Gold Coast has welcomed moves by SEC to restore investor confidence

Gold Coast Fund Management (GCFM) has welcomed confirmation by the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) that it is seriously engaging with the company to find a lasting solution to the liquidity crisis faced by it.

The Commission
recently revealed they have received and started reviewing proposals from GCFM,
the biggest fund manager, on how they hope to meet payment obligations to their
customers and investors.

The news came via a statement released by the SEC which said, “The Commission is presently reviewing the viability and soundness of the proposals and wishes to assure all interested parties that it is doing so only in the interest of investor protection.”

GCFM has expressed
optimism that the approval of its proposal would give their clients real value
for their investment and provide a roadmap for other struggling fund management
companies seeking solutions to their liquidity challenges.

General Manager, External Affairs and Investor Relations, Benjamin Afreh, said “we submitted Cardinal Offer as an investment option to our Structured Finance Product. We believe the Cardinal Offer will give our customers real value for their investment while helping to mitigate our liquidity challenges.

“The Cardinal Offer will be a medium to long term, liquid and value enhancing product. It will be made up of a bond and an equity offer. The bond portion of the fund will allow customers to continue to earn a predetermined return without violating the recent directives from the commission. By this, we are offering a solution to the SEC directive by leveraging on this investment asset,” Mr Afreh added.

GCFM has so far paid nearly GH¢70 million to aggrieved customers and various categories of clients and has shared details of these payments with the regulator.

In addition, GCFM is
one of the few if not the only fund manager to have ceased taking new deposits
for its Structured Finance product from investors since October 2018, in
compliance with the regulator’s directive to the fund management industry to
stop offering guaranteed rates.

The company is also taking firm and urgent steps to recover investments placed with other financial institutions and government infrastructure products. When government agencies pay contractors for work done, it will restore normal operations for GCFM.

Source: Adom News