trafalgar Multi-Asset Fund and STM Fidecs and they are, understandably, stunned as well.  I have met the people at the Gibraltar FSC and they had seemed decent guys |(but WTF do I know?!).  Maybe they’ve all left, because the people I met appeared enthusiastic and conscientious.  But perhaps they’ve been replaced by a bunch of malfunctioning robots, or ex-scammers or – much worse – ex STM Fidecs employees.

    Pension Life Blog - James Hadley has been investigated for his role in Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund, Capita Oak and Henley Retirement Benefits scams
    Serious Fraud Office investigating XXXX XXXX

    The bottom line is that STM Fidecs scammed hundreds of victims out of their pensions.  STM Fidecs took business from unlicensed scammer XXXX XXXX  of Global Partners Limited (only had an insurance license with Marcus Groombridge’s firm Joseph Oliver) and then invested 100% of the victims’ funds into an illegal UCIS fund – run by XXXX XXXX (now under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office – although I really don’t know what they are playing at because XXXX still isn’t behind bars).

    The rest is history.  The Trafalgar Multi-Asset Fund is being wound up, and after paying the liquidation costs to Stephen Doran, of Doran + Minehane, there is unlikely to be much – if anything – left.  Deloittes spent weeks supposedly investigating STM Fidecs’ books.  I reckon the chumps at Deloittes probably spent most of that time on the golf course with Alan Kentish having a chuckle and a side bet about how feeble the Gibraltar FSC was likely to be.  And, of course, they were right.

    Pension Life Blog - STM Fidecs and the Gibraltar FSC - Evil lives on at the rockNow, of course, Deloittes and STM Fidecs are celebrating, as the GFSC has done nothing to stop this iniquitous, dishonest, incompetent and negligent firm from trading.  Whether STM Fidecs bribed the Gibraltar FSC, or merely got them drunk on the golf course, we will never know.  And it makes no difference.  But certainly the matter has been brusquely brushed under the carpet and the hundreds of ruined lives have been conveniently ignored and forgotten.

     

    Neither STM Fidecs nor the Gibraltar FSC has said a word about redress for the Trafalgar Multi-Asset Fund victims.

    The only words spoken are that the Gibraltar Regulator has told STM Fidecs to “improve its compliance”.  Improve??  How can you improve something that doesn’t even exist at all?  We know that one victim (of scammers Holborn Assets) was bullied by STM Fidecs for trying to improve compliance and harassed for trying to stop obviously non-compliant transactions when she was employed by them.  She was subsequently “paid off” and threatened with a gagging order.

    “STM is now expected to engage with the Gibraltar FSC in order to discuss the Recommendations of the report, and agree a plan of action to implement them.” (according to the report by FT Adviser).  Recommendations?  Where are the sanctions?  Where are the appropriate fines?  Where are the bans to stop Alan Kentish and David Easton from ever practising in financial services again?  Where is the cancellation of STM Fidecs‘ license?

    With this in mind, here are some idiots’ guides as to how to become a pension trustee, and how to become a regulator.  Both are equally easypeasylemonsqueasy – any old idiot or scammer could do it.

    HOW TO BE A PENSION TRUSTEE IN EASY STEPSPension Life Blog - STM Fidecs and the Gibraltar FSC - Evil lives on at the rock

    1. Think of a catchy name: obviously inspired by the acronym STD, Alan Kentish came up with the name STM.  FIDEC is an acronym for “Fighting Infectious Diseases in Emerging Countries”.  Here’s my suggestion: Trussed4U – wadya fink?
    2. Think of a jurisdiction with the most ineffective, pathetic and corrupt regulation – such as Gibraltar
    3. Find an unlicensed scammer like XXXX XXXX who will transfer lots of UK-resident victims into an offshore QROPS and invest their life savings in whatever crap will pay him the highest commissions
    4. Sit back and rake in the profits
    5. Forget fiduciary obligations or anything with the word “trust” in it – only concentrate on the word “trussed
    6. Play golf with the regulator

    HOW TO BE A REGULATOR

    1. Join a golf club (that isn’t too picky about who it lets in)
    2. Give licenses to as many scammers as possible – the more the merrier
    3. Buy lots of blindfolds (to help turn a blind eye to scams and scammers)
    4. Play lots of golf with the scammers and bent pension trustees who facilitate financial crime
    5. When an advisory firm or a trustee firm gets caught scamming, slap a few people on the wrist with a wet fish
    6. Write meaningless reports about robust compliance

    HOW TO BE A SCAMMER

    1. Find yourself a bent jurisdiction (such as Gibraltar)
    2. Find a bent trustee who will accept business from any old unlicensed scammer (such as STD FIDEC)
    3. Find a bent “umbrella” fund which will facilitate financial crime – such as Richard Reinert’s Nascent Fund
    4. Find a Ponzi scheme such as Dolphin Trust which will issue “loan notes” at 10% interest per annum (and up to 25% in introduction commission)
    5. Transfer hundreds of UK residents to a Gibraltar QROPS scam
    6. Get the trustee to agree to invest 100% of 100% of the victims’ retirement savings in … your own fund!

    See how easy it is to be either a trustee, a regulator or a scammer?  But, equally, remember how easy it is to be a victim!

    Quite frankly, Gibraltar should be towed out to sea and sunk.  It is a disgrace to the British nation.  Just give it back to the Spanish and let them clean it up – they would soon kick the likes of STM Fidecs out and stop any further scams and scammers from operating on Spanish soil.  Soil being the operating word.

    Rather than going on about how utterly disgusted I am with the Gibraltar regulator, I will leave it to the eloquent words of one of the STM Fidecs/Trafalgar Multi-Asset victims to put this sickening disgrace into perspective.

    VICTIM: “I have been quietly simmering away but feel I have to release my anger having again read the response from GFSC.

    Firstly, do Gibraltar FSC actually realise over 1,000 individuals and their families are affected by the Trafalgar fiasco, who will potentially all suffer negatively in many different ways during their retirement years?  On a personal level, I should have known better but was caught out by cleverness at a weak moment in my life, but many others I have spoken to had no understanding at all of financial affairs and put all of their trust in the hands of STM and all connected parties due to their apparent convincing knowledge and lies – shocking!!!!!
     
    Due to my own personal research, I know of several other financial institutions who were offered and were involved in discussions regarding Trafalgar.  But due to having correct procedures in place (unlike STM), they clearly ”smelled a rat”, and were far more ”ROBUST” in their approach. The only rat STM smelled was some form of hopeful ”Magic Money Tree” with no concern for its clients’ wellbeing – apart from its own pound note signs.
     
