The Citizen (KZN)

Watchdog bars Warriner

BHI TRUST: NOT ALLOWED TO PROVIDE FINANCIAL SERVICES FOR 30 YEARS About R3bn lost as new investment allegedly used to pay interest.

- Ina Opperman – inao@citizen.co.za

The Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) has barred Craig Warriner, 60, from BHI Trust for 30 years after investigat­ing the conduct of the trust and Warriner between 7 February, 2013 and 30 September, 2023.

About 2 000 investors lost about R3 billion in BHI Trust that allegedly used money from new investors to pay interest to earlier investors.

Warriner’s debarment means that he will not be allowed to provide or be involved in the provision of financial services, act as a key person of a financial institutio­n and provide specified financial services to a financial institutio­n, whether under outsourcin­g or otherwise.

The FSCA investigat­ion found that the BHI Trust and Warriner, in his capacity as a trustee of BHI Trust, acted as discretion­ary financial services providers (FSPs) by exercising discretion in buying and selling securities on behalf of a number of clients.

Therefore, they were required to be authorised as a category II FSP, but they were not, contraveni­ng section 7(1) of the Financial Advisory and Intermedia­ries Service Act.

In addition, Warriner, in his capacity as a trustee of the BHI Trust, rendered financial services to clients on behalf of BHI Trust while it was not authorised as an FSP, contraveni­ng section 13(1)(a) of the Financial Advisory and Intermedia­ry Services (Fais) Act.

The trust was provisiona­lly sequestrat­ed on 25 October in an applicatio­n brought by Cawood Attorneys.

Gert de Wet and Sumaya Mohamed from Kaap-Vaal Trust were appointed as the joint trustees. BHI Trust was formally sequestrat­ed on 7 February.

According to a report filed in terms of Section 81 of the Insolvency Act that the joint trustees released recently, Warriner said BHI Trust was a trading trust.

“It was a trust that took money and traded it on a short-term basis. It traded Anglo American, Billiton, it traded Naspers, it traded Standard Bank, British American Tobacco. We concentrat­ed on all the 40 stocks, which is the top 40 stocks.

“You see, money goes in; I take it. People want money out, so I rob Peter to pay Paul. That is after 2008 and then what happens is that because you are showing decent returns, it becomes the Ponzi pyramid scheme. And the money comes in and it goes out.”

Warriner handed himself over to police last year, admitting to fraud.

He appeared in the Palm Ridge Magistrate’s Court several times and has not been granted bail.

Although there have been reports claiming that the BHI Trust was “backed by” and “registered with the FSCA”, the regulator said neither the BHI Trust nor Warriner were licensed with the FSCA.

The focus of the FSCA investigat­ion was on the activities of the BHI Trust and the possibilit­y that it was conducting unauthoris­ed financial services business and unauthoris­ed collective investment scheme business.

FSCA also confirmed earlier that none of the parties under investigat­ion were authorised as financial services providers or licensed as collective investment schemes managers.

According to FSCA, people must check that an entity or individual is authorised by FSCA to provide financial products and services, including recommenda­tions about how to invest.

It is also important to check what category of advice the person is registered to provide, as there are instances where companies or people are registered to provide basic advice for a lowrisk product and then offer advice on far more complex and risky products.

In addition, consumers must also ensure that the FSP number the entity or individual offering financial services uses matches the name of the FSP on the FSCA database.

It’s important to check what category of advice the person is registered to provide

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