AN illegal money-lender was today jailed for eight months in prison and ordered to pay back thousands of pounds of criminal cash.
Stuart Bell, of Newcastle Road, South Shields, will have to pay £60,000 following a confiscation hearing under the Proceeds of Crime Act.
At Newcastle Crown Court on Tuesday, April 24, Bell pleaded guilty to engaging in activity requiring a licence between January 2005 and June 2010.
Today, he was sentenced to eight months in jail for prividing unlicensed loans and ordered to pay back the cash.
He was given 28 days to pay the £60,000, or he will face 19 months in prison on top of his sentence, as default.
Bell was arrested in June 2010 after an investigation by Northumbria Police and the North East Illegal Money Lending Team into his illegal money lending activities.
His home was searched and a number of items relating to illegal money lending, including hand-written repayment schedules, were seized.
A confiscation order is based on the value of the defendant’s assets at the time it is made.
The benefit figure is the amount of profit the court decides the defendant has ‘earned’ through crime.
Detective Inspector Paul Knox of Northumbria Police’s Serious and Organised Crime Unit, said: “We are pleased with the outcome of the confiscation hearing.
“Financial outcomes can be as much of a deterrent as going to jail.
“Anyone found making money from any type of crime will be caught and will be dealt with appropriately by the courts.
“This confiscation order clearly demonstrates that crime does not pay.”
Investments: make money from water - Daily Telegraph
The fund has a 14pc weighting in China alone, as well as exposure to Brazil, India and Singapore.
“There is a huge opportunity in emerging markets where populations are growing immensely. There often is not enough water to go around and where there is water it is polluted,” he said.
Impax is dedicated solely to environmental services investing, with holdings in alternative energy, water and waste, with both global and geographically focused funds.
The investment philosophy revolves around the four key themes of resource scarcity, pollution, energy security and climate change.
Balancing this ethical approach with investors’ need to make a profit is part of what drives Mr Jenkyn-Jones.
“You need to invest to deliver clean water. There are many people in emerging markets who are suffering because of dirty drinking water. It is only through investment in clean-up technologies that the situation will change,” he said.
“The rise in the price of water is mitigated for poorer people – but that rise is what delivers the technology that benefit.”
US STOCKS-Wall St little changed, investors focus on Greece - Reuters UK
(Fixes day to Friday in lead)
* French banks drawing up Greek euro zone exit contingency plans- sources
* U.S. consumer sentiment climbs in May, highest since Oct 2007
* Stocks off: Dow 0.4 pct, S&P 0.1 pct, Nasdaq 0.2 pct
By Angela Moon
NEW YORK, May 25 (Reuters) - U.S. stocks were little changed in volatile trading on Friday as fresh warnings about Greece kept investors away from risky assets.
Despite the weak start, the S&P 500 was on track to post its best weekly gain in over two months. Trading has been choppy all week, with stocks usually opening lower or little changed but adding gains heading into the close.
Volume was also expected to be light as traders stay away from making new bets or positions heading into the Memorial Day holiday weekend. U.S. markets will be closed on Monday.
French banks, which are among the lenders most exposed to Greece, have stepped up their efforts on contingency plans for the debt-laden country leaving the euro zone, sources familiar with the situation said.
The heightened preparations by banks, including Credit Agricole, BNP Paribas and Societe Generale , come after euro zone sources told Reuters earlier this week that each member of the common currency would have to prepare a plan for a possible Greek exit.
Belgian deputy Prime Minister Didier Reynders issued a new warning over Greece, saying it would be a "grave professional error" if central banks and companies were not preparing for a Greek exit from the euro zone.
Energy stocks were among the day's top gainers. Chesapeake Energy Corp rose 2.4 percent to $15.95, up for the second day after the company announced it has put a half-million acres in Wyoming and Colorado up for sale.
Data showed Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers' final May consumer sentiment index rose to 79.3 from 77.8 in the preliminary May report. It was the highest level since October 2007. Market reaction was muted.
