This event has now taken place but you can watch the video recording of it through our Youtube Channel, get to it by clicking the button below
When
Thursday, March 18th from 6:00pm to 8:00pm UK timeWhere
Online symposium via Zoom.Format
There'll be a great line-up of speakers plus ample scope for discussion and debate.Why you should attend
Our symposium will focus on the rather alarming story of how the Financial Conduct Authority has been shown to have failed to protect consumers from harm, even though they were given sufficient information to take decisive action against Blackmore Bond. The net result is that around £47M of investors’ money has been lost, much of which could have been saved had the FCA acted appropriately when they were told precisely what was going on by a whistleblower.
Here’s some of the coverage from a great write-up by Amy Austin at FT Adviser:
Conservative MP Peter Gibson is calling for an independent report into the Blackmore Bond scandal to investigate exactly what went wrong while criticising the regulator as not being “fit for purpose”.
Gibson, who chairs the all-party parliamentary group on Personal Banking and Fairer Financial Services, said the Blackmore Bond scandal provided further “irrefutable evidence” that the Financial Conduct Authority is failing to regulate effectively.
[Note that the TTF is the Secretariat to the APPG]
Blackmore Bond raised millions of pounds from investors to fund property developments between 2016 and 2018, but the company fell into administration in April last year owing £46m to investors after several months of rocky waters in which it failed to pay interest due to bondholders.
Gibson said an independent report by Dame Gloster – who recently published her review into the FCA’s regulation of London Capital & Finance (LCF) – or someone “equally as robust” should be the next step.
He also said parliament should be prepared to scrutinise more closely the work the FCA is doing saying it is currently “not functioning as parliament wishes”….
Gibson said: “Parliament has given the Financial Conduct Authority clear statutory objectives which include protecting consumers from harm but there is mounting evidence that the regulator is consistently failing to deliver.
“It is obvious that the FCA is not for purpose. The real issue now is whether parliament can get it to perform satisfactorily through transformational reform; or whether its issues are so deep-rooted that a more brutal approach is necessary.”
There’s also been superb coverage in Saturday’s Telegraph, with these being perhaps the most powerful points:
“We are seeing a clear pattern of behaviour from the FCA. It shies away from regulatory scrutiny and consistently puts savers at risk.” – Sarah Olney MP.
Kevin Hollinrake MP, a member of the APPG on Personal Banking and Fairer Financial Services said there had been a succession of failures at the Regulator: “Multiple, significant, credible concerns had been raised with the regulator well before the firm’s failure….It is time for a thorough and fully independent review.”
Furthermore, Labour’s Cat Smith, Shadow Cabinet Office Minister said she had “written to the Treasury urging an investigation into negligence on part of the FCA.”
…and in the House of Lords, Baroness Bennett of the Greens and Lib Dem Lord Sharkey have both backed calls for a review.
In our opinion, Thursday’s meeting is important in that the whistleblower at the heart of the story, Paul Carlier, will be “revealing all” in terms of who at the FCA was told what; and when. Paul’s account is significant because unlike the recent LC&F investment scam revelations, it will not be possible for the senior leadership at the FCA to credibly suggest they did not know what was going on. Therefore, some believe the consequences of this case may be significant.
Will it be “the straw that broke the camel’s back?”
We are hoping our symposium will galvanise support for the reform that is so desperately needed.
At the very least we should all be calling for a thorough independent enquiry, ideally by Dame Gloster who’s report on the LC&F Bondholder’s scandal did a great job of shining a big bright light on the seriousness of the failings at the FCA.
The good news is that many knowledgeable members of the House of Lords have been proposing positive amendments to the Financial Services Bill working its way through Parliament right now. Their proposals relate to the underlying causes of the regulatory failure that has led to the problems that we keep seeing time after time.
We’re expecting lots of interest in this event, given how topical the subject is, including from Parliamentarians from all parts of the House, and key journalists and campaigners too.
You won’t want to miss this one!
Here's the programme and timings so far...
