The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Money

‘I’m still owed £250k from failed investment’

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More cases are emerging of savers who have lost life-changing sums after investing in a £45m unregulate­d property bond, a year after Telegraph Money first revealed concerns about the scheme.

Last year we reported how 89-year-old Sheila Jeffryes lost £67,000 after her financial adviser invested in bonds issued by London Property Holdings, an offshorere­gistered property developer. Because her adviser’s firm went bust, she could claim only £50,000 of her £117,000 investment, the maximum compensati­on paid by the Financial Services Compensati­on Scheme.

Since then several other readers have reported being caught up in the same scheme. The last correspond­ence received by investors from London Property Holdings confirmed that the five-year bonds would not be accessible until 2021. The original lock-in period was due to end in September 2017.

The case has reignited calls for financial advisers – who are regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), the City watchdog – to be banned from selling unregulate­d investment­s, which are riskier than their regulated counterpar­ts.

Hugh Montgomery, 70, a former accountant, has fought a longrunnin­g battle over £400,000 he invested in the scheme.

He reached a High Court settlement with London Property Holdings and his former advisers, Timothy Eddolls and Anthony Smith, in September 2014 in which it was agreed that London Property Holdings would meet Mr Montgomery’s £45,000 legal fees and return his £400,000 investment. This was to be made in monthly instalment­s, with a £280,000 “balloon payment” scheduled to be paid in September last year.

However, after he had received £92,000 in instalment­s, the payments stopped last summer. Earlier this month he received £50,000 from the FSCS after the collapse of Portland Financial Management, the nowdefunct advice firm where Mr Eddolls and Mr Smith were previously directors and which had given him the advice to invest.

That still leaves him nursing losses of £250,000. He has hired lawyers to chase London Property Holdings for this outstandin­g amount.

During a career at several large companies he built up a buy-to-let portfolio before severe ill health forced him to sell up and be signed off work. He and his wife have been left living in rented accommodat­ion on the south coast. He said: “I’ve lost my house and we’ve got about £150,000 of cash left to survive on until we die – it’s not what I’d planned.”

Chris Rodda, a partner at Royds Withy King, a law firm, said: “We have been consulted by a number of individual­s affected by the collapse of Portland, whose investment­s ended up in London Property Holdings.”

Mr Rodda added that the case echoed others the firm had worked on where it was thought the City watchdog could have intervened earlier. He said: “One feature noted was the suggestion that the FCA seemed to fail to inform investors when they investigat­ed Portland, so as to enable action be taken, until it was too late.

“This is a situation we have noted in other cases. Investors need to take care choosing advisers, given the limits of statutory compensati­on.”

Kerry Nelson of Nexus Independen­t Financial Planners is helping several people worried about London Property Holdings investment­s.

Her clients have not received any updates from the firm after investors were told their money was locked up for a further four years. Both Ms Nelson and Telegraph Money have made repeated unsuccessf­ul attempts to contact London Property Holdings.

Telegraph Money did reach Mr Eddolls, but he declined to comment.

A spokesman for the FCA said rules prevented it from disclosing informatio­n while its investigat­ions were ongoing. There is a risk that investors rush to withdraw their money, which could lead to the collapse of firms before any wrongdoing has been proved, he explained.

Marc Sidwell

Head of Personal Finance @marcsidwel­l

Even if your adviser is regulated, it doesn’t mean your investment is, writes Sam Brodbeck

Lauren Davidson

Personal Finance Editor @laurendavi­dson

Contact us

money@telegraph.co.uk 020 7931 2000 @moneyteleg­raph

Your informatio­n

Many readers share their personal informatio­n with us and this plays

‘I’ve lost my house and have £150,000 to live on until we die – it’s not what I’d planned’

 ??  ?? London Property Holdings owns a developmen­t in Chepstow, on the Welsh border
London Property Holdings owns a developmen­t in Chepstow, on the Welsh border

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