Morgan Stanley will adjust thousands of trades to ensure outstanding limit orders to sell will be filled at no more than $42.99 a share for Facebook stock from last Friday's botched initial public offering, the firm told its brokers on Thursday, according to several who listened to the call. Facebook shares were down 2.9 percent at $32.07.
The Dow Jones industrial average was down 44.95 points, or 0.36 percent, at 12,484.80. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was down 1.69 points, or 0.13 percent, at 1,318.99. The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 6.40 points, or 0.23 percent, at 2,832.98.
(Editing by Dave Zimmerman)
Someone's making money in Greece: Burglars stealing cash stashed under mattresses after families take it out of banks - Daily Mail
- Andreas and Emilia Karabalis, both 80, had €80,000 taken from island home
- Billions of euros hidden in cupboards and under floorboards across nation
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Warning: Greeks are being urged to keep their money in the nation's banks and not to stash their cash at home (file picture)
Greeks are being urged to keep their money in the nation's banks and not to stash their cash at home - as thieves continue to profit from the country's economic uncertainty.
Police say brazen burglars are making off with hundreds of thousands of euros, on an almost daily basis, as they raid homes where money is hidden in cupboards or under the mattress.
Andreas and Emilia Karabalis, both 80, are just one of the many victims targeted by unscrupulous robbers.
The couple took out €80,000 and hid it in their home, on the island of Lefkada, because they thought their bank would collapse. But days later thieves came in the night.
Emilia said: 'We were sleeping. The two masked burglars came to our bed and tied us up. They hit us. They robbed us - they didn't leave anything, it was torture.'
Husband Andreas added: 'Our life is black now. They took our life's savings. We lost everything.'
No-one knows exactly just how much cash lies stashed in Greek homes, secreted in cupboards, at the back of the ice-box, beneath the floor or under the mattress.
But by any guess it is well in the billions, and burglars are after their share of loot which is both highly portable and virtually impossible to recover.
Greece's debt crisis has plunged it into five straight years of economic contraction, thrown half of its young people out of work and may see it ejected from the eurozone.
Civil disorder: As well as the targeting of homes, there has also been violence on the streets of Greece in recent months
In the past two years, Greeks have withdrawn from banks more than €72billion - or close to €7,000 for every man, woman and child in the country. And much of that has been taken in cash.
Police say gangs who may have once eyed 'hard targets', - like the banks themselves, or jewellers - are now going after homes of ordinary people, where there is far less risk and often large stashes of cash freshly withdrawn from savings accounts.
'Many people have withdrawn their money from the banks fearing a financial crash, and they either carry it on them, find a hideout at home or in storage rooms,' said national police spokesman Thanassis Kokkalakis.
He said: 'We urge people to trust the banking system, leave their money there, or at least in a safe place, not hide it at home, where they must anyway take the basic security measures.
Little wonder: But with shares in Greek firms plunging, and the nation's banks having to be bailed out, many think keeping their money at home is the sensible option
'Some people don't even lock their doors and windows.' The unexpected bonanza is attracting foreign crime networks, he said, including two from ex-Soviet Georgia which police dismantled in recent months, blaming them for 300 burglaries.
Crime is just one hazard for people storing unusually large hoards of cash, most of which are not insured.
GREEKS HIT BY UNCERTAINTY OF ECONOMY, AND NOW BY THIEVES
Carpenter George Psychogios, 30, withdrew his savings of €8,000 and kept them in his house at Arta, a small town 200 miles from Athens and known principally for its Byzantine stone bridge and a 13th-century church.
He said: 'I hid the money in two different places before leaving for a trip. When I came back it was all gone. They broke into the house through a balcony door and they took it all.
'We used to sleep outside with the doors unlocked. Now we don't feel safe even when we lock up. They break into homes, shops, businesses. There is a surge in robberies here.'
In Iraklion, a working class neighbourhood of Athens, local people say some thieves have become so brazen they often prowl in broad daylight, even when a family is in.
'We were sitting on the front veranda chatting when they jumped from the roof to the back yard and got into the house,' said pensioner Mattheos Michelakakis, 61.
Before he realised what had happened, they had made off with his family's gold.
'Burglars hear that people are scared and withdrawing money and they hit homes randomly hoping they will be lucky,' he said.
