FCA investigates collapsed lender MFS amid £1.3bn mortgage scandal
Summary
Photograph: M4OS Photos/Alamy View image in fullscreen The FCA said it had ‘opened an enforcement investigation’ into MFS. Photograph: M4OS Photos/Alamy FCA investigates collapsed lender MFS amid £1.3bn mortgage scandal Move follows the granting of a worldwide asset-freezing order on company’s founder, Paresh Raja What is the £1.3bn MFS mortgage scandal and what is private credit? The UK’s financial regulator has launched an investigation into Market Financial Solutions (MFS), the mortgage lender that collapsed last month amid allegations of fraud. On Friday, the Financial Conduct Authority said it had “opened an enforcement investigation” into the stricken mortgage lender, which borrowed £1.3bn from a string of financial companies and slumped into administration in February.
Photograph: M4OS Photos/Alamy View image in fullscreen The FCA said it had ‘opened an enforcement investigation’ into MFS. Photograph: M4OS Photos/Alamy FCA investigates collapsed lender MFS amid £1.3bn mortgage scandal Move follows the granting of a worldwide asset-freezing order on company’s founder, Paresh Raja What is the £1.3bn MFS mortgage scandal and what is private credit? The UK’s financial regulator has launched an investigation into Market Financial Solutions (MFS), the mortgage lender that collapsed last month amid allegations of fraud. On Friday, the Financial Conduct Authority said it had “opened an enforcement investigation” into the stricken mortgage lender, which borrowed £1.3bn from a string of financial companies and slumped into administration in February.
## Article Content
The FCA
said
it had ‘opened an enforcement investigation’ into MFS.
Photograph: M4OS Photos/Alamy
View image in fullscreen
The FCA
said
it had ‘opened an enforcement investigation’ into MFS.
Photograph: M4OS Photos/Alamy
FCA investigates collapsed lender MFS amid £1.3bn mortgage scandal
Move follows the granting of a worldwide asset-freezing order on company’s founder, Paresh Raja
What is the £1.3bn MFS mortgage scandal and what is private credit?
The UK’s financial regulator has launched an investigation into Market Financial Solutions (MFS), the mortgage lender that collapsed last month amid allegations of fraud.
The move follows the granting of a £1.3bn
worldwide asset-freezing order on MFS founder Paresh Raja
on Wednesday, as creditors successfully gained court orders in London and Dubai barring the tycoon from dissipating assets.
On Friday, the
Financial Conduct Authority said
it had “opened an enforcement investigation” into the stricken mortgage lender, which borrowed £1.3bn from a string of financial companies and slumped into administration in February.
What is the £1.3bn MFS mortgage scandal and what is private credit?
Read more
Companies owned by Raja borrowed from a series of financial institutions – including banks and hedge funds – before loaning that cash to MFS, which extended mortgages to customers.
Creditors have alleged in court documents that some of the borrowers that ultimately received mortgages from MFS were actually connected to Raja, as part of a structure that “may have been a device designed to extract monies … on false pretences”.
There are also concerns that some loans may prove to be unsecured, with allegations that security had been granted to two or more financial institutions at the same time over the same property, in a process known as “double pledging”.
The financial institutions that appear to be on the hook include banks such as Barclays, Jefferies and Santander, as well as hedge funds and “private credit” lenders including Elliott Management, Castlelake and Apollo’s Atlas SP unit.
CS Venkatakrishnan, the chief executive of Barclays,
said
on Wednesday that the bank’s anticipated losses would be “materially lower” than £500m, the amount MFS owes the bank.
A spokesperson for Raja declined to comment. The financier’s lawyer has previously
told the Daily Telegraph
: “Mistakes have been made but there has been no intention to defraud whatsoever and Mr Raja has not been the beneficiary of any shortfall (if any) there may be.”
Explore more on these topics
Financial sector
Financial Conduct Authority
Banking
Corporate governance
news
Share
Reuse this content
---
## Expert Analysis
### Merits
N/A
### Areas for Consideration
N/A
### Implications
- Creditors have alleged in court documents that some of the borrowers that ultimately received mortgages from MFS were actually connected to Raja, as part of a structure that “may have been a device designed to extract monies … on false pretences”.
- There are also concerns that some loans may prove to be unsecured, with allegations that security had been granted to two or more financial institutions at the same time over the same property, in a process known as “double pledging”.
- The financier’s lawyer has previously told the Daily Telegraph : “Mistakes have been made but there has been no intention to defraud whatsoever and Mr Raja has not been the beneficiary of any shortfall (if any) there may be.” Explore more on these topics Financial sector Financial Conduct Authority Banking Corporate governance news Share Reuse this content
### Expert Commentary
This article covers mfs, financial, raja topics. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 409.
Related Articles
India's lack of widebody aircraft a 'scandal', says incoming IndiGo chief
6 hours, 50 minutes ago
Nike’s high-tech 2026 World Cup jerseys have a shoulder problem
6 hours, 50 minutes ago
Britons warned about Russian hackers targeting internet routers for espionage
6 hours, 50 minutes ago
Bristol airport loses legal challenge against Cardiff rival over £205m subsidy
7 hours, 24 minutes ago