Suggestions the Financial Markets Authority knew about David Ross long before his business was raided were "crap", the regulator's chief executive told a conference this morning.
"Let me very clear about this because there have been some assertions and some whispering campaigns that everybody knew about Ross and that we were too slow to act. I'm standing here before you today to say that it took one phone call, one, for us to take action. Any suggestion that we knew about Ross beforehand is crap," FMA head Sean Hughes said at the 2013 Forensic Conference in Auckland today.
Wellington's Ross Asset Management was raided by the Financial Markets Authority last year after complaints from an investor attempting to get money out. The High Court then froze the business' assets as well as those of its founder, David Ross, and appointed receivers to manage the firm's affairs.
Although Ross' 900 clients believed their investments were worth almost $450 million, receivers from PwC could identify only about $11 million in his group of companies.
PwC's John Fisk also said last year that they had found "characteristics of a Ponzi scheme" at Ross Asset Management and the FMA and Serious Fraud Office are both investigating Ross and his company.