'I feel like I've been naive. We always used to leave all the doors open; we had nothing to worry about.'
There are tales of savings going up in smoke in fires or, as in one case, being lost when a pensioner withdrew his life savings - then died suddenly, before telling his family where they were hidden.
Theft, though, seems the biggest risk and the crime wave has spread far beyond the big cities into rural areas where robbery was little known.
According to the central bank, Greeks withdrew €72billion from bank accounts between January 2010 and March 2012, leaving just €165billion behind.
Since then, withdrawals have accelerated further after an inconclusive May 6 election led EU leaders to talk openly of Greek exit from the single currency.
Some of that money was wired abroad and some spent, but much of it was hidden in homes, either in cash or converted to gold. If Greece leaves the common currency area, any money left in Greek banks would probably be turned into drachmas worth a good deal less. Euros stashed in a box at home would still be euros.
'People have already taken their money out of the bank. The rest are doing it now because they are afraid we will be kicked out of the eurozone,' said one police officer.
Among cases he said he had come across in the past week: a man reported €30,000 in cash and gold stolen from a storage room next to his house and an elderly woman had her life savings of €100,000 stolen from her apartment.
That woman's home also happened to be packed full of cartons of long-life milk and boxes of pasta - in case, she explained, the economic crisis led to food shortages.
Stashing cash is as old as Greece. The countryside is dotted with archaeological sites where the ancients squirreled away their silver drachmas to hide them from marauding armies.
Greek museums are rich in treasure whose owners never made it back.
'Hiding valuables - small or larger amounts of coins, golden, silver, even bronze - was very widespread in antiquity, especially in times of war, crisis or difficulty,' said George Riginos of the Association of Greek Archaeologists.
'Sometimes the owner would perish and this is how they reached us, hidden in the ground, in holes in the wall, small vases under the floor or leather bags.'
Future archaeologists may yet stumble on some of the buried treasure of the euro zone crisis of 2012. A senior banker tells the story of a family on the island of Rhodes who recently visited their local branch, trying desperately to figure out how much their late father had withdrawn before he died.
Not trusting the bank, the old man had taken out his life savings. But he hadn't told anyone where he hid it. His children were searching everywhere, tearing down walls in the house trying to find it, but with no luck.
Stocks to Watch: Frontline, VeriFone Systems, Talbots - Wall Street Journal
By Corrie Driebusch and Nathalie Tadena
Among the companies with shares expected to actively trade in Friday’s session are Frontline Ltd. (FRO), VeriFone Systems Inc. (PAY) and Talbots Inc. (TLB).
Frontline’sfirst-quarter earnings fell 53% on a double-digit drop in revenue as the company said demand in the tanker market continues to lag supply. But the results topped estimates, and the company, which recently undertook a restructuring effort, said it expects its second-quarter results to be better than the first. Shares were up 8% in premarket trading to $5.38.
VeriFone’s fiscal second-quarter earnings fell 43% as restructuring and acquisition-related costs continued to overshadow stronger revenue and better-than-expected core profit. Shares sank 8% to $41.38 premarket as guidance estimates were mostly below Wall Street expectations.
Talbots said its exclusivity agreement with Sycamore Partners has expired without the companies agreeing to a takeover deal at this time. The struggling women’s apparel retailer and the private equity firm entered the agreement earlier this month after Sycamore Partners made a sweetened offer that valued Talbots at about $215 million. Shares slid 22% to $2 in premarket trading.
Dell Inc. (DELL) is in talks to buy Quest Software Inc. (QSFT), Bloomberg reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter. Bloomberg said Dell is among several companies that made offers for Quest Software after it agreed in March to be bought by private equity and venture capital firm Insight Venture Partners for about $2 billion. Shares of Quest Software jumped 3.5% to $26.05premarket.
SemTech Corp.’s (SMTC) first-quarter earnings slid 90% as expenses and a purchase accounting adjustment related to the chip maker’s acquisition of Gennum Corp. weighed on margins and bottom-line results. But Williams Financial upgraded its stock-investment rating on SemTech to buy from hold saying while the results were below consensus, the quarter was “fairly strong.” Shares rose3.8% to $24.60 premarket.
