The Mail on Sunday

Have my water bonds just gone down plughole?

- Tony Hetheringt­on

M.M. writes: Other investors and I purchased investment bonds from Global Water Group Limited valued at nearly £900,000 in total. The company assured us they had been in business for six years with good returns, and that capital was fully protected by assets. Now the company is in liquidatio­n, with no explanatio­n of where our money has gone.

GLOBAL Water Group (which has no connection to an American company of the same name) certainly made some impressive claims. It described itself as ‘a high level network of investors in, and advisers on, issues related to water supply whose members include heads of state, leaders in the global water industry, leading universiti­es and academic institutio­ns, wealth management firms, philanthro­pists, pension funds and high net worth investors’. Not bad for a company with just one director, that was set up in 2012 yet, according to Companies House, was dormant until at least 2017 and possibly 2018, when the formation agent signed it over to director Michael Livesey, from Basildon in Essex.

He ran the company until October 2019 when he handed it over to Ross Perry, also from Basildon, and Perry was in control until last May when he decided to put the business into liquidatio­n.

When it was offering interest-bearing bonds, Global Water told investors that all their money would go into ‘water technology’, reflecting what it described as ‘our success in the global water markets’.

Reassuring­ly, it mentioned the company’s own corporate account with well-known broker Hargreaves Lansdown.

However, Hargreaves Lansdown has told me: ‘There is no record of a client account under that name.’

Even more worryingly, director Ross Perry is already known to me. He was a director of a scam carbon credit investment company called London Green Financial which went bust in 2013.

And in 2012 he was briefly a director of Elite Asset Exchange, which promoted storage units as an investment. It went into liquidatio­n in 2015, one step ahead of being struck off by Companies House.

Global Water has never produced any trading accounts, and Perry has told its liquidator­s that its assets amount to a possible £81,000 in bank accounts. Yet its 2018 balance sheet shows the company held investment­s worth £528,000 and was owed a further £250,000. So where did all this money go?

Similarly, company records show that Global Water paid £500,000 for an option to purchase land. What land? Where is it? Who was paid half a mill i on pounds of i nvestors’ money? And why is there no mention of this i n the assets Perry declared to the liquidator­s?

There are other mysteries too. You are not the only investor to contact me. Between you, I have been given details of three employees of Global Water.

Yet a list of creditors drawn up by the liquidator­s does not mention any money owed to employees, nor any tax or national insurance contributi­ons owed to the taxman. It is amazingly unusual for any company with employees to go broke yet leave not a penny owing to them or Revenue & Customs. Do those employees even exist, I wonder?

Global’s directors Perry and Livesey failed to offer any informatio­n or comments on this or any other question I put to them. The liquidator­s Carter Clark (who were also liquidator­s when Perry closed down London Green Financial) declined to say whether they had informed the police of the false claims made to investors, but did tell me that ‘reports to various government bodies have been made, but the contents of these reports are strictly confidenti­al’.

Carter Clark will issue a progress report to investors in May, but there is no indication whether this will answer the basic question of where more than £ 800,000 of investors’ money has gone. In the absence of a proper police investigat­ion, it looks as if Global Water’s money has simply gone down the drain.

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 ?? ?? MYSTERY: Global Water Group has gone into liquidatio­n
MYSTERY: Global Water Group has gone into liquidatio­n

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