Tag: Fleet Mutual Wealth Limited

  • Bogus Offer To Take Over Avon Turns SEC Website Into Crime Scene

    Avon logoOn May 14, someone used the SEC’s EDGAR database to plant a bogus news release that claimed a company known as PTG Capital Partners LTD. had made an offer to buy out Avon Products Inc. for $18.75 a share. As NPR put it on May 15, this was “a huge premium.”

    DealBook, on May 14, reported that the “federal government’s system for filing securities documents may not be as secure as many on Wall Street assume.”

    Given that the typo-laden hoax that appears in part to have been a copy-and-paste job in which words were lifted from the website of a legitimate company caused Avon’s stock price to surge, the news release looked like a pump-and-dump bid. It could be that, of course.

    But it also could be something more sinister: a marketplace taunt, if not a taunt at the U.S. government itself that more or less screams, “Look what we can do! And we don’t need even to hire an editor!”

    The theatrics that effectively turned part of the SEC’s website into a crime scene appear to have gotten under way at roughly 11:30 a.m. on Thursday. Avon responded quickly, issuing a statement within about 90 minutes.

    “In response to an SEC filing made by an entity purporting to be named ‘PTG Capital Partners,’ Avon reports that it has not received any offer or other communication from such an entity and has not been able to confirm that such an entity exists,” the company said.

    Like A Ponzi-Board Scam

    Remember Profitable Sunrise, the egregious scam shut down by the SEC and state regulators in 2013? The SEC alleged that Profitable Sunrise operated from a “mail drop” in England and had a registered agent based in Seychelles, an island chain in the Indian Ocean.

    A listing for PTG Capital Partners on the SEC’s website claims the business has a street address in London and was incorporated in “BRITISH INDIAN OCEAN TERRITORY.”

    In a May 15 story, the Wall Street Journal, reporting on an FBI inquiry into the bogus Avon takeover bid and citing information from a U.K. government official, noted that “[t]here are no businesses registered in the British Indian Ocean Territory.”

    Any number of recent scams appear either to have fabricated U.K. addresses or used mail drops to reach out and pluck the masses. The utterly preposterous Rockfeller.biz was only one of them. Others include MooreFund and SummitOilProfits.

    These scams, which often use an MLM or network marketing component in which affiliates are promised recruitment commissions, are stealing millions and millions of dollars. The money disappears down ratholes.

    Now, Avon, an MLM company, appears to have been targeted in a similar scheme — one that may have the appearance of a pump-and-dump but perhaps was calculated to taunt the government.

    In March 2014, the SEC alleged that a “program” known as Fleet Mutual Wealth Limited (or Mutual Wealth) effectively had filed invalid Forms D with the commission to dupe the masses. “Pre-IPO” scams also are of concern. (See UFunClub.)

    Some international scammers allegedly have traded on American-sounding names to fleece their marks. (See ProfitsParadise.)

    The bogus PTG Capital Partners offer to buy Avon is of significant concern. It should be investigated as an attack on the free market.

     

     

     

     

  • BULLETIN: Entities Operating As Fleet Mutual Wealth Limited And MWF Financial Are Online Frauds, SEC Says; ‘Program’ Has Presence On TalkGold And MoneyMakerGroup Ponzi Forums; Money Ordered Frozen In SolidTrustPay, EgoPay And Perfect Money Accounts

    mutualwealthsmall
    A website styled MutualWealth.com is fraudulent and is part of an international pyramid scheme, the SEC says.

    BULLETIN: (7th Update 8:51 p.m. ET U.S.A.) Entities known as Fleet Mutual Wealth Limited, MWF Financial Limited and Mutual Wealth are frauds that filed invalid forms with the SEC to dupe the masses, the SEC said.

    An associated web domain styled MutualWealth.com also is a fraud, the SEC said in a statement and emergency court filing that alleges a pyramid scheme in which promoters become referral agents or purported “accredited advisors” to earn recruitment commissions.

    “Mutual Wealth used Facebook and Twitter as well as a team of recruiters to spread a steady stream of lies that tricked investors out of their money,” said Gerald W. Hodgkins, an associate director in the SEC’s Division of Enforcement.

