Regarding the Fraud Facilitators
Sometimes financial entities expose a fund to fraud possibilities without being the direct beneficiary. Their actions create the opportunity for fraud, and then of course actively engage in cover up when the fraud is committed.
#1 - CSSF, the Luxembourg financial regulator
- Married Apex (the fund administrator) to Luxembourg Fund Partners, thus created the conflict of interest in NAV calculations.
- Granted a newbie fund an unusual 3 years carte-blanche re. non-diversification. After the first 3 years ending December 201majority of investments were still siphoned through Stephens/McGrath-controlled World Accord Ltd. in Hong Kong, in breach of the 30% diversification rule of the CSSF. PWC never "looked through" the SMB accounts to discover the catastrophic losses.
- Refused to force a regulated entity, SocGen, to provide historic bank statements, thus abetting the covering up of fraud and money laundering.
- Refused to force a regulated entity, Alter Domus Management, to provide historic fund documents, thus abetting the covering up of fraud and misdealings.
- Refused to provide the investigating director with the previous directors' replies to CSSSF enquiries into lack of diversification, use of HK companies etc..
- Ignored shareholder complaints and requests for help, citing that as "Well-informed Investors" under the SIF Law, basically "tough luck!!" - notwithstanding the widescale fraud that had occurred under their watchful eye..
#2 - PWC, the Luxembourg Auditor
- Was aware from April 2013 that Apex owned 18% of Luxembourg Fund Partners, yet never once alerted investors to this clear conflict of interest in the annual reports.
- PWC never "looked through" the London-based SMB Professional Services accounts for World Accord, thus overlooked the catastrophic losses - 25% in 2014, 31% in 2016./li>
- Signed off annual audited accounts showing yearly successes of Blackstar Commodities, thus deceiving investors.
- In 2017 accounts PWC stated 3 years of positive NAV returns for each share class, even though the fund had suspended then collapsed in May 2017.
#3 - SMB Professional Services Ltd., UK-Based internal management accountant to HK-based World Accord Ltd. from March 2015 to September 2016
- Managed the accounts for World Accord up to the suspension of Blackstar Commodities.
- Raised many questions with management of World Accord, unanswered.
- Auditor of World Accord Ltd. unknown, known to PWC Luxembourg.
#4 - Luxembourg Fund Partners, the fund manager
- Effectively an Organised Financial Crime Group, operating at least 4 Ponzi schemes in LFP I, plus similar losses in LFP Prme, and Alliance Omnibus Property
- Primarily owned by LFP directors Luc Leleux and Julien Renaux, then 18% shareholder Apex from April 2013.
- Shared 2 directors, and same office floor with Apex at 11 Boulevard de la Foire in Luxembourg, zero independence of administrator and investment manager.
- Ceded lack of transparency to 100% subsdiary World Accord Ltd. in Hong Kong, to conceal catastrophic investment losses from Luxembourg and investors,
and used to breach investment diversification rules in defiance of CSSF investment rules.
- Lost 25% of NAV in 2014, hidden from Blackstar investors.
- Lost 31% of NAV in 2016, hidden from Blackstar investors.
- Invested in related party companies of Stephens and McGrath in 2026/17 just before Blackstar Commodities fund collapsed in May 2017.
- Luxembourg Fund Partners was sold to Alter Domus Group at end of 2017
- Alter Domus refused to hand over historic fund documents to investigating new director David Mapley in December 2018, sued in Luxembourg courts, case still not resolved as at November 2023!!
#5 - LFP I Directors, Luc Leleux, Julien Renaux
- Architects of the entire LFP Organised Financial Crime Group, with LFP I, LFP Prime, and Alliance Omnibus Property group of funds.
- Also controlling directors of investment manager Luxembourg Fund Partners.
- Also directors of investment subsidiary World Accord Ltd. in Hong Kong, which concealed catastrophic investment losses.
#6 - Apex Fund Services Malta, the fund administrator
- Apex owned 18% of Luxembourg Fund Partners, from April 2013 - an undisclosed conflict of interest re monthly NAV share price calculation.
- Apex provided a managing director to Luxembourg Fund Partners, Christophe Lentschat, involved in the day-to-day running of Blackstar.
- Apex provided a second director to Luxembourg Fund Partners, Peter Hughes, the global CEO of Apex Group
- Strangely, Apex operated in Luxembourg through the branch of Apex Malta, which somehow failed to raise any suspicions.
- The CSSF arranged the Apex shareholding and management involvment in Luxembourg Fund Partners in order to grant Luxembourg Fund Partners a funds management licence.
- Christophe Lentschat resigned as managing director of Luxembourg Fund Partners in January 2016, Peter Hughes resigns as director in December 2016.
Regarding NMC Health and Luxembourg
NMC Health was a UK FTSE-100 company until undeclared debts of US$ 4 billion were discovered - Blackstar Capital played its part!!
- (17/11/23) Guardian - collapsed FTSE-100 NMC Health misled markets over $3.2 bn. of debt, says FCA.
- (20/12/19) FT - NMC Health & Blackstar held talks to raise €200m in off-balance sheet debt..
- Blackstar Capital placed Supply Chain bonds issued by NMC Health into Luxembourg, with inter alia Credit Suisse Supply Chain funds buying a lot of this debt. With the default of the Lex Greensill's financial empire in March 2021, Credit Suisse Supply Chain funds, based in Luxembourg, collapsed within weeks in 2021, writing off over US$ 3 bn. of holdings.
- Lex Greensill, Australian businessman, Queensland University of Technology law degree, 1994-2001. Daniel McGrath, Australian businessman, Queensland University of Technology law degree, graduating 2001...