The Sun (Malaysia)

Unregulate­d British company attracts investors from Asia

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LONDON/ABU DHABI: Financial.org, a UK company that describes itself as an education business and sponsors a Formula One team, is managing hundreds of thousands of dollars for Asian investors even though it is not licensed to engage in financial transactio­ns, according to 17 people who say they have invested through the firm.

The 17 people, from China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), told Reuters they had each given between US$3,000 and US$400,000 (RM12,000 to RM1.6 million) to Financial.org to invest.

“I have doubled my investment­s,” said Azmi Tumpang, a former constructi­on worker from Malaysia outside a gala dinner organised by Financial.org on the sidelines of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix in late November.

Most of the people said their money had been invested in US blue-chip stocks and that they had made a profit. Reuters was unable to verify whether the share transactio­ns took place.

Financial.org is not on a publicly available list of companies authorised and regulated by Britain’s financial regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), to buy and sell stocks or bonds for clients. Offering investment services without regulatory permission is a criminal offence in Britain.

Financial.org, which has an office in London’s Canary Wharf, declined to comment on whether it acted as an investment firm.

The company signed up two years ago with the UK’s official company register as a real estate business, according to filings. The UK registrar of companies, Companies House, said it was preparing to strike off the firm on Jan 23 because it had never filed accounts. If a company is struck off, it cannot continue to trade legally and its assets pass to the state.

UK-registered companies must by law be authorised and regulated by the FCA if they deal in securities such as shares and bonds for clients, even if the investors are outside Britain. Under FCA rules, this applies both to principals – parties investing on behalf of clients, and agents – firms including brokers that arrange for investment­s to take place.

The FCA declined to comment about whether Financial. org was operating illegally.

The regulator has previously warned of the dangers of investing through firms it has not authorised, as no independen­t checks have been made on their businesses. It said it had received reports of more than 8,000 cases of unauthoris­ed businesses in the last financial year.

On the home page of its website, Financial.org says it is an education platform, providing “financial knowledge and skills”.

“We do not deal with securities and receive any financial benefits from financial products and service providers,” it says. However, elsewhere on its site, it also says it “helps members to manage and oversee their investment­s” and “provides self-directed investors with brokerage services”.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) last March placed Financial.org on an investor alert list of “unregulate­d persons who, based on informatio­n received by MAS, may have been wrongly perceived as being licensed or authorised by MAS”, its website says. The authority said investors should “exercise caution” when dealing with companies on the list.

Malaysia’s Securities Commission also placed Financial. org on a list of “unauthoris­ed websites/investment products/ companies/individual­s” last year, according to its website.

The MAS and Malaysia’s SC both declined to comment on Financial.org and why they had placed it on alert lists.

Financial.org declined to comment on the two regulators’ warnings.

The company has been a sponsor of British Formula One team Williams since May 2016, and its logo appears on the Williams Mercedes FW38 cars and team strips. Williams declined to comment. – Reuters

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