    As you already know I have previously discussed this matter with my local MP and with your permission would like to highlight again the manner in which Gibraltar FSC have dealt with and inadequately reacted to  STM’s performance. STM’s website highlights their glowing history and expertise, but at no point mentions their clearly poor basic audit and compliance mechanisms.
     
    Hopefully, at some point in the future all the evil parties – including STM – in this matter are dragged through the courts, eventually embarrassed and humiliated by the press, and made to pay both financially and personally for their hideous crimes – I can only dream.
     
    Still angry and in despair.
    STM Fidecs/Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund Victim 
     
     
    That victim may well have lost her entire life savings thanks to XXXX XXXX and STM Fidecs.  I am sickened and disgusted with our own onshore regulator’s pathetic failings: the FCA.  But, quite frankly, the Gibraltar FSC makes the FCA look like Superman with TWO pairs of pants on outside their tights!
     

    Pension Life Blog - STM Fidecs and the Gibraltar FSC - Evil lives on at the rockInterestingly, Justin Caffrey – who used to run Harbour Pensions in Malta – told me a year or so ago that he had been approached by XXXX XXXX who wanted to flog his toxic Trafalgar Multi Asset crap.

    Caffrey claimed to have sent XXXX packing with a flea in his ear because he twigged straight away that XXXX was a no-good spiv.  However, he had no such ethics when he invested victims’ pensions in Phillip Nunn’s Blackmore Global crap.

    But now STD FIDEC has bought Harbour and Caffrey has been given the heave-ho.  You couldn’t make it up!

     
     
     
     
  • International Adviser – Giraffe Awards

    Looking at International Adviser’s 2017 awards, I really think the judges were having a giraffe (or they were very drunk).

    Best regular premium investment product – Hong Kong – Zurich International Life” 

    Seriously?  This grim firm has one of the most expensive long-term savings plans on the market.  A victim scammed into buying one of these toxic, inflexible products will pay 48.07% of their savings in fees to Zurich.  To put this into real numbers, a victim who saves £366,600 over a 25-year period, will pay £176,240 in fees.

    In this disgraceful long-term rip-off contest, Zurich is in the midst of the others who similarly overcharge their victims with these undisclosed charges: RL360 at 51.68%, Hansard at 51.28%, Generali at 47.08% and Friends Provident at 46.64%.  Savers would be better off sticking their savings under the mattress, away from the greedy clutches of these rip-off merchants.

    “Best regular premium investment product – Singapore – Friends Provident International”

    OK, perhaps the least expensive of the big five, but still 46.64% is ludicrously expensive.  These long-term savings plans are routinely mis-sold and victims end up losing most of what they have saved.

    “Readers choice – Europe – SEB International”

    This life office was routinely ripping off pension savers by taking business from unlicensed, unqualified, unscrupulous scammers Continental Wealth Management from 2010 to 2017.  To the tune of 1,000 victims with £100 million worth of investments.  About half of which has been destroyed.  SEB stood by and watched CWM invest hundreds of victims’ life savings in toxic, high-risk, professional-investor-only structured notes.  As the scammers gambled away millions of pounds, SEB kept taking their fees – based on the original investment value.  In this case, all of SEB’s victims lost part or all of their retirement funds.

    I HAVE DECIDED TO INVITE MY FRIENDS AT INTERNATIONAL ADVISER TO LAUNCH A NEW AWARDS CEREMONY:

    THE GIRAFFE AWARDS

    My proposal is that awards are given every year for the worst performers in terms of either operating scams or facilitating them.  Let us be very clear – we are talking about financial crime here.  It is extremely important that publications such as International Adviser do their bit in cleaning up the financial services industry.  That is why these awards are so important.

    The judges should be the victims themselves.  Here are my nominations – but am more than happy for victims to suggest others:

    Advisory FirmsContinental Wealth Management, Holborn Assets

    Pension Trustees: Concept, STM Fidecs, Fast Pensions

    Life Offices: SEB, Generali, Hansard

    Funds: Blackmore Global, Trafalgar Multi-Asset, Christianson Property Capital

    Structured Product Providers: Leonteq, Nomura, RBC, Commerzbank

    Regulators: Isle of Man, New Zealand, United Kingdom

    It is clear that regulators and ombudsmen are useless, limp and disinterested in how their respective jurisdictions operate financial crime so routinely.  International Adviser could emerge the hero by exposing the appalling practices in offshore financial services which routinely destroy victims’ retirement savings.  (Or not, as the case may be).

     

     

     

     

  • 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.

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

    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.

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

    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.

  • STM FIDEC’S VARIOUS NEFARIOUS BOOKS

    STM FIDEC’S VARIOUS NEFARIOUS BOOKS

    STM Fidecs' Alan Kentish and David Easton avoided the humiliation of a public court appearance and will now be letting Deloitte inspect their dirty books.

    STM Fidecs has played its “get out of jail free” card, avoided January’s court hearing and agreed to “cooperate” with the Gibraltar Financial Services Commission (GFSC)  – allowing auditors Deloitte to probe STM’s dirty books.

    STM'S VARIOUS NEFARIOUS BOOKS - Pension life - Fraudsters Alan Kentish and David Easton escapes court

    I was more than a little miffed because I was looking forward to a nice day out in Gibraltar.  I had my packed lunch all planned – spam sandwiches, hard-boiled eggs and ripe tomatoes (with a few spares in case I got a chance to lob one or two at Alan Kentish and David Easton).

    Instead, Deloittes are going to “probe” STM’s undoubtedly cooked books.  Fraudsters Alan Kentish and David Easton might try to hide some of the dirtiest stuff.  (And in case some eager defamation lawyer is reading this, “fraudsters” is what Kentish and Easton called themselves on Facebook).

    Deloitte will be digging the dirt on STM Fidecs various pension scams and uncovering exactly what Alan Kentish and David Easton have been up toI will, of course, be more than happy to help Deloittes see the whole picture – rather than just what the Fraudsters want them to see.  I will happily buy a whole shed full of spades as well as several boxes of latex gloves and surgical masks.  However, the most important way in which I can assist them is to give them details of the various scams which the Fraudsters have operated and facilitated.

    The Gibraltar regulator has for some time been trying to expose STM’s various nefarious activities – while Kentish and Easton have doggedly and desperately wriggled and slithered out of reach.  The Deloitte investigation will finally expose the company’s internal compliance failures and conflicts of interest.

