The Northern Advocate

New Zealand ties to alleged $100 million China fraud

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which was sent to an account designated by Chai.

Chai then allegedly transferre­d money and, instead of operating a foreign exchange business, took possession of the money before fleeing China in August 2018.

Chinese authoritie­s allege the two men claimed without the approval of financial regulators that Bobaopei had asked Blackwell to operate the trading platform and made oral public statements to that effect to investors.

Zhaoqi has also been arrested.

The NZ Blackwell

At the same time as authoritie­s allege Chai was misleading Chinese investors about a potential foreign exchange business, NZX-listed Blackwell was updating the market about its plans to start a derivative trading platform.

Chai was first linked to the New Zealand company in February 2016 when what was then finance company NZF Group announced it had a new “wholesale investor”, Chai.

Chai invested $125,000 into the firm, with NZF issuing 16,000,000 new shares in return.

By 2017, NZF was now renamed

Blackwell and said it was laying the groundwork to file an applicatio­n for a trading licence from New Zealand’s regulator, the Financial Markets Authority (FMA).

It appointed a new general manager, Howard Wilcox, to oversee the licence applicatio­n in the first part of 2018.

But in December 2018, four months after Chai allegedly fled China with millions of dollars fleeced from investors, Blackwell told the NZX it was abandoning its pursuit of a licence and derivative­s trading operation through its wholly owned subsidiary, Blackwell Global Investment­s (NZ) Limited.

The Blackwell board said the regulatory landscape for derivative trading operations in New Zealand had become increasing­ly complex and expensive to comply with, and the investment needed had increased significan­tly beyond its forecasts.

“The timeframe for the derivative­s operation to become cashflowpo­sitive were also anticipate­d to take longer than originally forecast.”

Caymans and Cambodia

Blackwell also has companies in Cambodia, the Bahamas, the United Kingdom, Hong Kong and Cyprus and a head office in Singapore. Blackwell firms had brokerage licences in the UK and Cambodia.

The UK’s regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority, would not comment on whether it investigat­ed Blackwell in the UK.

In 2017, Blackwell Global signed a partnershi­p agreement with English Premier League football club Everton as its official forex and brokerage partner.

It launched Blackwell Global Cambodia in the same year.

Sources in Southeast Asia told BusinessDe­sk the Everton deal, along with Blackwell’s New Zealand links and licence in the UK, provided respectabi­lity for Chai and the Blackwell brand.

The football deal also meant potential investors would be exposed to the Blackwell brand when Everton games were screened.

Cambodia and the Philippine­s are considered hot spots for organised crime, including investment scams, romance scams and “pig butchering scams”, where investors are enticed into pouring more and more money into the scam.

An Interpol global financial fraud assessment released in March said it was facing an epidemic in the growth of financial fraud.

NZF Group to Blackwell to shell

Before and after Blackwell had intentions to become a trading platform, the NZX-listed company was operating a small finance company.

In early 2021, the company announced it was restructur­ing its operations and winding down its finance operations after being unable to raise debt or equity.

Since then, the company has effectivel­y been a shell searching for a business to buy or a transactio­n to complete for a reverse takeover.

It had no staff and reported about $9,212 income in its most recent financial year, with directors Joyce and Anderson being paid $138,000 in directors fees against a $264,717 loss. It had $863,900 cash on hand.

Last month, Blackwell told the NZX its major shareholde­r, Blackwell Global Group Limited, would forgive $200,000 of bonds owed to it.

The New Zealand company is distancing itself from Chai and its majority shareholde­r, saying the bond forgivenes­s would dilute both interests in the NZX firm.

It also planned to change its name and was set to be rebranded as RTO on May 1.

What remains is Blackwell’s oftrepeate­d stance that it is focused on executing a reverse takeover.

The Philippine­s and Apec

It is not clear when, if ever, Chai visited New Zealand or how often he communicat­ed with the NZ company. The firm has said in its annual reports that it held quarterly board meetings. It is understood Chai's alternate on the board, Steve Chua, mostly attended.

Joyce didn’t answer questions about when it had last spoken to Chai or how the company had come to be involved with him in 2016.

The NZX said it had no comment on Blackwell or its belated update to the exchange on Chai's arrest.

New Zealand Shareholde­rs' Associatio­n chief executive Oliver Mander said boards should have processes in place to pick up when directors were arrested.

Philippine­s immigratio­n said in January said Chai was picked up as he tried to board a Cathay Pacific flight to Hong Kong at Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport. Authoritie­s said Chai entered on an Asia Pacific Economic-Cooperatio­n (Apec) business travel card, which allowed “bona fide” businesspe­ople streamline­d travel into Apec countries.

The travel card was issued by Taiwan, BusinessDe­sk understand­s. Taiwanese authoritie­s did not respond to requests for comment.

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