    Some recent scams have purported to operate out of Hong Kong, something that appears also to be the case with Mutual Wealth.

    “[A]lmost nothing that Mutual Wealth represents to investors is true,” the SEC said.  “The company does not purchase or sell securities on behalf of investors, and instead merely diverts investor money to offshore bank accounts held by shell companies.  Mutual Wealth’s purported headquarters in Hong Kong does not exist, nor does its purported ‘data-centre’ in New York.  Mutual Wealth also lists make-believe ‘executives’ on its website, and falsely claims in e-mails to investors that it is ‘registered’ or ‘duly registered’ with the SEC.

    And, the SEC said, Mutual Wealth may operate through entities in Panama and the United Kingdom “and through Russian or Belarussian nationals.”

    From the SEC complaint (italics added):

    Investors who complete an account application are instructed to transfer money to Mutual Wealth either by wire transfer to banks located in Latvia and Cyprus or through third-party payment processors such as SolidTrust Pay, EgoPay, or Perfect Money.

    Like other fraud schemes, Mutual Wealth has a presence on the MoneyMakerGroup and TalkGold Ponzi forums.

    U.S. District Judge Dolly M. Gee of the Central District of California has ordered an asset freeze on all accounts “at any bank, financial institution, brokerage firm, or third-payment payment processor (including those commercially known as SolidTrust Pay, EgoPay, and Perfect Money) maintained for the benefit of Mutual Wealth,” the SEC said.

    Assisting in the probe are the FBI, the Financial and Capital Market Commission of Latvia, the Ontario Securities Commission and the Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission, the SEC said.

    From the SEC’s statement (italics added):

    According to the SEC’s complaint, Mutual Wealth operates through entities in Panama and the United Kingdom and uses offshore bank accounts in Cyprus and Latvia and offshore “payment processors” to divert money from investors.  Mutual Wealth’s sole director and shareholder presented forged and stolen passports and a bogus address to foreign government authorities and payment processors.

    As in previous scams, the Mutual Wealth fraud spread on social media, the SEC said.

    “Mutual Wealth maintains Facebook and Twitter accounts that link to its website and serve as platforms through which it lures new investors,” the SEC said.  “Some of Mutual Wealth’s ‘accredited advisors’ then use social media channels ranging from Facebook and Twitter to YouTube and Skype to recruit additional investors and earn referral fees and commissions.

    “Mutual Wealth’s Facebook page spreads such misrepresentations as ‘HFT portfolios with ROI of up to 250% per annum.  Income yield up to 8% per week,’” the SEC said.  “A Facebook post on Aug. 12, 2013, boasted ‘$1000 investment into the Growth and Income Portfolio made on April 8th, 2013 is now worth $2,112.77.’  Mutual Wealth regularly posts status updates for investors on its Facebook page, and the comment sections beneath the posts are often filled with solicitations by the accredited advisors.  Mutual Wealth also tweets announcements posted on its Facebook page.”

    Regulators have been warning for years about scams spreading on social media.

    Scammers recently have been purporting they are conducting IPOs or pre-IPOs or are registered with the SEC.

    “Mutual Wealth has filed three Securities Act Forms D with the Commission,” the SEC said. “Each Form D purports to give notice of offerings of securities that are exempt from registration with the Commission under Regulation D of the Securities Act.

    “But Mutual Wealth’s offers and sales of securities do not qualify for the exemptions cited in the Forms D or any exemption under from registration under Regulation D of the Securities Act. Consequently, the Forms D are invalid and of no legal effect,” the SEC said.

    About 150 U.S. investors opened Mutual Wealth accounts, plowing “at least” $300,000 into the scheme, the SEC said.

    Note: Thanks to Jordan Maglich at PonziTracker.com.

    Screen stot of section of SEC complaint alleging that Mutual Wealth is a pyramid scheme. Red highlights by PP Blog.
    Screen shot of section of SEC complaint alleging that Mutual Wealth is a pyramid scheme. Red highlights by PP Blog.