Trader goes missing after £130m of clients' cash disappears

Trader goes missing after £130m of clients' cash disappears

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Original Poster:

13,251 posts

123 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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telegraph said:
Police are investigating an alleged fraud over claims almost $200m has vanished from an investment company run by a 59-year-old Yorkshireman

A currency trader has vanished along with £130 million in investors’ cash in an alleged fraud that could be one of the biggest in recent British history.

Joe Lewis, 59, is being investigated by police over almost $200 million which he claimed was in clients’ accounts but now no longer exists. It is rumoured that professional footballers and golfers have lost money in his investment scheme.

In an email sent to clients a fortnight ago, Mr Lewis admitted that his company, JL Trading, had stopped operating in 2009 after suffering heavy losses on disastrous foreign exchange deals.

He confessed in the email that he had continued taking people’s money for the next five years in an attempt to turn his fortunes around, but that all those attempts had failed.

In an email sent a month earlier – in response to growing concern from investors trying to get their money out – he claimed that his company was having “a stressful time” releasing $197 million (£126 million) from American brokers because of US red tape.

Whatever the truth, the reality for investors – many of them British – is that they have each lost a small fortune. Police have taken statements from a number of victims and begun an investigation into Mr Lewis.

A civil action to freeze his accounts and seize any assets has also been started. The businessman, who traded from a smart residential address in Istanbul with views over the Bosporus, is understood to have left Turkey some weeks ago. His adult son said he had no idea where his father was. One report suggested he had briefly visited relations near Hull and may now be in the Far East.

In the email sent on Dec 3, Mr Lewis wrote: “Dear investor, I am writing to inform you that JL Trading is ceasing to carry on business. Contrary to the impression that I have hitherto given, the business has lost almost all of its assets, and there appears no prospect of those assets being recouped. “JL Trading ceased foreign exchange trading in 2009 following substantial losses and since that time the business has suffered further losses, which I have tried to make good through investments in a number of commercial projects. However, it is now clear that the business will not be able to recover its losses and must cease trading. This means that, contrary to what was reported to you previously, you cannot expect any payments in the future.

“I can only apologise unreservedly for any losses or unfulfilled expectations of profit. I have tried to recover the position for a considerable period of time, but it is now clear that I will be unable to do so. I sincerely regret that I have not been able to do better on your behalf.”

Mr Lewis, a father of two, started his company about a decade ago, employing at its peak about 30 staff over two storeys of the residential block. He lived in a penthouse apartment with his Turkish wife.

Investors had been attracted through word of mouth with the promise of monthly returns on his currency trades of between one and three per cent. They were also enticed through golf days in exotic locations such as Thailand.

Since about 2011, only investors with a minimum of $25,000 (£16,000) could join his investment “club”. One client had invested about £500,000 in the past 12 months and is unlikely to get his money back; another is said to have put in £1.2 million.

Don Wall, 77, a retired businessman from Cambridgeshire, is owed about £100,000 by JL Trading. “These are my life savings,” he said, “This money was supposed to be savings for my children and grandchildren. I have never met the bloke and I don’t think I have ever spoken to him.”

His son-in-law and daughter, who live abroad, also invested, as did a family friend. Mr Wall signed up in 2009 with an original investment of £10,000. He was able to withdraw about £7,000 and encouraged by the decent rates of return – the Bank of England interest rate had fallen to 0.5 per cent – he invested a further £100,000. Problems began in September last year.

“I was asking could I draw some money out,” recalled Mr Wall, “And they started giving me excuses why they couldn’t do it.” Then the first of a series of email bombshells dropped.

On Sept 10 this year, Mr Lewis sent an email to clients that explained that he was “not able to give an exact date when we can send monies out” due to ongoing problems with American regulators. Lawyers, he said, were working on it and “they have everything in hand”.

On Nov 14, Mr Lewis sent another email. “We are going through a stressful time having our funds returned from our brokers; this has led to many doubts and concerns about the security of funds being held,” he wrote.

His business was being wound up, but investors would all get their money back, he said. “So you can realise the extent of our business, our current values are: Due to clients, $197,000,000 in 893 accounts, worldwide. Due from Broker, $260,000,000 in 1 account, US,” he wrote, adding: “As we are no longer trading, these amounts should not change.”

Then came the email of Dec 3, in which he admitted he had not traded currency for five years.

Two days later, Mr Lewis sent out another email – the last anyone has received – changing his story again and in which he blamed the previous email on his legal team. “You have been sent an update this week which was worded by my lawyers, but I wanted everyone to know, I am not running away from things,” he wrote, “Whilst I regret some of the things I have done, I will do my best to remedy this situation.

“Please note, I have covered up my mistakes from everyone including my staff, no one else knew what was happening.”

Investors are not sure what to believe. Mr Wall has given a statement to Cambridgeshire Police.

Mark Bavin, who introduced Mr Wall and others to the scheme and who helped to organise JL Trading’s golf days, has reported Mr Lewis to the authorities.

Mr Bavin, who also invested heavily and has lost his money, said: “I am sure this is a massive fraud; almost certainly it’s a pyramid scheme. I have reported it to the fraud squad. We have all put money in and he has run off with all our money and that is as much as we know. I am owed significant sums.”

Neil Rodrigues, a British engineer working in the oil industry, invested £26,000 in 2013, four years after Mr Lewis has admitted his company stopped operating. Mr Rodrigues said: “Most of my colleagues with spare cash invested in JL Trading. We have never got any money back.”

One investment broker, who did not wish to be named, said he had 25 clients involved who had invested a total of £3.2 million and not had a penny back. The broker had begun legal proceedings to have Mr Lewis’s accounts and assets frozen worldwide. On Facebook and on other internet sites, alleged victims have been urged to join the class action.