—————————————-6:00pm GMT—————————————-
Welcome to the symposium, introductions and initial exploration of the main issues; by
Andy Agathangelou
Founder, Transparency Task Force; Governor, Pensions Policy Institute; Chair, Secretariat Committee, APPG on Pension Scams; Chair, Secretariat Committee, APPG on Personal Banking and Fairer Financial Services
—————————————-6:10pm GMT—————————————-
Presentation #1, for 5 minutes including Q&A/discussion by
Kevin Hollinrake MP
Co-chair of the APPG on Fair Business Banking; MP for Thirsk and Malton
—————————————-6:15pm GMT—————————————-
Presentation #2, for 5 minutes including Q&A/discussion by
Baroness Kramer
Co-chair of the APPG on Whistleblowing;
LD Lords Treasury Spokesperson, House of Lords
—————————————-6:20pm GMT—————————————-
Presentation #3, for 30 minutes + 15 minutes Q&A/Discussion by
Paul Carlier
FX, Financial Markets & Banking Consultant
—————————————-7:05m GMT—————————————-
Short leg-stretch and comfort break, for 5 minutes
—————————————-7:10m GMT—————————————-
Presentation #4, for 5 minutes + 5 minutes Q&A/Discussion by
Mark Bishop
Leader, Connaught Action Group
—————————————-7:20m GMT—————————————-
The “Just a minute”-round
Inspired by the BBC Radio 4 programme, we have asked a selection of our attendees to spend just a minute sharing their thoughts on what has been covered during the symposium. But unlike the Radio 4 programme our speakers won’t be penalised for hesitation, repetition or deviation!
SPEAKERS:
Simon Deane-Johns
Consultant Solicitor, Keystone Law
Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle
Green Party Peer
Ian Fraser
Author, Journalist, Broadcaster
Andrew Candy
Director, Tentacle Limited
Paul Bates
Senior Counsel, Paul Bates Barrister
Shujata Luptajan & Charlie Griffiths
Dave Davies
Justice Campaigner
—————————————-7:30pm GMT—————————————-
Open discussion & debate, 25 minutes
—————————————-7:55pm GMT—————————————-
Final conclusions; and suggested next steps and close to the formal proceedings.
However, for those that want it…
8pm GMT until 8:30pm GMT
….informal, unstructured networking and informal conversation; a “fireside chat”
___________________________________________________________________
*The programme will continuously evolve so is subject to change.
Paul Carlier
FX, Financial Markets & Banking Consultancy
Paul worked as a trader for many of the world’s largest banks between 1987 and 2015, including Citibank, Chemical Bank, Lehman Brothers, Natwest, SBC, UBS (twice) and Lloyds Bank. He blew the whistle on significant wrongdoing whilst at UBS in 2011 and during his two year employment with Lloyds paying the price with his job on both occasions.
Since winning unfair dismissal against Lloyds at the Employment Tribunal, Paul has devoted his time to establishing businesses and highly skilled & experienced teams that provide litigation support services to law firms and businesses involved in large bank or financial markets litigation, helping expose flaws & disturbing failings within the whistleblower ‘process’ in the UK, and helping victims on a pro-bono basis that have been failed by their bank, the FCA and/or the Financial Ombudsman Service.
“I am fortunate to be able to work daily with so many highly experienced and like-minded associates, and to have helped secure over $5bio in settlements for claimants across the globe in multiple asset classes. However, it’s the £3.5mio in compensation that I have helped secure for over 500 victims on various complaints, on a pro bono basis, that is most satisfying.”
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Mark Bishop
Leader, Connaught Action Group
Having entered the world of financial services consumer advocacy in 2012 as de facto leader of the Connaught Action Group and member of the liquidators’ committee of the Connaught Income Fund Series 1, Mark now works with the principals of other action groups and lobbies regulators and politicians to improve the regulatory environment.
Having worked as a journalist, media company executive, strategy consultant and corporate finance advisor, Mark holds an MBA from Cranfield University School of Management (where he is now a Visiting Fellow) and sits on the Advisory Board of the MBA programme at Sussex University, where he gained his first degree. He is also the author of a business book, The Future of Private Equity – Beyond the Mega Buy-Out.
Mark also advises the Transparency Task Force leadership team on strategy matters.
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Our bonds clearly stated that our investment was covered by the Government compensation scheme.
It was not true so why is this not seen as fraud and prosecuteable by the fca
All the powers that be seen to be able to talk, but not able to tackle the problem of all our money disappearing. Companies lawyers solicitors et cetera all come on board all get paid but the people that put the money in I’ve lost everything .
British justice just does not seem to work in this case it’s just up to each individual to be extra careful I will never invest in anything again.