Yorkshire Post

‘No figure’ on victims of assets scandal

Investors may lose thousands each after collapse of Trust

- Chris Burn BUSINESS AND FEATURES EDITOR

LEEDS Building Society does not know how many of its customers are affected by a £138m financial scandal involving life savings and the ownership of family homes, the mutual’s chief executive has told The Yorkshire Post.

LBS was among several building societies who referred loyal elderly customers to unregulate­d advisers based in their branches who signed them up to put homes in trust and life savings into investment schemes. The assets have since become mired in financial complicati­ons linked to the collapse of a firm called Philips Trust Corporatio­n, which ended up in charge of much of them. There are an estimated 2,300 victims of the scandal – many of whom expect to lose tens of thousands of pounds each.

LBS has been cited with Newcastle and Nottingham building societies as among the mutuals involved but Richard Fearon, chief executive of LBS, inset, told The Yorkshire Post he was unable to say how many current and former customers are affected.

LBS was among several building societies nationally to have previously had a contract with a firm called the Estate Planning Group, whose arms included The Will Writing Company and the Family Trust Corporatio­n.

The Will Writing Company arm of the business went into administra­tion in February 2018 but the Family Trust Corporatio­n division continued to trade.

Customers were advised to transfer trusts and savings to a related company called Philips Trust Corporatio­n which then itself went into administra­tion in 2022, leaving assets of those who did make the move stranded.

Administra­tor Kroll is working with building societies involved to establish how many of each mutual’s customers are affected.

Mr Fearon said: “One of the difficulti­es is we never had a relationsh­ip with Philips Trust. While we have an idea of people who went to The Will Writing Company, we have no idea who then transferre­d between one and the other. Having not had that relationsh­ip it is very hard for us to know exactly who is affected.”

He said he was also unable to confirm how many customers had dealt with The Will Writing Company before potential transfers of assets to Philips Trust. “We know who was referred historical­ly. Again, there comes a point where people were referred across and we don’t know what they then went on to do. So I don’t think we have indication­s on the front.”

Victims and family members have been seeking compensati­on from building societies over their parts in what happened.

When asked about the prospect of compensati­on payouts, Mr Fearon did not answer directly but said details are still emerging from the administra­tion process, which is due to run until 2026.

“Developmen­ts are coming out almost day by day. There will be more updates from the administra­tors. We will keep that under review and be very thoughtful about the impact on our members. I think there is lots we need to learn on this.”

Mr Fearon said he was “deeply saddened” by the impact of the issue and backs calls for a police investigat­ion into the Philips Trust situation to be reopened. “We will help the police in whatever we can. We are keeping this under review and are learning things day by day and monitoring the impact it is having on our members.”

Andrea Hindley from the Philips Trust Action Group said: “Leeds had a duty of care to manage any third party relationsh­ips they created. Without building societies introducin­g, marketing, promoting and endorsing the Estate Planning Group and their products, which they failed to inform their clients were unregulate­d, none of their clients would be in the position they are now.”

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