Quilter Cheviot unveils Aim strategy
Quilter Cheviot has launched a strategy investing in the alternative investment market (Aim), targeted at UK-based high net worth investors.
Quilter Cheviot has launched a strategy investing in the alternative investment market (Aim), targeted at UK-based high net worth investors.
The chief executive of Providence Companies Group has been federally indicted, along with its chief operating officer, for orchestrating a $150m (£112.5m, €125.8m) fraud that saw the firm’s operations in Guernsey and a Jersey-based IFA firm shut down in 2016.
An Italian princess is disputing a Jersey Royal Court judgement that she conspired with her film-star mother to secretly direct $200m of family wealth away from her sister.
Entrepreneurs are consolidating their businesses at the fastest rate for six years.
Two out of five UK advisers are working longer hours in 2017 due to business growth, increased compliance and regulatory requirements, research from Prudential has found.
Following a damning investigation by a consumer watchdog, the Chartered Institute for Securities and Investment (Cisi) has warned that UK advisers will face legal action if they fraudulently claim to hold a qualification from the organisation.
Anti-fraud campaigners have welcomed a story arc in the world’s longest-running drama series that highlights the dangers of investment fraud.
The UK Government is launching an inquiry into collective defined contribution pension schemes, also known as defined ambition, which are commonplace in the Netherlands, Canada and Denmark but not yet permitted in the UK.
The head of family law at Appleby, the firm at the centre of the Paradise Papers, has left the business and set up her own firm in Jersey.
Isle of Man politicians have strongly defended the island’s economy following the Paradise Papers revelations, with one minister describing them as “a deliberately orchestrated attack from the international media”.
An app launched by insurance company Zurich can calculate how much life insurance would cost for a customer based on a selfie.
The UK needs to treat its whistleblowers better, according to a law firm which unearthed Financial Conduct Authority data.