The Light Was Yellow Sir
Well-Known Member
Whilst they might have trusted these blokes, the value of your investment can go down as well as up. Diversification is your hedge against financial disaster when you’re investing and they should have been aware of what was happening.I think some of the comments are a bit unfair and fail to appreciate human nature somewhat.
If someone has worked for their money and trusted their financial advisor to invest it on their behalf, and not only did that money disappear but they are then faced with a eye watering tax bill which means financial ruin then anyone is entitled to feel devastated by that.
It wasn’t a tax dodge, it was a government backed investment scheme and so those players were completely entitled to think it was legit.
As someone who has great trust placed in him by others in the course of my job I understand what a sacred responsibility that is. And I think people who consciously break such a bond of trust are cunts.
I actually knew quite a few people in that documentary twenty or so years ago, in and around Nottingham, including the two blokes from Kingsbridge who I was on nodding terms with and engaged in some small talk from time to time (McMenamin went out with my mate’s ex) and to be frank I didn’t get hugely bad vibes from either of them, so if I didn’t pick that up then I’m not going to criticise a footballer for missing it too.
By a weird twist of fate I got talking to a lawyer about this a couple of years ago who was acting for some of the players, and so I’m now reasonably well informed about what went on - which was reprehensible on Kingsbridge’s part, if not criminal, at least based on that conversation.
So I do have some sympathy for those players. Even Brian Deane who I also knew back then and never liked. He was as miserable back then as he was on that documentary.
I invested in the Woodford fund that went tits up, had a significant shareholding in UK Oil and Gas that’s now ‘worth’ less than 0.1% of what went in and a solid holding in Thomas Cook which went bust.
It’s all part of the ups and downs of investment.
Now, all that being said, I’m not unsympathetic to these fellers but, they’re now being supported by some politicians with a suggestion of compensation and/or the setting aside of tax owed, which sounds like an expensive precedent.
As with much of UK PLC, it’s yet more socialism for the rich supported by crushing capitalism for the poor.