FCA bans and fines former LCF director

Huisamen signed off on financial promotions despite his own concerns about LCF’s strategy.

Related topics:  Finance News,  Regulation
Rozi Jones | Editor, Financial Reporter
13th February 2024
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"Under him, the approval process became an ineffective tick-box exercise – as a result, thousands of investors were persuaded to invest on the basis of highly misleading statements."
- Therese Chambers, FCA

The FCA has fined a former director of London Capital & Finance £31,800 and banned him from working in financial services.

Over 11,000 people invested a total of £237m with LCF before it collapsed into administration in 2019. Although LCF was FCA-approved, its high-risk mini-bond products were unregulated.

The FCA says financial promotions, signed off by Floris Jakobus Huisamen, presented a "misleading picture of the minibonds, making them appear a far more attractive investment than they were". Investors were not given the full picture about the risks of the product, including the presence of hidden charges and the unsustainable nature of the lending being carried out by LCF.

Huisamen signed off these financial promotions despite his own concerns about LCF’s strategy, the FCA investigation found. He failed to provide proper scrutiny or sufficiently challenge senior management. In particular, he failed to obtain evidence of the claims being made, allowed promotions that gave a misleading impression that the minibonds were regulated by the FCA and continued to approve promotions even when he became aware of inaccurate claims.

Therese Chambers, joint executive director of enforcement and market oversight at the FCA, said: "Mr Huisamen should have ensured LCF’s financial promotions were ‘fair, clear, and not misleading’. However, under him, the approval process became an ineffective tick-box exercise – as a result, thousands of investors were persuaded to invest on the basis of highly misleading statements.

"His failings contributed to thousands of retail investors losing significant amounts of money. It is right that he can no longer work in financial services."

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