Delcath Systems Inc. (DCTH) said it plans to sell shares of its common stock and warrants to purchase shares to raise funds to develop and commercialize the specialty pharmaceutical and medical device developer’s products, as well as for working capital. Shares slumped 24% to $1.80 premarket.
New York Mortgage Trust Inc. (NYMT) plans to sell 4 million shares to raise funds to acquire assets, including commercial and residential mortgage backed securities, and for other purposes. Shares fell 5.5% to $6.55 premarket.
Rosetta Genomics Ltd. (ROSG) agreed to sell 570,755 shares to investors at a 29% discount to its Thursday closing price. The molecular diagnostics firm’s shares fell 7% to $15.15 premarket, above the $11.50 offering price.
America’s Car-Mart Inc.’s (CRMT) fiscal fourth-quarter profit jumped 15% as the used-car seller recorded stronger volume and selling prices. Earnings topped analyst expectations.
AOL. Inc. (AOL) urged shareholders to vote for its slate of board nominees, saying activist investor Starboard Value LP’s nominees lack a long-term strategy or relevant industry experience.
Bazaarvoice Inc. (BV) agreed to acquire privately held rival PowerReviews Inc. in a cash and stock deal valued at $151.9 million, including options, that will expand the branding and marketing information company’s client base among small-to-medium sized retailers. The company also reported preliminary fourth-quarter revenue that topped analyst expectations.
Bunge Ltd.’s (BG) board approved a 8% increase in the grain-processing company’s quarterly dividend, the latest in a series of companies to make shareholder-friendly moves.
Exchange operator CME Group Inc. (CME) declared a five-for-one stock split, as the company said it hoped a lower share price would appeal to “a broader, more diverse mix of investor portfolios.”
Delphi Automotive PLC (DLPH) made a binding offer to acquire FCI Group’s motorized vehicles division in a deal valued at EUR765 million, or $972 million, that will strengthen the parts maker’s connector product portfolio. The deal is expected to be accretive to the company’s 2013 earnings.
Dish Network Corp.’s (DISH) standoff with broadcasters over its new ad-skipping technology turned into a legal battle Thursday as the parties filed lawsuits against each other.
Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services upgraded El Paso Pipeline Partners L.P. (EPB) into investment grade territory, citing the company’s growing size and asset diversity.
Mentor Graphics Corp. (MENT) swung to a fiscal first-quarter profit as the chip-design software company saw its margins improve on broadly higher demand.
Rue21 Inc.’s (RUE) fiscal first-quarter earnings rose 21% as the value-oriented teen-apparel retailer continued to record strong sales growth.
Sealed Air Corp. (SEE) appointed Carlisle Cos. (CSL) executive Carol P. Lowe as its new chief financial officer, starting next month.
A U.S. District judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania found former USA Technologies Inc. (USAT) director Bradley Tirpak violated a nondisparagement-contractual provision in his attempted proxy battle against the company.
Watson Pharmaceuticals Inc. (WPI) confirmed Thursday it has filed an application with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to market a generic version of Auxilium Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s (AUXL) Testim 1% gel, a testosterone replacement therapy.
Business Bancshares makes partial TARP repayment - St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Business Bancshares made a partial repayment of TARP this week, thanks to steadily improving earnings and assets.
The $6 million payment, made on May 23, is 40 percent of the Treasury's $15 million investment through the Troubled Asset Relief Program. The Treasury's infusion of capital was made in 2009.
Business Bancshares is the holding company for the Business Bank of St. Louis, which operates a single branch in Clayton.
“The partial repayment of TARP funds reflects the continued improvement in earnings and asset quality for the organization,” the bank's chairman, Charles Thal, said in a statement.
Business Bancshares announced its partial TARP repayment the same day it reported first quarter earnings. The bank holding company reported a $485,000 profit for the first quarter that ended March 31, up from a $469,000 profit in the first quarter of 2011.
The bank's nonperforming assets as a percentage of its total assets declined to 3.38 percent in the first quarter, compared to 3.42 percent in the first quarter of 2011.
