Debt & debt management

England cricket captain faces £14m property debts

July 17th, 2012

A former England captain has appeared in court over £14 million of debts that he accrued from a disastrous property venture.

Adam Hollioake, who is an ex-captain of Surrey and the England one-day cricket team, was declared bankrupt last year, and this week he appeared in court to confirm how much money is owed to each of his 40 creditors, reported the Daily Mail.

Mr Hollioake, 40, gave up cricket and returned to Australia, where he was born, to go into a property development business in 2004.

He captained Surrey between 1997 and 2003, winning three County Championships, and led the England team in one-day internationals. He also represented his country in Test matches.

Mr Hollioake then retired after his father, John, suggested he could receive a salary of around £100,000 a year if he joined him in a property development company.

He had doubled his money on a house sale in 1994 and believed he could do it again. “I was a genius – or so I thought”, he said, according to the Mail.

However, the venture soon turned sour and from living a life of luxury, with more than one home on each side of the Australian continent, he and his family now own no property and are renting.

Mr Hollioake said last week: “The lawyers representing the creditors in court yesterday wanted to know where every cent had gone and it was not a pleasant experience. They wanted to know everything about my life, almost down to how many times I went to the toilet.”

Since his bankruptcy, he said, attempts had been made ‘by enemies’ to paint him as a criminal, but he insisted: “I’m no crook. My life is an open book.”

He opened his wallet and added: “This is all I have left – just a few dollars. Yet there have been claims that I’ve ripped people off, run away with their money, got it all tucked away, secretly loaded myself up.”

He said he was a victim of the global financial crisis, adding: “What happened was mostly out of my hands, although I accept that I did not apply the same professionalism in my business affairs as I did in my cricket.”

He now reportedly admits that he made a ‘massive error’.

His firm was liquidated in September 2010 and among his creditors is former England and Surrey teammate Alec Stewart, whose claim is estimated to be more than £400,000.

“Alec understands the position I got myself into, as do the other creditors, apart from one who is determined to stamp me into the ground,” Hollioake said.

Hollioake’s determination to fight the damage to his reputation was not helped when it was revealed that he had tried to leave the country without the permission of his bankruptcy trustee, and had been stopped by Australian Federal Police.

He said: “In fact, I had no idea I wasn’t allowed to leave after being declared bankrupt.

“I was actually on my way to Papua New Guinea to do some charity work, but when it was pointed out to me that travel was not allowed without explicit permission I realised I had made an innocent error.”

He added: “In two years I’ll be free of bankruptcy and the first thing I plan to do is to shake the hands of people who have lost money through my property ventures.

“I am trying to establish whether I am legally entitled to try to pay them back after I have been dismissed from bankruptcy but either way I feel very badly about what has happened and I hope that I can clear the air with those creditors one way or the other.”

Hollioake has even taken up cage fighting in an attempt to scrape some money together. He said: “Cage fighting doesn’t pay all that well. It hurts, physically, at times, but I haven’t got my head knocked off yet.”

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OFT takes action against illegal cold calling debt firm

November 8th, 2010

The OFT has taken action against a lead generation firm as part of a crackdown on illegal cold calling practices in the debt management sector.

As a result the firm, Compensation Professionals Network Ltd (CPN), no longer holds a consumer credit licence.

CPN’s practices were described as ‘unfair and improper’ by the consumer watchdog, as they were found to be sending automated messages without consent, which implied that their calls were made on behalf of the government.

The OFT said it took action to prevent consumers being misled by the company, as they claimed they were able to write off consumer debts and that these services were free.

The action against CPN follows a previous OFT warning to the debt management industry to stop using unsolicited and misleading cold-calling practices to generate client leads.

The OFT is working with the debt management industry trade associations Debt Managers Standards Association (DEMSA) and Debt Resolution Forum (DRF) to warn member debt management firms that they should only use licensed lead generation firms and that failure to do so could lead to licensing action.

This will be reflected in the OFT’s revised Debt Management Guidance due to be published for consultation next year.

Lead generation firms source information from people looking for debt help or loans and sell this data on to other businesses such as debt management firms.

Ray Watson, Director of the OFT’s Consumer Credit Group, commented on the crackdown, saying: “Misleading or improper lead generation and cold-calling can be real nuisance and cause problems for consumers. The OFT has taken action against CPN to safeguard the interests of consumers.

“Debt management companies should take care to only deal with reputable lead generators that are licensed by the OFT. Failure to do so will put the companies themselves at risk of enforcement action.”

The OFT has worked closely with the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), which is the lead enforcer on cold-calling.

David Smith, Deputy Commissioner and Director of Data Protection at the ICO said: “We welcome the OFT’s action against CPN. Automated calls promoting debt solutions cause real annoyance and anxiety to individuals. We will continue to work together with the OFT to crack down on these harmful practices.”

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Fall in debt judgments welcome news for Northern Ireland

November 8th, 2010

A £2 million fall in the value of debt judgments for the third quarter of 2010 will come as welcome news in Northern Ireland.

According to figures released last week by Registry Trust, the non-profit organisation that collects judgment information from Northern Ireland and other jurisdictions in the British Isles, £7.7 million of debt judgments was issued in the third quarter of 2010 compared with £9.6 million in the same period of 2009.

However, Q3’s figure represents an 18 percent increase on the previous quarter.

Announcing the statistics, chairman of Registry Trust, Malcolm Hurlston, said: “Although this release shows Northern Ireland has recovered from the depths of last year’s situation, more dark clouds are visible on the horizon.

“The Comprehensive Spending Review will hit hard in Northern Ireland. In the coming round of belt-tightening I encourage people to check past debt records on our website before doing business.”

The number of searches performed on the Register by people checking past judgment records exceeded the previous record, reaching 1,888 searches in one quarter.

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Middle class repossessions set to spike as child benefits cut

October 18th, 2010

A leading repossession lawyer has warned that the removal of child benefits for those earning over £44,000 may increase repossessions, as many middle class families find their debt problems spiralling and financial situations increasingly squeezed.

Moore Blatch warns that many of the affected families have very serious borrowing issues, often having ‘maxed out’ on both secured and unsecured credit facilities.

The result is that child benefit may be all that is keeping some families afloat financially.

For example, a family with a household income of £45,000, two children under the age of 16 and a stay-at-home partner could be over £1,700 worse off per year. That is equivalent to a loss of gross earnings of over £2,900 (6.5% of total income).

If this is considered in terms of mortgage commitments it represents three months’ payments, assuming a mortgage of £140k at 5%.

Paul Walshe, partner and head of lender services, Moore Blatch, said: “I fully appreciate the Government’s position with regards to cutting costs and, on the face of it, cutting child benefit for the better off is eminently sensible.

“However, whilst it is easy to assume that households on that level of income can absorb this level of cut back without having any profound consequences, the reality that we see from our cases, is that many of the families that will be affected are running a financial tightrope, and the only thing keeping them out of possession is the low interest rates and access to benefits.

“Public sector employees are rightly concerned about pay freezes eroding their disposable income by the rate of inflation but the cut will be much deeper for many middle-class families who will lose their child benefit unless the government compensates those families with stay at home parents in other ways.”

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