    Police investigation into the Cornerstone Friendly Society pension scam facilitated by STM FidecsDeloittes will need to concentrate on at least three main areas: Trafalgar Multi-Asset Fund; Cornerstone Friendly Society and Blackmore Global.  They will also need to liaise closely with the Serious Fraud Office which is investigating the Trafalgar fund scam and the West Yorkshire and Humber Police which is investigating the Cornerstone scam.

    If Deloittes are going to be able to conclude their investigations into STM by the end of March 2018, they will have to ask many probing questions to establish the extent of STM’s “compliance failures” (aka facilitation of financial crime).

    • Why did STM accept business from serial scammer XXXX XXXX’s unlicensed firm Global Partners Limited?

    • Why did STM accept hundreds of transfers from UK residents in whose interests it was NOT to swap their British pension arrangements for an expensive QROPS?

    • Why did STM allow these victims to have funds invested in XXXX XXXX’s own fund – Trafalgar Multi-Asset (a UCIS which is illegal to promote to UK residents)?

    • Did STM not consider it to be a conflict of interest for the “adviser” and fund manager to be one and the same person? Especially a person with a sordid track record of operating pension scams such as Capita Oak, Henley, and Westminster?

    Chief executive Alan Kentish has described the Deloitte “deal” as a workable solution and is jolly pleased to have avoided January’s court hearing.  He has also said that the hearing wasn’t in either STM’s or the GFSC’s interests.

    I suspect both STM and the GFSC knew it was very likely that quite a few STM victims whose pensions are in tatters were likely to turn up and that the hail of ripe tomatoes was likely to make quite a mess of the Supreme Court’s wallpaper.

    Meanwhile, Alan Kentish and another STM Fraudster are still being investigated by the Gibraltar Police Money Laundering Unit.  I just hope they don’t get hauled off to jail before Deloitte get to finish their digging and probing – as that might delay the publication of the report.

    So what has prompted all this recent flurry of action?  In November 2017, the GFSC wrote to STM Fidecs and outlined their concerns.  These included – among other things:

    • Effectiveness and oversight of STM Fidecs’ internal compliance functions
    • High turnover of staff in Compliance Officer and Money Laundering Regulatory Officer roles
    • General suitability and experience of compliance staff
    • Exercise of corporate governance across all of the STM companies
    • Compliance with legal and technical requirements in relation to the operation of client accounts
    • Level and nature of due diligence undertaken when accepting new QROPS business and whether legal and regulatory obligations are/were being met
    • Nature of investments made in relation to QROPS e.g. the Trafalgar Multi-Asset Fund – linked to serious customer detriment and alleged fraud

    I think Deloittes also ought to look into why STM Fidecs’ own staff were bullied into “looking the other way” when they were worried about compliance issues (and then paid off to keep them quiet).

    Finally, STM Fidecs has now announced it will be moving from Gibraltar to the UK.  This move comes after what Alan Kentish has described as “unexpected challenges”.  Kentish remains bullish, however, about the company’s profitability.  However, he still fails to express any concern for the hundreds of STM Fidecs’ victims who will inevitably see heavy losses in their pension funds and will suffer poverty in retirement.  Shame on this callous character.

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

    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.

  • Pension Scams: Investigations and prosecutions by SFO

    A letter from the SFO to Frank field highlighting pension scam prosecutions. Pension Life Blog

    The Serious Fraud Office has written to Frank Field – Chairman of the Pensions Select Committee.  The SFO was responding to Frank’s request for details about pension fraud cases prosecuted by the SFO and about the fraudsters’ various scamming techniques.

    It is obviously essential to recognise and understand these techniques so that police authorities, regulators, HMRC, the Insolvency Service and the government understand how these crimes work.  They need to know how the criminals think, plan, scheme and execute their crimes.  It is even more important to publish these details to educate and warn the public as to how to avoid becoming victim to existing and future scams.

    The SFO reported two cases and described how they worked:

    Sustainable Agroenergy (SAE) Plc,  investors were told their investments were in biofuel products, that land was owned in Cambodia and planted with Jatropha trees – a tree with highly toxic fruit that could be used to produce biofuel.

    Pension life highlighs more toxic pension and investment scammers. Sustainable Agroenergy (SAE) Plc investmenst in Bio fuel.

    Investors were told there was an insurance policy in place to protect the investments if the crops failed. There was already documented research to show that the Jatropha tree,  was not as fruitful as originally thought.        Gary West, James Whale and Stuart Stone, were convicted of fraud and bribery offences and sentenced to a total of 28 years imprisonment. They were given confiscation orders totaling £1.36m – most of which has now been paid and distributed on a pro-rata basis to investors eligible for compensation.  Details of compensation.

    In the Arck LLP case (not to be confused with the ARK pension liberation scam)  the fraudsters promised investments would be used for a scheme to develop holiday resorts in Cape Verde. Pension life highlights that Clay and Clark pleaded guilty to fraud and forgery. Clay was sentenced to 10 years and 10 months in prison, while Clark, the junior conspirator, was sentenced to two years in prison, suspended for 2 years, with 300 hours unpaid work. Confiscation Orders of £344,244.07 and £178,522 were made against Clay and Clark respectively. To date, the SFO has recovered over £500,000 and is currently identifying potential victims for compensation, test on a cloudy beach. Pension and saving scamsWith assurances that the funds were in secure bank accounts which would not leave the UK, Arck LLP later forged statements to mislead investors about the losses.

    Clay and Clark – the Arck fraudsters – pleaded guilty to charges of fraud and forgery. Clay was sentenced to 10 years and 10 months in prison, while Clark, was sentenced to two years in prison. Confiscation Orders of £344,244.07 and £178,522 were made against Clay and Clark respectively. To date, the SFO has recovered over £500,000 and is currently identifying potential victims for compensation.

    The SFO is also conducting investigations into Capita Oak Pension and Henley Retirement Benefit Scheme, various Self-Invested Personal Pensions (SIPPS) as well as other storage pod investment schemes. This investigation also includes the Westminister Pension Scheme and the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund.

    It  is thought that over a thousand individual investors have been affected by this alleged fraud.

    The amounts invested in these scams totals over £120m.

    Stephen Ward parachutes away each time his victims face crippling losses on scams he has cashed in on. Pension Life
     

    Around 300 victims of the Capita Oak scheme were given “Thurlstone” loans operated by scammer XXXX XXXX. Now victims face crippling tax bills from HMRC as the loans are deemed to be unauthorised payments.

