Category: Morally Wrong

Boost Your Capital Or Not

The email says “Give your business a boost

From Boost Capital Limited

It’s a simple offer – more cash to help with any cash flow issues or capital to help with expanding your business. You can use the money however you choose.

And it promises no complicated forms, no upfront fees, no hidden costs and that the money can be in your account in 2 days.

All very good, but what it doesn’t say is that their typical APR is 40%. No wonder they are so keen to lend out money and not care about what it’s for.

Not as bad as some people in this market, but still pretty bad at 160 times the base rate.

If your business needs cash – there are much much cheaper ways of getting it than at 40% APR.

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Further Investment in Burial Plots

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Back in April 2016, I published a post about an investment company offering burial plots in Rainham Cemetery as an investment. “Buy now before the cost  goes up” and sell back when bereaved people are desperate for a plot. A very nasty business.

The original post is at https://fightback.ninja/test/this-is-nasty-investment-in-burial-plots/ 

MoneyMail has been investigating Harley Investments who claim 40% returns in 2 years on burial plots. (article published on October 5th, 2016). It turns out that the men who run Harley have developed Get Rich schemes before and not delivered as promised.

The two men running Harley were linked to number of companies that sold an investment in allotments and there have been other such ‘investments’. The allotments investment has people who’ve been waiting years to get anything back and the location of the allotments hasn’t been built up as promised – it’s just empty unused land.

The management of Harley Investments claim they are just the victim of bad luck and delays, but the investors are still waiting and in the meantime the men involved continue with new ‘investment’ plans such as burial plots.

This is a very nasty business – trying to make money from bereaved people desperate for a burial plot.

How could you sleep at night if you were part of this?

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Quick Cash

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An email titled “Little Loans” offering cash within 15 minutes.

“Get an instant loan decision today up to £2,500”

This is from uk-prizes.com which is not a money lender.

They are a credit broker meaning they find “victims” willing to pay extortionate interest rates to get quick cash and pass their information onto a lender and they get commission from the lender if a credit agreement is taken out by the “victim”.

The legal status of uk-prizes is spelled out in the message and it is a registered trading name of Digitonomy in Cheshire.

I did say extortionate interest rates.

The message says their representative APR is 278% meaning if you borrow £1,000 for a year then you have to pay back almost £4,000.

Sadly this is quite legal and even if a fair number of people can never pay back their loan, the company still makes huge profits on those who do.

A second email arrived the same day from Cashflex.co.uk which again is a trading name of Digitonomy and offers quick cash. This time they claim their representative APR is only 99.9% but further down in the email does say they charge up to 278% APR

This really should be criminal.

Never take money from these kinds of companies.

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Joanne Has a Persistent Cold Caller

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Joanne isn’t bothered by scam and spam emails – just presses delete for anything at all dodgy.

And she has fun with the Microsoft support scam phone calls that have been happening a lot recently.

Joanne says “With ‘Microsoft’ scam calls I tend to feign interest. I go along with what they’re saying, let them deliver their speech and then say ‘Oh, I don’t have a pc’.  Then they hang up, which I find amusing”.

But she has had problems with a very determined cold caller – Zenith Windows.

Constant calls annoyed Joanne and no amount of explaining she wasn’t interested would put them off. She tried a high pitched whistle – still they called.

She threatened to report them for harrassment – no effect.

She threatened a solicitor’s letter – still they called.

She complained to their head office – no change.

When she moved house, she assumed that would be the end of Zenith calls, but they tracked her down through a previous employer.

Fortunately  for Joanne, her ex employer realised the situation and denied knowing Joanne.

When does cold calling become harassment?
When does cold calling become threatening behaviour?

Not good.

Online Auction for Domain Names

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We received an email at the radio station, offering the opportunity to participate in an auction for sale of the Internet domain name radio.co.uk

Clearly they are sending out the invites to every radio station they can find.

This is a Dutch company that runs the auctions and claims to have 21 million domain names .

It claims to connect the best virtual real estate i.e. domain names with industry leaders. But that’s false – they just sell to the highest bidder. That’s how auctions work. There’s no quality check – just counting of money.

A quick check shows they are currently auctioning

259.com estimated to be worth €50,000

Also 43.com estimated at €3,000,000

Estate.com at €1,500,000

Multivitamins.com at €150,000

There are much cheaper domain names available e.g. ann.nl estimated to be worth €1,000

It seems there is a group of people calling themselves domain name speculators or domainers  whose job is the buying and selling of  domain names.

Is there anything wrong with this?

Buying and selling commodities of all types is normal business practice – from farm output to stocks and shares to minerals. However, I do feel there is something repugnant in buying things you think other people want and making money from their need without adding anything.

So I think this is legal but objectionable.

It is clearly a big market – the buying and selling of domain names.