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‘£200m lost in investments’ by North West families


DOZENS of Asian families across the North West fear they have lost fortunes in foreign investment schemes.

As much as £200m is believed to have been put into operations which promised speculators returns as high as 90 per cent in 18 months if they invested in international property projects – many in the Gulf states.

But in some cases profits have not materialised and worried investors are trying to get their capital back.

A Lancashire Police spokesman said the force was aware of the situation. He said: “Police in Preston have received two complaints from potential victims of fraud and the full extent of this fraud is currently under investigation.”

Illyas Munshi, chief executive of Enterprise4all Ltd, a regional business support organisation, warned of the dangers of people investing in anything without doing sufficient homework.

Mr Munshi, said: “People have borrowed from friends and family, re-mortgaged homes and invested entire life savings into such schemes and are now paying a very hefty price.

“We have begun receiving correspondence from Asian Business Federation members highlighting how they have invested their personal and business wealth into these schemes and now do not know who to turn to.

“The sheer scale of the problem and amounts transferred is daunting.

“It has been raised from the Asian community across Lancashire.”

He said people were encouraged to invest by stories of how others had supposedly got substantial returns and got “caught up in euphoria that is generated”.

He said: “Investors ignore the most fundamental principle of investment: One cannot expect to make large profits without taking risk.

“Whenever a large amount of money is at stake, individuals should logically seek large amounts of information on where they should invest.

“But investors in this case did not. Few ask the right questions at the right time and are naive enough to believe in what is communicated to them.

“Many incidents do not get reported, as people do not like to admit that they have lost money.

“The fear is people are still waiting with bated breath for their returns but to no avail.

“We have been hit already but a new set of investors is being approached.

“The scheme details might change, but the structure is the same.

“People should stay away or seek professional advice”.

One man, who said he staked more than a million pounds in a scheme, said: “We were promised a 90 per cent return within 18 months.

"And at first many people did get paid out. There were never any concerns.

“In return for the investment we were given a letterhead with the company logo on it.

Another Lancashire businessman said he raised money and then found he had become a ‘middle man’ for an investment scheme.

He said: “People came to us and gave us money to hand over. They effectively knew they were investing it elsewhere but the buck stops with us now.

“They are coming to us wanting the money back. So we are deeply concerned.”

Comments(3)

Izanears says...
4:26pm Fri 10 Jul 09

Once again, people forget the old maxim. If it sounds to good to be true,then it is to good to be true.
Greed is some peoples worst enemy.

Kevin, Colne says...
7:03am Sat 11 Jul 09

Behind this story is a lot of grief and heartbreak, and for those who sunk all their wealth and some into this scheme quite possibly runiation.

I have to say that if someone came to me promisng a return of 90% in 18 months I'd show them the door, no matter who recommended them or what returns other investors had achieved.

One other thing folks need to be on their guard against is boiler rooms. These are pure hook and fry outfits.

I was contacted yesterday by a guy claiming to be from an investment house who then said that we'd had a discussion six-months ago about my holding in a well-known publicly listed company. This was the hook to get me into dialogue and then they would attempt to fry me by offering stock in a business that was either non-existant or pretty duff. Those who know me will tell you that I need no help on that score as I'm quite capable of picking duff companies without assistance from anyone else.

The conversation yesterday lasted all of 5 seconds. My reply was: "I am sorry but you are wrong. I can assure you that we did not have a discussion six months ago because I do not own stock in the company you've just named, nor do I wish too. Moreover I never discuss financial matters with unsolicited callers. Thank you for calling." The guy was still jibbering and following his script when I put the receiver down.

They must hook some people though. I do not know what the hit-rate is but it must be sufficient to make cold-calling worthwhile.

As Izanears says "If it's too good to be true, then it probably is."

TONY WALES says...
4:12pm Sat 11 Jul 09

Was this money for investment, or money laudering purposes?
If you were trying to hide it from the British taxman, you have got what you deserve, if it was a genuine investment and you intended to declare the income on your tax return, I feel sorry that you have lost your money.
Perhaps investors will inform the readers?


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