Skip to content
International Adviser
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
  • Regions
    • United Kingdom
    • Middle East
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • North America
    • Latin America
  • Industry
    • Tax & Regulation
    • Products
    • Life
    • Health & Protection
    • People Moves
    • Companies
    • Offshore Bonds
    • Retirement
    • Technology
    • Platforms
  • Investment
    • Equities
    • Fixed Income
    • Alternatives
    • Multi Asset
    • Property
    • Macro Views
    • Structured Products
    • Emerging Markets
    • Commodities
  • IA 100
  • Best Practice
    • Best Practice News
    • Best Practice Awards
  • Media
    • Video
    • Podcast
  • Directory
  • My IA
    • Events
    • IA Tax Panel
    • IA Intermediary Panel
    • About IA

ANNOUNCEMENT: Read more financial articles on our partner site, click here to read more.

Scammers continue to target mini-bond victims

By Cristian Angeloni, 29 Apr 22

Lifeboat scheme has urged them to be ‘very wary’

The targeting of London Capital & Finance (LCF) victims by fraudsters has been relentless over the last couple of years.

The Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) has been forced to write to bondholders again warning them about communication being sent by scammers.

This is the third time International Adviser has reported on such attempts, the first one in February 2020, and then in January 2022.

The lifeboat scheme told bondholders it is aware of two companies, called LC Holdings and Capital Finance, that are claiming to be “able to get compensation for the full amount” of their LCF investments.

The FSCS warned bondholders that both firms are run by scammers, and that they should be cautious as “there may well be others”.

It has reiterated that victims should “be very wary of any emails, letters or calls claiming to be from LCF or someone else offering to hep you get access to compensation”.

As of 14 April 2022, the lifeboat scheme paid compensation for 12,330 bonds under the government scheme totalling over £114m ($150m, €136m), and it had 88 bonds that were pending redress.

The sum doesn’t include payments from the FSCS itself or LCF administrators, which in March 2022 totalled £58.3m and £5.4m, respectively.

Tags: Fraud | FSCS | London Capital & Finance

Share this article
Follow by Email
Facebook
fb-share-icon
X (Twitter)
Post on X
LinkedIn
Share

Related Stories

  • Companies

    VIDEO: II’s The Breakfast Briefing EP 2 – Sam Instone, CEO, AES International

    Heather Hopkins

    Industry

    MPS assets surge 32% to £190bn as adviser usage grows

  • Latest news

    FCA fines Nationwide Building Society £44m for AML failings

    Hamid

    Industry

    Former Invesco head launches EM investment platform


NEWSLETTER

Sign Up for International
Adviser Daily Newsletter

subscribe

  • View site map
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact

Published by Money Map Media – part of G&M Media Ltd Copyright (c) 2024.

International Adviser covers the global intermediary market that uses cross-border insurance, investments, banking and pension products on behalf of their high-net-worth clients. No news, articles or content may be reproduced in part or in full without express permission of International Adviser.