    The Henley Retirement Benefit scheme is the sister scheme to Capita Oak.  Both schemes were administered by Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions and Premier Pension transfers.

    Westminister Pension Scheme: Stephen Ward AGAIN! 

    Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund: hundreds of victims have been affected by this toxic, high risk UCIS fund (Unregulated Collective Investment Scheme) which is illegal to be promoted to UK residents.  All these victims were “advised” by unlicensed XXXX XXXX to transfer into an STM Fidecs QROPS and then invest 100% of their funds in Trafalgar – his own fund.

    How, you may be asking, are these people getting away with scam after scam? Especially Stephen Ward. His company, Premier Pension Solutions(PPS) has close connections with ARKEvergreen Retirement Trust Qrops, CWM, Headforte, Southlands, London Quantum to name just a few. Ward is a clever “chameleon”, hiding his past scams and reinventing himself each time with ever changing new skins.

    A common feature in a number of these frauds is the offer to investors of an unrealistically higher or secured rate of return.  Pension Life has many members who have suffered at the hands of not just the schemes listed above but also the repeat fraudsters operating them.

    Some victims are facing more than a 73% LOSS! on their pension investments.                       Others are facing huge tax bills from HMRC.

    Click here for more blogs by Pension Life on other groups involved.

     

     

     

  • BSPS – Pension Dilemma for Steel Workers

    Pension life advises British steel workers to consider their pension options careful so they don't get scammed. BSPS pension decision to avoid fraud and listen to Henry Tapper (The Pension Ploughman), Al Rush, Darren Cooke

    The BSPS dilemma for steelworkers is clearly difficult with very little time to consider options and make a wise decision which will affect them for the rest of their lives.

    There’s a whole team of willing voluntary professional advisers trying to provide some guidance to help people avoid making the wrong decision.  This team includes eminent pensions experts including Henry Tapper (The Pension Ploughman), Al Rush, Darren Cooke and many more.

    I’d like to contribute to this excellent initiative to help the scheme members – but I can’t advise how to do things right; I can only advise how not to do things wrong.

    Henry Tapper, Al Rush and Darren Cooke – plus other qualified, licensed advisers generously giving their time to help the BSPS members – will give sound guidance as to the right decision to make.  The Pensions Advisory Service will also help.

    Here are some pointers from me – someone who represents hundreds of victims of pensions scams and has seen all the tricks, lies, false promises and smoke/mirrors in the pension scamming business.

    1. Check that a proper adviser is licensed – in other words: regulated.  You can check this out on the FCA register.  Here is an example: check out Darren Cooke’s firm, Red Circle.  You will see that his firm is regulated (or licensed by the FCA – Financial Conduct Authority) to carry out personal pension and stakeholder pension advice.  Remember, unregulated means SNAKE OIL SALESMAN.  And beware the “introducer” – which is another word for snake oil salesman.  If you find the so-called adviser is not regulated – run like hell!
    2. Beware “free” financial advice.  Go to Tesco and ask if they have any free milk.  Go to the Post Office and ask if there are any free stamps.  Go to an accountant and ask if he will do your accounts for free.  Go to your local car dealer and ask if there are any free cars.  There ain’t no such thing as free.  Everything has to be paid for – but make sure that all the charges, fees, commissions etc., are openly declared.  If someone promises you free financial advice – run like hell!
    3. Run a mile from “get rich quick” investment schemes.  Your pension has to be invested in boring, safe, traditional assets which will grow steadily and safely.  If you are offered something exciting and sexy – like eucalyptus plantations; car parks; football betting; overseas property “opportunities” and truffle trees – run like hell.  If you are told that your pension will get “guaranteed returns” of 8%, 10% or 12% – run like hell!
    4. If you are told you can have some cash out of your pension other than your 25% tax free at age 55 – or the rest at the marginal tax rate – run like hell!
    5. If you are cold called – run like hell!

    Remember, you are a sitting duck – and it is open season.  Also remember, the good guys like Henry Tapper, Darren Cooke and Al Rush – as well as all the other decent, honourable, ethical advisers who are volunteering their time free to help you avoid the scammers – can give you some invaluable, generic guidance.  But someone who is offering to transfer your pension into another scheme is giving you advice.

    So what is the difference between actual advice and general guidance?  Let us take the example of a medical practitioner: you know a doctor – say a GP –  at your local tennis club.  You are concerned about your health in general and the fact that you are putting on weight and get breathless going upstairs.  The doctor might suggest – as in suggest – that you consider going on a diet and taking some exercise, but that you also consult your GP.  That is an informal and friendly (as well as well-meaning and common sense) suggestion.  But it does not constitute formal advice.  A specialist would look for deeper issues such as blood pressure, signs of diabetes and any other underlying conditions to be investigated – and would prescribe specific treatment.

    If all else fails, drop me an email and I will try to help: angiebrooks@pension-life.com – but meanwhile, please buy some good running shoes!

    Meanwhile, take a look at just a few of the schemes for which Pension Life is representing groups of victims who have lost their life savings to the same – or very similar – scammers who will inevitably be targeting you now:

    Ark

    Axiom UPT

    Blackmore Global

    Capita Oak

    Continental Wealth

    Fast Pensions

    KJK Investments and G Loans

    London Quantum

    Park First

    Salmon Enterprises

    Trafalgar Multi-Asset Fund

    Westminster

     

     

     

     

     

  • STM FIDECS – SAFE HARBOUR FOR ALAN KENTISH

    STM FIDECS – SAFE HARBOUR FOR ALAN KENTISH

    Gibraltar's most wanted man - Alan Kentish, CEO of STM Fidecs
                                                        Gibraltar’s most wanted man – Alan Kentish, CEO of STM Fidecs

    STM Fidecs needed a safe Harbour.  And now they’ve got one – but is it really safe?

    LETTER TO ALAN KENTISH – CEO OF STM FIDECS:

    Dear Al, hope you are well.  I’m not anticipating a response to this because I know how difficult it must be to type emails when you’re wearing handcuffs.  However, I thought I would drop you a line because I am genuinely worried about you.

    STM's harbour for investment scams
                     STM’s harbour for investment scams

    You see, I heard you’d bought Harbour Pensions for £1 million – a book of 1,600 members.  But how many of these members will want to stay once they find out they are now in the hands of STM?  If any of them have got any sense they will transfer out to a decent QROPS trustee who can be trusted to look after their pensions.  STM Fidecs allowed hundreds of victims – advised by a known scammer running an unlicensed firm (XXXX XXXX) of the Pensions Reporter/Global Partners Limited) – to be 100% invested in XXXX’s own fund, Trafalgar Multi Asset (now suspended, under investigation by the SFO and being wound up).

