The UK financial regulator is taking legal action against the former investment star Neil Woodford for allegedly offering unauthorised investment advice online – months after announcing plans to ban him from the City.
The Financial Conduct Authority said it was seeking an injunction against Woodford and W4.0, a United Arab Emirates-registered company, to stop them carrying out “potentially unlawful activities”. In a short statement on Monday afternoon, the regulator said it had “started civil proceedings against Mr Neil Woodford and W4.0”. The FCA alleges that Woodford and W4.0 are “providing regulated investment advice and making financial promotions through the subscription-based platform, www.w4pz.com, without authorisation”.
“FCA sues Neil Woodford for allegedly giving unauthorised investment advice online after 2019 fund collapse.”
The legal action comes a year after the FCA announced it would ban Woodford from holding senior manager roles and managing funds for retail investors in the UK, following the collapse of his popular equity fund in 2019. At its peak, Woodford’s equity fund was worth more than £10bn, but it suffered from several poorly performing investments in companies including the estate agent Purplebricks, the finance company Burford Capital and the doorstep lender Provident Financial. That string of bad bets, combined with Woodford’s decision to put money in a number of private unlisted companies that were harder to sell, led to the fund’s suspension and eventual collapse.
Woodford resigned in mid-October 2019 and subsequently closed his investment company. Administrators later wound down the fund and returned money to many of its 30,000 investors at a steep loss.
In a damning report outlining Woodford’s alleged management failures, the FCA said at the time of the ban: “Mr Woodford is not a fit and proper person to perform regulated activities associated with managing open-ended funds and any senior management or significant influence function on the basis of his lack of competence, capability and reputation.” The regulator also fined Woodford and his investment company a total of £46m.
Both Woodford and his investment management company said they planned to challenge the FCA’s fine and financial services ban in the upper tribunal. Woodford Investment Management last year said it “strongly disagree[d]” with the financial watchdog’s findings, and said the blame sat with the Link Fund Solutions, the company in charge of administering the fund. A date has not yet been set for the tribunal hearing.