No-deal Brexit temporary passporting backstop goes live
Financial Conduct Authority has offered a glimmer of stability as Brexit fatigue bites
Financial Conduct Authority has offered a glimmer of stability as Brexit fatigue bites
Investors with run-off shares in the ill-fated EEA Life Settlements fund are projected to lose more than a third of the value of their investment by the time all shares are redeemed, the coordinator of the EEA Investors’ Group told International Adviser.
There is some good news for investors in the beleaguered EEA fund after RL360° confirmed the scheme is distributing around $15.1m (£10.9m, €12.2m) to holders of run-off shares.
Holders of more than 870,000 EEA shares have not acted to stop their funds from potentially being automatically reinvested in similar products, warns action group EEA Investors’ Group.
Investors in the ill-fated EEA Life Settlements Fund will receive a $54.5m (£42.1m, €49.9m) payout for their shares in the so-called ‘death bonds’.
Investors in the ill-fated EEA Life Settlements Fund have been told it could be more profitable for them to sell off remaining policies in the fund than hold them to maturity, according to David Trinkwon, coordinator of the EEA Investors Group.
Malta-based Harbour Pensions is predicting “increased interest” in the European Economic Area (EEA) Qrops market after forging a renewed partnership with the Federation of European Independent Financial Advisers (Feifa).
Investors in the ill-fated EEA Life Settlements Fund received a $49m (£39.6m, €59.8m) payout in October for their shares in the so-called ‘death bonds’.
Investors in the ill-fated EEA Life Settlements Fund have been told they cannot sell their shares in so-called ‘death bonds’ until later in the year as not enough cash has been generated from maturing policies, according to campaign group EEA Investor’s Group (EEIG).
Investors in beleaguered Guernsey-based EEA Life Settlements Fund are stuck between the devil and the deep blue sea as they decide whether to sell their shares at a heavily discounted price or face another 10 years in the failed fund.
Investors in the ill-fated EEA Life Settlements Fund have received a “dismal” strike price offer for their shares in so-called ‘death bonds’, according to campaign group EEA Investor’s Group (EEIG).
Investors in Guernsey-based EEA Life Settlements Fund have been dealt a further blow in their attempts to sell some, or all, of their shares after the company running the sale offer advised that it needs more time.