    The Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund was a sub-fund of the Nascent Platform – one of many operated by Custom House Global offering scammers a cost-effective place to waste pension pots.  This provided a low-cost solution to wannabe fund managers to try their hand at playing musical money with victims’ life savings.

    What surprises me, is that having proved that STM Fidecs is an incompetent firm run by inept – or perhaps even crooked – people, you would be splashing money around acquiring more victims and more toxic assets.  Instead, you should have been paying compensation to your existing victims who may well have lost a substantial proportion of their retirement savings due to STM Fidecs’ own failings.

    Having acquired Harbour, you have now added the toxic, illiquid, high-risk, un-audited Blackmore Global fund to your portfolio of worthless crap.  Your balance sheet must need disinfectant and a good old scrub.

    STM's balanced portfolio of toxic investment scams - Trafalgar Multi Asset and Blackmore Global
    STM’s balanced portfolio of toxic investment scams – Trafalgar Multi Asset and Blackmore Global

    Furthermore, you will now be in league with not one but TWO lots of scammers who are under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office.  XXXX XXXX (Trafalgar Multi Asset) and Nunn McCreesh (Blackmore Global) were both behind the Capita Oak and Henley Retirement Benefit pension scams – all 100% invested in Store First store pods.

    Seriously, Al, you should think about cleaning up your act – not making it dirtier and murkier.  Hope those handcuffs don’t chafe too much.

     

    Best, Angie

     

  • SCAMS AND SCANDALS SYMPOSIUM – TRANSPARENCY TASK FORCE 15.11.17

    SCAMS AND SCANDALS SYMPOSIUM – TRANSPARENCY TASK FORCE 15.11.17

     

    Scams, scandals and creepy crawlies
    IT IS A SCANDAL THAT THE WOLVES, VULTURES, SCORPIONS AND BLOOD-SUCKERS OF THE FINANCIAL SERVICES WORLD STILL FLOURISH

    SCAMS AND SCANDALS SYMPOSIUM – PART OF THE TRANSPARENCY TASK FORCE: WEDNESDAY 15TH NOVEMBER AT THE OFFICES OF IG GROUP, 12.30 TO 5PM

    Pension and investment scams and scandals are a blight on financial services and saving for retirement.  The energetic and inspired campaign by Darren Cooke of Red Circle successfully raised awareness of the problems of cold calling.  But the snap general election scuppered serious traction on this and the most the government has achieved so far is to make a vague promise to talk about talking about it.  But still it is not illegal, and still the scammers are scamming away merrily.

    Andy Agathangelou, Chair of the Transparency Task Force
    Chair of The Transparency Task Force

    The Scams and Scandals team was formed as a result of inspiration by the Transparency Task Force’s Andy Agathangelou.  It has attracted a group of like-minded professionals who believe passionately that a concerted effort should go into coordinating a zero-tolerance approach to scams and scandals.  All members of the team are committed to producing a White Paper which can focus the minds of government ministers, regulators and law enforcement agencies on the whole problem – not just the cold calling bit.

    CWM "advisers" acted as sharks

    Irrespective of which version of which political party we are talking about, the ultimate object of a successful and fulfilled life is to be happy, healthy and solvent.  And this includes getting a decent education, leading a responsible and law-abiding life, and saving for a comfortable retirement.  Millions of British citizens manage to achieve this goal, but sadly many thousands of them lose part of all of their retirement savings to the armies of scammers.

    Pension Life has been dealing with dozens of different scams in different jurisdictions by an army of repeat scammers since 2013.  These include Trafalgar Multi-Asset Fund scam operated by XXXX XXXX and facilitated by STM Fidecs in GibraltarContinental Wealth Management pension investment scam (with much of the transfer advice provided by “sister” company Premier Pension Solutions run by Stephen Ward); Blackmore Global run by Nunn and McCreesh (who ran the cold calling and lead generation for Capita Oak and Henley); Fast Pensions run by Peter and Sara Moat in collaboration with Bridgebank Capital; Premier New Earth Recycling Fund; Park First – part of Group First (along with Store First); Windsor Pensions and the Danica QROPS liberation scam; London Quantum and Stephen Ward’s Dorrixo Alliance; Holborn Assets in Dubai; Ark (Lancaster, Portman, Cranborne Star, Woodcroft House, Tallton Place, Grosvenor); Toby Whittaker’s Store First; Elysian Biofuels liberation scheme; Axiom UPT; Capita Oak; 5G Futures; Guardian Wealth Management; Square Mile Financial Services; https://pension-life.com/incartus-investment-pension-scheme-in-the-hands-of-dalriada-trustees/Incartus Investment Pension Scheme; KJK Investments and G Loans; Westminster pension scam run by XXXX XXXX; Salmon Enterprises – run by James Lau; Pennines, Malvern and Mendip liberation scams; Henley pension scam run by XXXX XXXX; Evergreen QROPS and Marazion loans; Bespoke Pension Services.

    James Hadley, one of the many pension scammers ruining thousands of victims' lives
    XXXX XXXX, one of the many pension scammers ruining thousands of victims’ lives

    All these scams and scammers have caused thousands of victims to lose hundreds of millions of pounds’ worth of retirement savings.  And caused untold misery – in many cases exacerbated by HMRC punishing the victims rather than the perpetrators.

    The Scams and Scandals Team has a clear five-point goal:

     

    1. Ban UK cold calling and fraudulent calling

    We must not let this disappear off the agenda and must keep up pressure on MPs and Ministers – as well as the regulators.  But this must also be extended to overseas as we already know that the UK-based cold calling outfits have made arrangements to move their operations or merely facilitate re-routing of phone numbers.  However, the twilight industry of “introducing” must also be examined as this is a serious source of scam facilitation.

     

    1. Support Lesley Titcomb “Scammers are Criminals”
    Lesley Titcomb - head of the Pensions Regulator
    Ms Titcomb has publicly declared scammers to be criminals

    We must work with the regulators, government and law enforcement agencies to enhance existing and introduce new regulation and legislation to prevent new scams, close down known existing scams and bring those involved in conceiving, operating and promoting both to account.

     

    1. Revitalise Scorpion Campaign

    Fundamental to preventing scams is communication to the public of the dangers of cold calls and pension/investment scams which would include the Scorpion Campaign – but so much more as well.  A key part of this exercise is the use of social media and the plan to produce a documentary and Youtube channel giving real-life examples of past and current scams. Explaining the mechanics of a scam is one thing – but showing an actual example of a victim and the scammer is bound to have even greater impact.

