shoot first and ask questions later

Investment Risk – How do you quantify it?

As a recent article published in The Telegraph demonstrates, risk can be a highly subjective component of any investment.

The-Telegraph-2nd-June-2015The basis of the majority of claims made against independent financial advisors (IFAs) seems to be that they mis-sold to clients because they failed to adhere to the client’s risk profile. But what do we mean by risk and is the term applied generically across the financial services industry?

When I studied complex systems for my degree there was a pretty straightforward starting point; understand the impact of a failure and the probability of it occurring and you can start to understand the risks.

Impact

Premium Bonds are regarded as one of the lowest risk investments because your capital remains intact even if you never win a prize. At the other end of the spectrum, entire investments can be lost when a Hedge Fund goes bust. The impact of failing to win a prize is clearly far less worrying than losing everything put into an investment.

So when the Financial Services Regulator encouraged consumers to take action against IFAs for mis-selling the EEA Life Settlements shares and branded them as high risk, where did EEA sit on the scale? Well given that the fund was based on life insurance policies that the US Government obliges insurers to make available for a secondary market, and the policies were underwritten by some of the world’s largest insurance corporations, the capital amounts invested should have been secure. In fact the only erosion in the value of capital was the amount of premiums paid and the management fees taken once each policy was purchased. Both of these factors were predictable but in this respect the investment could not be described as quite as low risk as, for example, Premium Bonds. But then very few investments are.

The risk with EEA Life Settlements shares was overwhelmingly about the magnitude of gains once premiums and fees were deducted and not about the loss of the underlying policy values. Not Premium Bonds, but certainly on the low risk side of scale as opposed to Hedge Funds or more speculative investments.

Probability

Even if the consequences of a fund failing are low, we rightly also consider the probability of that occurring. None of us would place our savings in a fund that was highly likely to fail. Although for many there may be an increasing desire to find safety by placing our savings in low or zero growth funds in order to avoid the uncertainty of financial markets.

To understand the probability of a failure, we were taught to study those factors which influence an entity, both in its immediate and extended environment. We would then conduct a detailed risk analysis. In the case of EEA Life Settlements, the probability of the fund crashing was extremely low because almost all the factors in its environment were detached (it was sold as uncorrelated because the performance of stock, currency or commodity markets had no impact on the fund). Life Insurance corporations might have failed to meet their obligations but the risk of this occurring would be no greater than large banks or even governments defaulting – it happens, but it’s thankfully rare and if we judged all investments exposed to this risk as high, every investment under the sun would be in that category.

The only real risk in EEA Life Settlements related to the magnitude of any gains with a very small risk of capital depletion if every policy holder outlived the life expectancy analysis (carried out by qualified physicians) by a considerable margin. Even if the fund had been badly managed, the underlying policies represented a rock solid asset.

In November 2011, it was accurate to describe EEA Life Settlements as low risk.

But then in November 2011 nobody could have predicted what would happen next.

The analogy that springs to mind is of a pedestrian crossing the road. There’s a risk which is largely determined by the traffic on the road and the common sense of the pedestrian, but we rely upon traffic controllers to mitigate that risk by implementing safeguards. What you don’t expect is a traffic control helicopter to target the pedestrian and deliberately land on top of him or her.

You could argue about whether the EEA Life Settlement fund was in a quiet country lane or the high street but prior to November 2011, when the traffic helicopter of the FSA landed on the fund, it was safe – it was certainly low risk.

It’s unfortunate for those who would like to take action against their IFA for mis-selling (as a consequence of risk) but the only thing that changed the risk status of the EEA Life Settlements Fund was the action of the FSA – the traffic police. The action of the regulator exclusively and retrospectively transformed the fund from low to high risk.

Another analogy; worrying lending decisions are discovered at 3 or 4 small banks. The regulator declares the banking sector to be on the verge of a solvency crisis; a run on all banks follows forcing the doors to close and access to all cash denied. Would it be reasonable to brand Barclays, HSBC or NatWest as high risk before this intervention? In the Life Settlements industry, EEA was the largest fund operating in the UK and one of, if not the, largest in the world.

At least we know that if the banks fail, tax payers will bail them, or if the FCA makes reckless comments about the insurance sector, millions of pounds will be spent on independent reports and officials will be too embarrassed to accept their bonuses.

What is the risk, I wonder, of our new administration doing the right thing for ordinary savers?

Final 12 Hours to Deadline and Claim Reaches £57m

With under 12 hours left before the deadline for registrations, the total value of the claim has reached £56,987,719.

Five hundred registrations have been accepted for the Class Action amounting to just over £44m and the loss of income is calculated to be in excess of £12.6m.

Since launching the action on 2nd January 2015, we have tried to reach as many investors as possible and we would like to thank Skandia and all the IFAs who have done their best to spread the word. We would also especially like to thank David Trinkwon and his EEA Investors Group for doing a great job informing people and answering queries. Unfortunately EEA did not co-operate and as a result, many investors may have lost the opportunity to participate, or at least decide for themselves if they wish to do so.

During the past weeks, we’ve done our best to handle queries but in the last couple of days it has been difficult to give the detailed responses that some have required whilst coping with the large number of registrations coming in. In particular, questions have been asked about our indemnity clause and I would like to explain that the sole purpose of this clause is to protect those of us who are working on your behalf from being sued for our actions or inactions whilst working on this Class Action. Unfortunately the times we live in require us to include this protection. It is only intended to relate to the Class Action and has no bearing on the limitation of your costs in the initial action. As previously mentioned there will be no cost to investors unless we secure a settlement and the current maximum contribution (to be deducted from the settlement) if we are successful in this stage is under £20 including VAT.  If, as we expect, a second stage of action in the European court is required, nobody will be committed to participate in this and the details of funding that stage will be announced at a later date.