Mr Lewis was unavailable for comment last week. He failed to answer emails and phone calls, and at his Istanbul apartment a doorman said he had not been seen for a few weeks.

Mr Lewis’s son James said: “He [Joe Lewis] didn’t live extravagantly. I don’t know where the money’s gone. I am happy to share information with the legal entities.

“Everything he had is ruined. There are no assets at all that I am aware of.”
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/11305953/Trader-goes-missing-after-130m-of-clients-cash-disappears.html

Eric Mc

121,992 posts

265 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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Sounds awfully Bernie Madoffish.

tuffer

8,849 posts

267 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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I do feel for the people who have lost money in this scheme/scam but I seriously wonder about some people who are willing to put such large sums into such a risky and unregulated fund. A classic, if it seems too good to be true....it probably is. Seems there are plenty of people out there that have £XXXX that they are desperate to turn into £XXXXXXXX on just a simple promise of magic beans.

jonah35

3,940 posts

157 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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If it sounds too good to be true.....

People investing without having met or spoken to the chap.


RobinOakapple

2,802 posts

112 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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'JL Trading'? Could he really not think of a better name than that? Sounds like the sort of thing you might see written on the side of a market trader's van.

davepoth

29,395 posts

199 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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tuffer said:
I do feel for the people who have lost money in this scheme/scam but I seriously wonder about some people who are willing to put such large sums into such a risky and unregulated fund. A classic, if it seems too good to be true....it probably is. Seems there are plenty of people out there that have £XXXX that they are desperate to turn into £XXXXXXXX on just a simple promise of magic beans.
I'm pretty sure the majority of people would like to do that - what always surprises me is that they think a setup like this is normal.

Newc

1,865 posts

182 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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Edited: wrong Joe.

Edited by Newc on Sunday 21st December 12:24

Eric Mc

121,992 posts

265 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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And yet it happens time after time after time - whether the "investors" ( I hesitate to describe them as such) are wealthy high net worth individuals or people bumping around at the bottom with hardly two pennies to rub together .


Eric Mc

121,992 posts

265 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
quotequote all
Newc said:
This might be a good place to start looking for the money:





http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aviva_%28yacht%29
Is that his?

RobinOakapple

2,802 posts

112 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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Different 'Joe Lewis'.

Eric Mc

121,992 posts

265 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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I thought so. In fact, then other bona fide Joe Lewis is probably pretty angry at the moment.

Abagnale

366 posts

114 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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I see now why Chris Hoy gets abused on Twitter every time that ref has a shocker.

anonymous-user

54 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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Maybe it's just another 'tax evasion' scheme footballers and rich people are using.

Money in, all disappears, no tax to pay, Job jobbed smile

andy43

9,702 posts

254 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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I have an email here from an exciled Nigerian prince who's just managed to transfer eleventy billion from the clutches of the anti-government soldiers into a UK bank account, and needs someone within the UK to access it.
He'll cut you in for 10% if you help him transfer it through western union.
I would be right in there, but I'm too busy cultivating these bullion beans I swapped our house for at the moment - they're not as easy to grow as I thought.

economicpygmy

387 posts

123 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
quotequote all
tuffer said:
I do feel for the people who have lost money in this scheme/scam but I seriously wonder about some people who are willing to put such large sums into such a risky and unregulated fund. A classic, if it seems too good to be true....it probably is. Seems there are plenty of people out there that have £XXXX that they are desperate to turn into £XXXXXXXX on just a simple promise of magic beans.
yes Some people are so desperate to believe, they do. I bet 2% in a bank looks pretty good now.

Eric Mc

121,992 posts

265 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
quotequote all
I think these frauds (if it is one) are a bit more subtle than the "too good to to be true" excuse to be so easily trotted out, although it is still a good basic yardstick to judge any "investment scheme".

Often these schemes work on friends, acquaintances and "trusted individuals" recommending them by word of mouth to their friends and family. It isn't the simple "Nigerian phone call" scam - it plays on the fact that people know and trust each other. These are rarely embarked on with complete strangers.

Having said that, the fact that a scheme was being touted by a friend or member of the family should really start some alarm bells ringing.

Only the day before yesterday I heard another tale of such a scam - only this one won't be so big as to make the news but it will have a massive detrimental effect on those who got caught up in it.

Justayellowbadge

37,057 posts

242 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
I think these frauds (if it is one) are a bit more subtle than the "too good to to be true" excuse to be so easily trotted out, although it is still a good basic yardstick to judge any "investment scheme".

Often these schemes work on friends, acquaintances and "trusted individuals" recommending them by word of mouth to their friends and family. It isn't the simple "Nigerian phone call" scam - it plays on the fact that people know and trust each other. These are rarely embarked on with complete strangers.

Having said that, the fact that a scheme was being touted by a friend or member of the family should really start some alarm bells ringing.

Only the day before yesterday I heard another tale of such a scam - only this one won't be so big as to make the news but it will have a massive detrimental effect on those who got caught up in it.
Look at something like Connaught - seen as solid, supposedly audited by Ernst and Young, Capita managing etc etc.

A lot bought in because it was touted as low risk, guaranteed returns, but everyone still woke up one day to discover there was nothing left.


Eric Mc

121,992 posts

265 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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Constant reassurance that all is fine until the whole edifice collapses is the norm.

Hoofy

76,351 posts

282 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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Was he in that recent documentary we were discussing a month ago? biggrin

crankedup

25,764 posts

243 months

Sunday 21st December 2014
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RobinOakapple said:
'JL Trading'? Could he really not think of a better name than that? Sounds like the sort of thing you might see written on the side of a market trader's van.
You could be fairly sure a market trader would have been a better choice of trader, re Late David West.