FCA commences civil proceedings against ‘sale and rent-back’ company and its director

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has commenced proceedings in the High Court against London Property Investments (U.K) Limited (LPI), NPI Holdings Limited (NPI), Daniel Stevens (the sole director and shareholder of both companies) and his father Anthony Kafetzis.

Based upon present information, the FCA believes that the defendants’ activities have affected dozens of individuals, some of whom are highly vulnerable and who may have lost hundreds of thousands of pounds to the defendants.

The FCA alleges that:

LPI and NPI carried out regulated activities in the UK without FCA authorisation or exemption, and LPI communicated financial promotions without the required authorisation or approval and that Daniel Stevens and Anthony Kafetzis were knowingly concerned in LPI and NPI’s contraventions.

LPI provides services to financially distressed individuals who face eviction from their homes or who have recently been evicted.

Its services would include dealing with possession proceedings brought by mortgage lenders while arranging replacement finance with third-party lenders, ostensibly to enable the individuals to remain in their homes.

The replacement loans would not be explained to the individuals, but are typically high-interest and for amounts greater than the individual’s existing loans, leading to even greater indebtedness.

Individuals would be asked to sign a consent to allow LPI to register a restriction over the individual’s property at the Land Registry.

This would also not be explained but, when the individual attempted to sell their property, LPI would demand a large fee (up to 35% of the property value) to remove the restriction before any sale could go ahead.

LPI would also tell individuals that it had found another company, NPI, which would buy their house and then rent it back to them (known as “sale and rent-back”).

Mr Daniel Stevens is the sole shareholder and director of both companies. However, this relationship would also not be explained to individuals.

The FCA has secured an interim injunction stopping these activities from continuing and a restraint order freezing 17 residential properties worth approximately £3.9 million and the defendants’ other assets up to £867,770.

The FCA is asking the court to return the ownership of properties to the affected individuals, restitution for individuals who suffered losses as a result of the defendants’ actions, declarations from the court stating that the defendants acted illegally, and injunctions to prevent further breaches in the future.

The court proceedings are at an early stage and no date for trial has been set.

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One Comment

  1. anon-mon73

    Wow someone still doing SARB.

    SARB in the right hands was a good deal for both sides, I still have tenants in properties from 10+ year that I bought their property. No rent increases ever and can live there for as long as they want.

    Difference is the capital appreciation is not London where there’s more money to be made in throwing people out on the street!

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