We have also been asked to name the lawyer acting on our behalf in this case. He is currently abroad concluding another case and has asked us not to give out his details whilst he is away. I think this is entirely reasonable and quite clearly his details will be in the public domain as soon as we formerly commence the legal action.

Thank you to everyone who has (or is about to) joined this action. We are as convinced as the day we started that we have a strong case under Human Rights Law and also under UK law but the latter provides no remedy due to the iniquitous immunity from prosecution behind which wrong doers in the FCA can seek refuge.

Thank you also for understanding that I am no lawyer or financial expert and whilst I have tried to conduct this process as fairly and efficiently as possible, it may have been very rough around the edges! We could have employed a bunch of professionals to do this but I suspect that you, like me, would object to introducing additional costs.

After today, I will go quiet for a few weeks as I’m about to move house and there will be a period between moving out and moving in when my wife and I will be nomads imposing upon the good nature of our children to put us up – or put up with us –  depending upon your perspective!

Although I will be unavailable during this time, my colleagues on the steering committee will be busy on your behalf and our lawyer will be back and working on this case in a few days.

Emails coming in to me after the deadline tonight will automatically receive an ‘out of office’ reply until I’m set up in our new home in March.

 

 

 

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The Last 4 Days to Register

This message is intended mainly for those who have not yet registered.

As the only person managing all the registrations, can I please ask you to ensure that you do not register more than once. Sorry to be so emphatic but with hundreds of registrations it’s important for your sake that you get it right first time, otherwise a duplicate registration may result in no registration. It is also your responsibility to ensure that you are legally entitled to register (especially if you register on behalf of someone else), if you aren’t the registration will be invalid. I’ve tried to assist a good number of people already but with the deadline approaching and my time being a limited resource, I can’t promise to help everyone to get this right.

We now have over £30m in claims from 276 investors, more are on the way and there are still 4 days to go.

 

 

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£27m and 7 Days to Go!

As we enter the final week for registering to join the Class Action, the claim currently stands at £27m (plus loss of income) and continues to increase every day.

EEA declined our invitation to let their policy/share holders know about the action, to allow them to make their own minds up about whether or not to participate. Let’s hope that those who miss the deadline as a result are of a forgiving nature!

Our lawyer is back from concluding a case abroad on the 16th of this month and the real action will commence very soon after that date.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Class Action Passes £22m

The current value of claims in the Class Action against the FCA is now £22,848,750 and it continues to rise every day.

We are grateful to Skandia/Old Mutual for notifying their policy holders about the existence of the action and their letter should arrive in the post of investors by tomorrow. A number of postal claims and claims under a Power of Attorney are also anticipated before the deadline.

Prudent accounting practice dictates that the FCA should now accrue for potential losses, not only as a result of this legal action but if, as we expect, we win in the European court, a legal precedent will be established for many others to follow. In 2011, the FSA estimated the UK market to be worth around £1bn and the international market, damaged by their actions, will be many times that amount.

As a footnote, personal exemption from liability (under UK law) will also be forfeit when Strasbourg rules that Human Rights have been unlawfully restricted. I wonder who might be a tad concerned about that?

 

 

 

 

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Why the FSMA 2000 is Sensible and the FSA Should Have Complied With it

“If the Authority proposes to make any rules (or issue guidance) it must publish a draft of the proposed rules in the way appearing to it to be best calculated to bring them to the attention of the public.”

So says the Financial Services and Marketing Act (FSMA 2000), and it makes good sense.

If the FSA had done this in 2011, instead of shooting first and asking questions later, they would have been informed by the subsequent consultation and the guidance published in November 2011 might have been replaced by the finalised guidance published six months later in 2012.

The finalised guidance made no mention of toxic assets and drew no comparisons with illegal ‘Ponzi’ schemes. TPLIs, it stated, are also known as Traded Life Settlements or Senior Life Settlements. No reference here to Death Bonds. If the FSA had complied with their own rules and consulted, none of the damaging, pejorative language would have found its way into their press release or the headlines that directly caused a run on redemptions and the suspension of the EEA Life Settlements fund.

The consultation also brought out constructive suggestions from the 55 people, companies and industry bodies that responded. And some of these were incorporated in the finalised guidance. But it was already too late. By the time this guidance was published in 2012, the damage had been done and thousands of savers no longer had access to their funds. The good counsel of experienced professionals was wasted because the FSA shot first and asked questions later.

Over three years later the secondary market for TPLIs continues to suffer from this serious error of judgment with the announcement today from EEA LIfe Settlements that the Net Asset Value of remaining policies is to be revalued. Not because of any changes in mortality rates, premiums or the maturity value of the policies, but simply because the secondary market remains discounted due to the pent-up demand for redemptions caused by the FSA. The underlying policies continue to hold the maturity values they did prior to 2011 but if investors can no longer wait for the maturity of these policies, they will be forced into heavy discounts.

The pain just goes on and in true civil service fashion, the FCA hides behind its expensive lawyers and schemes to avoid taking responsibility and prolong the suffering they have already caused. But we have a message for them.

Not this time – we’re coming for you and the longer you draw out the pain, the more we’ll reflect back to you.

 

 

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