     

    1. Write off HMRC debt where scams are proven
    EDWARD TROUP HMRC PENSIONS LIBERATION ACCOMPLIACE
    HMRC celebrating the tax they collect from victims of pension liberation fraud

    We need the help of the government here and could do with an actuary to help us work out what the cost to the State is of taxing victims of scams.  If we can demonstrate that by ruining a scam victim (who has already probably lost part or all of his pension) with the tax charge, the long-term cost of supporting the victim and his family will far outstrip the tax collected.  This is especially well demonstrated in the Ark case where the victims have got to both repay the “loans” and pay the 55% tax even if the loans are repaid.

     

    1. Ensure AML regs include pension scamming
    Store First saw over a thousand pension scam victims lose £120 million
    TOBY WHITTAKER’S TOXIC EMPIRE WILL FINALLY BE HUFFED AND PUFFED AWAY

    I would widen this to include investment scams.  This is because at the heart of every pension scam there is a fraudulent investment (and/or loan).  The actual pension itself is harmless as it is essentially just a box with a label on it and only becomes toxic and dangerous once you put the scorpions, snakes and cockroaches inside it.  You could equally put fluffy kittens in it.  It is the mis-use of the pension “box” which is the scam.

     

  • STM Fidecs – Trafalgar Multi Asset Scam

    STM Fidecs – Trafalgar Multi Asset Scam

    STM Fidecs, the Gibraltar-based trustee firm used for the Trafalgar Multi Asset Scam, is now the subject of large numbers of complaints to the Gibraltar authorities.  Hundreds of victims of XXXX XXXX’s unlicensed “advice” transferred safe UK pensions to a Gibraltar STM Fidecs QROPS and then he invested 100% of their funds into his own fund – Trafalgar Multi Asset (now under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office).   These victims have now submitted evidence and testimony.  These reports and complaints are against both XXXX XXXX and STM Fidecs for their part in this scam.

    STM Fidecs are also being reported to the Gibraltar Financial Services Commission for the attention of:

    Annette Perales, Head of Financial Crime

    and

    Zoe Westwood, Head of Enforcement, Legal, Enforcement and Policy

    The Serious Fraud Office has been investigating this scam – in which STM Fidecs played an integral and crucial part – for some months.  XXXX XXXX and one of the STM Fidecs directors have been arrested.  XXXX’s office was searched and no doubt STM Fidecs’ offices were also searched.  Obviously, the victims all want those responsible for this scam to serve maximum prison sentences.

    The STM Fidecs website makes the following grand-sounding claim:

    “The backbone of STM is its staff. We have people who have worked for us for 20 years who are the heart and soul of our business. If we didn’t have outstanding staff, we wouldn’t be able to do what we do.”

    The only thing “outstanding” would be an immediate admission of their guilt and negligence, as well as an undertaking by STM Fidecs to compensate their victims for the £ millions of losses they are facing due to STM Fidecs’ complicity with this scam.  Let’s examine some of these staff and see how much backbone they really have.

    Pension Life Blog - Alan Roy Kentish ACA ACII AIRM Role: Chief Executive Officer
    Alan Roy Kentish
    ACA ACII AIRM
    Role: Chief Executive Officer

    Alan Kentish, CEO, claims to be a qualified chartered accountant specialising in the financial services industry.  So you would have thought he would have known not to accept business from an unlicensed firm – XXXX XXXX’s Global Partners Limited (now Tourbillon).  He ought to have known that UK residents should not be transferred to a QROPS at all.  He would have known that members’ funds should not be 100% invested in one UCIS fund (illegal to be promoted to UK residents).  And he should have recognised that it is a clear conflict of interest for members to be invested in a fund for which their adviser was also the investment manager.

    What has Alan Kentish done to put this right?  How much compensation has he offered to the hundreds of distressed investors?  Has he engaged with the victims and assured them that STM Fidecs acknowledges their responsibility, liability and culpability?  No – Alan Kentish has done nothing except pull up the drawbridge-like a spineless coward.

    Pension Life Blog - Pension Scams - David Easton, Head of Pensions at STM Group PLC
    David Easton, Head of Pensions at STM Group PLC

    David Easton, Head of Pensions for STM Group PLC joined STM in October 2014 as Managing Director of the Gibraltar pensions business and is also a board member of the pensions businesses in Malta and the UK. Since 1990 David has worked in the financial services arena specialising in pensions administration.  David is responsible for driving the expansion of STM Group’s international pensions division as well as personal and occupational pension schemes in Gibraltar and personal pensions in the UK.”

    So, responsible for driving the expansion of STM’s pension business into an investment scam run by a known serial scammer?  Well done David.  Your “primary focus” was very clear: put UK residents into a QROPS and then allow all of them to be 100% invested into an illegal UCIS.  And to what extent has he engaged with the hundreds of distressed victims of this scam?  Zero.  Another spineless coward who refuses to speak to these people.  He will neither explain nor apologise.

    Other members of this spineless team include Therese Neish – Chief Finance Officer, Liz Plummer – Company Secretary, Ian Farr – Group Head of Distribution, Linda Martin – Technical Services Manager.  There are of course many more – none of whom has shown the slightest concern for the plight of the victims who have lost £21 million worth of pensions between them.

    Backbone?  Heart?  Soul?  Absolute rubbish!

    A former employee of STM Fidecs sent me the following statement:

    “We were told not to go to the Pension Life website so as not to give her any traffic and SEO rankings.  I believed them. More fool me. This is why I am now checking it out and am amazed at what’s on there.

     I was asked to dig the dirt on Angela Brooks and I did, believing STM had not been aware of the Trafalgar stuff but had instead been duped.  It’s more than apparent now that they fully knew what they were doing. They have sent Angela lawyers letters insisting she cease from mentioning them on her website or will take legal action against her.

     Shot in the dark because everything she says is true so they can’t gag her.

     Glynis Broadfoot (a victim of Holborn Assets and Gower Pensions) who also used to work for STM Fidecs, was marched out. We had no anti-bullying policy in place at the time and Glynis was being bullied. They marched her out on trumped up charges.

     If I had known this at the time I would have objected. Glynis won’t speak though. They must have frightened her to death. 

    Outstanding staff?  I think not.  The only thing the STM Fidecs staff excel at is bullying.  And bullies are, of course, the biggest cowards of all.