“Earnings and asset quality trends continued to improve during the first quarter of 2012,” Larry Kirby, CEO and president of Business Bancshares and the Business Bank of St. Louis, said in the statement.
Small Business Strategies: Slow summer can be opportunity - USA Today
Some small businesses, especially those in the travel or hospitality industries, will be having their busy season.
For the rest of us, summer can mean the doldrums: Fewer customers. Prospects out on vacation. Lower income. And a house full of kids and visitors to top it all off.
What's a small-business owner to do?
You could sit by a pool and drown your sorrows in a margarita. (I'll take mine on the rocks with salt, thank you very much.) But if you can't afford that, I've got six steps to help grow a more successful small business this summer.
1. Make a splash on social media. You've been meaning to learn how to use one of the many social-media sites — such as Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn, Pinterest and Twitter — for your business, but you've just been too busy.
Use these slower summer months to spend some time figuring out which ones are right for you. Be sure to check out some of the many tools that make ongoing management of your social media activities easier and faster, such as HootSuite or Roost.
2. Network like crazy. All those backyard barbecues, softball games, and pool parties you get invited to are potential networking events, especially when they involve more than immediate family and friends.
If you're not getting many invitations, check out what's going on in your community. Try going to a Meetup group, Chamber of Commerce mixers, even neighborhood chili cook-off. Be sure to bring your business cards, mingle, and have a good elevator pitch ready so people you meet can easily remember what you do.
3. Update — or launch — your website. If you're like me, your website is outdated, but you haven't had the time to freshen it up.
Perhaps you don't have a website at all.
Summer is a good time to give your website a facelift. It doesn't have to be extensive, but make sure you have all the newest — and correct — information. Perhaps you want to add some e-commerce functionality, so customers can buy directly from you. And check to see that it looks good on mobile devices, too.
4. Turn those business cards into gold. I know you've got a stack of business cards from people you've met, but they're not doing you any good lying around your desk.
Yes, I know they take time to enter into a database. But, hey, it's summer. It's the perfect opportunity to get all these contacts into something like Salesforce or PipelineDeals. At least enter their contact info into your digital address book in Microsoft Outlook or Gmail.
If you have a ton of cards, like I do, you might want to buy a digital business card reader. They work fairly well now.
5. Start a simple e-mail newsletter. I'm a huge fan; I've got a monthly newsletter of my own with business tips.
They're easy to create and manage, and they keep your name as well as any specials or news in front of prospects and customers. Once you have names in a database or Microsoft Excel file, it's easy to import them into a simple newsletter program.
Or you can just enter the info into the e-mail newsletter service.
We use Emma, but other options include include Constant Contact; Vertical Response; and a free or inexpensive one that many small-business owners use, such as Mail Chimp. If you're very ambitious, you could even write 12 newsletters in summer and have monthly newsletters ready for the whole year.
6. Tackle a project. We all have a wish list of projects we would like to take care of someday.
You may have some new products or services in mind to develop, a new marketing campaign, organizing inventory, or cleaning out a back room to turn into an office.
Summer is a good time to take care of at least one of these. You'll feel a real sense of accomplishment if you do.
Of course, summer is also a good time for recharging your batteries. So maybe sitting by the pool with a margarita isn't such a bad idea.
Rhonda Abrams is president of The Planning Shop and publisher of books for entrepreneurs. Her most recent book is The Successful Business Plan: Secrets and Strategies. Register for Rhonda's free newsletter at PlanningShop.com See an index of Abrams' columns here. Twitter: @RhondaAbrams. Facebook: facebook.com/RhondaAbramsSmallBusiness. Copyright Rhonda Abrams 2012.
But what cash? These liars claim to not have any money with which to repay their loans. This is just another admission that the truth is they WILL not rather than CAN not pay. Our Government must show some spine and act to prevent this sort of behaviour - starting with siezure of every Greek asset with British reach and it's use to offset outstanding loans, firstly overdue repayments, then the principle if any cash is left over. That is the only way to deal with thieves.
- Iain, Glasgow Scotland, 25/5/2012 23:16
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