    Pension Life - Dolphin Trust - a UCIS which was illegal to be sold to UK residents - Pension Scam
    Dolphin Trust – a UCIS which was illegal to be sold to UK residents

    The Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund liquidators say this is the most obvious scam they have ever seen. Purely designed through ‘layering’ to misappropriate funds, the liquidators are just glad the administrators pulled the plug at £21m and not later. At the height of the success of this 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.

    Apparently, Dolphin Trust (the German fund which borrows money to refurbish derelict government and listed buildings) has “cooperated” and the liquidators have found some other assets as well, although getting them may prove tricky since they will have been vigorously hidden.  Dolphin Trust is typically found alongside car parking spaces, store pods, eucalyptus plantations, truffle trees and other toxic crap peddled by the scammers.

    The liquidators reckon the victims might get 50% back less costs, so after the liquidators’ costs that would be nearer 30% net.  But STM Fidecs know all this, but have deliberately hidden it from the victims.

    It is human to err, and STM Fidecs is staffed by humans (albeit spineless ones).  But what is not forgivable is to fail to come to the table and assure the victims they will be compensated for their losses and profound distress.  STM Group has been bragging that it has plenty of money and will be buying up other trust companies to make their business bigger and more profitable.

    Pension Life Blog - Dolphin trust pension scam - Only sharks and Jelly fish
    None so blind….

    STM Fidecs’ victims feel they shouldn’t be in the pension trustee business at all since they are clearly incompetent, dishonest and dishonorable.  This belief is clearly correct since STM Fidecs also accepted transfers from Continental Wealth Management (unlicensed “chiringuitos”) and then allowed the victims’ pensions to be 100% invested in high-risk, professional-investor-only structured notes.  As a result, the STM members are facing heavy losses.

    STM Fidecs is also mentioned in Offshore Leaks and was involved in the Cornerstone Friendly investment scam.

    Pension Life Blog - Hundreds of victims have reported both James Hadley and STM Fidecs to the SFO and the GFSC for fraud - Pension scams
    Hundreds of victims have reported both XXXX XXXX and STM Fidecs to the SFO and the GFSC for fraud

    The Gibraltar authorities must now show how “highly regulated and transparent” Gibraltar is.  As things stand, the evidence is that Gibraltar is full of thieves, scammers and scoundrels.  The chiringuitos love being there because the regulation is widely accepted as being as spineless as the staff and directors at STM Fidecs.

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

    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.

  • REGULATORS AND SCAMMERS

    REGULATORS AND SCAMMERS

    Regulators in all jurisdictions must take action against scammers
    Regulators have got to do some effective regulating

    Regulators and scammers; cops and robbers; cowboys and indians. Each has their role: cowboys fire their six shooters and dodge the injuns’ arrows valiantly; cops drive their police cars at breakneck speed to corner the robbers in a dark alley; regulators waggle their flaccid willies and watch the scammers walk all over them.

    In the week my great friend had his appendix out (somewhat hurriedly as it happens) I thought I would write a slight variation on the Three Sausages poem:

    Regulation, regulation, regulation,
    Three scammers went to the station,
    One got crushed, one got killed, 
    And one got a huge operation. 

    In any civilised society, criminals are jailed. Ours should be the same.
    The sizzling scammers need to be put behind bars – and the keys need to be thrown away.

    Now, I am not suggesting I want the scammers crushed or killed – nor even that they suffer the same pain and discomfort that my mate has gone through in hospital this past week.  But I do want them stopped from harming more victims and destroying more life savings.  And, of course, put behind bars where the only thing they can scam is the soap on a rope.

    WHAT DO REGULATORS NEED TO DO AS A MATTER OF URGENCY?

    All regulators in all jurisdictions where has been a history of scamming and mis-selling need to work closely with governments, tax authorities, financial crime units, ombudsmen and the press.  There has to be a “zero tolerance” attitude to scams and scammers – and all those responsible have to be brought to justice.  And publicly so.  It is clear that most regulators – including the FCA – are limp, lazy and useless and this has to change.  Here are some examples of regulators’ failures in each jurisdiction:

    UK:

    • Allowing unregulated firms to provide financial, pension and investment advice freely and without sanction in the UK.  Sometimes these firms have an insurance license – sometimes none at all
    • Not sanctioning regulated firms for clear breaches and/or fraud – such as Gerard Associates which was introducing Ark victims to Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions as far back as 2010, and was then providing “advice” to Ward’s London Quantum victims
    • Ignoring firms such as Fast Pensions who have defied 37 Pensions Ombudsmen’s determinations
    • Failing to coordinate criminal prosecutions against the scammers behind numerous scams who ruined thousands of lives and cost hundreds of millions of pounds’ worth of life savings
    • Failing to use existing legislation provided by FSMA 2000 to prosecute advisors (regulated and/or unregulated) overtly contravening the ban on communicating invitations to retail clients to invest in Unregulated Collective Investment Schemes
    • Announcing ineffective crack-down plans  by newly-appointed government minsters who have failed to grasp the enormity of the pension scamming industry and the desperate plight of thousands of pension scam victims

    GIBRALTAR:

    • Failing to police and sanction negligent pension trustees such as STM Fidecs for accepting members introduced by an unlicensed adviser: XXXX XXXX of Global Partners Ltd/The Pension Reporter – who was also the fund manager for the UCIS that all the victims had their pensions invested in and which is now being wound up
    • Refusing to communicate with members on the progress of the winding up of the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund which had been run by XXXX XXXX
    • Omitting to take action against STM Fidecs for its role in the Cornerstone Friendly Society investment scam

    MALTA:

    • Taking no action against Trustees, Integrated Capabilities Malta Ltd (ICML) for accepting retail members from an unlicensed firm in the Czech Republic and knowingly permitting investments in Nunn McCreesh’s UCIS: Blackmore Global, as well as Malta-licensed fund Symphony – a sub-fund of the Nascent Platform that is licensed only for professional investors
    • Not sanctioning Customs House Global, that runs the Nascent Platform, for inadequate due diligence and accepting unscrupulous sub-fund managers (such as XXXX XXXX, investment manager of failed TMAF and later, the recently wound up Symphony Fund) that exploit the platform for the sole purpose of pension scamming

    CAYMAN ISLANDS:

    • Not sanctioning Investors Trust for accepting high-risk UCIS investments for retail investors: Blackmore Global and Symphony

    CZECH REPUBLIC:

    • Allowing an unlicensed firm – Square Mile Financial Services – to operate freely in the EU, providing pension and investment advice with only an insurance mediation license

    ISLE OF MAN AND IRELAND:

    • Ignoring insurance companies which accept investments in UCIS funds and professional-investor-only instruments for retail investors
    • Failing to recognise those registered Closed-Ended Investment Companies whose true nature is as a Collective Investment irrespective of their form, such as Blackmore Global (registered number 010221V), that intentionally circumvent the stricter regulations imposed on collective investments, specifically to hide their financial accounts and the sub-funds which invariably include unsigned loan notes and high-risk hare-brained projects

    DUBAI:

    • Permitting brokers to use unqualified advisers to scam investors into high-risk, high-charges products

    SINGAPORE:

    • Allowing a bank – United Overseas Bank – to steal £2.5 million from a British client and taking no action

    NEW ZEALAND:

    • Failing to act against a pension liberation scam – Evergreen Retirement Benefits Scheme – run by Simon Swallow who was working with Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions and operating Marazion “loans”

    GUERNSEY:

    • Ignoring Concept Trustees (Guernsey) who offered retail investors the EEA Life Settlements UCIS and then accepted investment instructions from unlicensed, un-insured Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions

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

    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.

     

     

     

  • SAIL FINANCIAL – ANOTHER SCAM?

    SAIL FINANCIAL – ANOTHER SCAM?

    Establishing the connection between Sail Financial, Portia Financial and Global Partners Ltd
    Plain sailing in the world of pension scams

    SAIL FINANCIAL AND TRAFALGAR MULTI ASSET FUND: What is the connection?

    Who is behind Sail Financial?  And what is the connection to Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund?  We know Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund was originally run by XXXX XXXX as “Victory Asset Management” and that XXXX had also been behind the Capita Oak, Henley Retirement Benefits Scheme and Westminster pension scams: wound up by the Insolvency Service; now in the hands of Dalriada Trustees and under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office.

    We also know that the £120 million of store pods purchased for Capita Oak, Henley RBS and hundreds of SIPPS are now probably worthless and Store First is subject to a winding up petition due to be heard on 1st August in Manchester.

    In addition to being the Investment Manager of the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund, XXXX was also the “financial adviser” in the form of his firms Global Partners Limited and The Pension Reporter – a “trading style” of XXXX’s Nationwide Benefit Consultants.  But none of these firms were licensed for pension or investment advice.

    In fact, Nationwide Benefit Consultants were an appointed representative of Joseph Oliver – Mediacao de Seguros LDA, a firm registered with the FCA.  Joseph Oliver is a UK branch of a Portuguese firm and has permission for insurance mediation under both the FCA regulations and those of the Portuguese insurance regulator.

    However, Joseph Oliver’s Marcus Groombridge has stated:

    “I can confirm that XXXX XXXX and Nationwide Benefit Consultants Ltd were appointed on the 29th of May 2014 and terminated on the 8th of April 2016. The permission for insurance mediation covers pension advice.”

    Phew!  What a relief.  I am now looking forward to Mr Groombridge’s full cooperation with putting XXXX XXXX’s victims back into the position they should have been in had they not been scammed into investing their pensions in the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund in the first place.  I will also probably remind Mr Groombridge that the Trafalgar matter is under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office – along with other pension scams “distributed” by XXXX XXXX in 2012/13.

    If there hadn’t already been enough misery for the hundreds of victims of the Capita Oak and Henley Retirement Benefit schemes run back in 2012/13 – XXXX had also been operating pension liberation in the form of “loans” from his company Thurlstone, based in the Seychelles.  The victims have now been sent tax demands. But XXXX and his solicitor, Mark Manley of Manleys Law, have ignored pleas to indemnify the victims from these crippling tax liabilities.

    I have often wondered what people like XXXX do after their latest scheme collapses or implodes.  History tells us that they simply get straight on with their next one – and in fact had probably started it already.  XXXX  has been a director of seven companies (according to Companies House):

    Nationwide Benefit Consultants (active)

    Nationwide Corporate Benefits (active)

    Proactive Administration Solutions (active)

    Nationwide Trustee Services (dissolved)

    Ashton Abbott (dissolved)

    Nationwide Tax Administration (dissolved)

    Admin Protection (dissolved)

    XXXX  has resigned from Nationwide Benefit Consultants and Nationwide Corporate Benefits – and appointed someone called Raymond Hampton as a director.  But XXXX remains a director of Proactive Administration Solutions.  So perhaps that is one to watch.

    XXXX’s background is in the “distribution of pension schemes” (his words).  He has worked closely with the cold-calling and lead generation firms (such as Jackson Francis, Sanderson Clarke and Barncroft Associates run by XXXX´s mates Ben Fox and Stuart Chapman-Clarke) who were involved in the Capita Oak and Henley scams.

    So what is XXXX doing now?  Perhaps whatever project he is working on involves trying to make enough money to compensate the victims of Capita Oak, Henley, Westminster and the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund – all of the schemes are now under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office.  It is also probable that Gibraltar Trustees STM Fidecs no longer want terms of business with XXXX XXXX now that so many of his schemes are subject to criminal investigations.  STM Fidecs also probably now realises it was a serious conflict of interest taking business from an adviser who was also the Investment Manager to the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund – which is now in the process of being wound up.

    While I was idly puzzling over what XXXX´s next scheme might be, I started hearing reports about a firm called Sail Financial doing the rounds of firms in Europe – touting offering to do “introducing” and cold calling.  Looking at the Sail Financial website, it is impossible to see who is involved in the business – no names, no address, no regulation. According to the Companies House register, Sail Financial – incorporated on 8.5.2015 – has two directors: Robert Hathaway and Brian Westhead.  Neither of those names rang any bells with me.

    Hathaway has no other directorships listed.  However, Westhead does: he is listed as a director of a dissolved company called BIGB22 (08559856).  This company’s previous names were Portia Financial and The Pension Reporter: XXXX XXXX’s firms.  These firms have a history of being involved in pension and investment scams, cold calling and unregulated financial advice.  The victims of the Trafalgar Multi Asset/STM Fidecs pension and investment scam were introduced and “advised” by Portia Financial, GPL (Global Partners Ltd) and The Pension Reporter, with advice letters signed by XXXX XXXX and Tom Biggar.

    So clearly there is a connection between Sail Financial and various firms and schemes run by XXXX XXXX – including Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund.  Perhaps XXXX XXXX  is sailing round the Mediterranean now?  I just hope he doesn’t have one glass of champagne too many and fall overboard.