I didn't buy Qenta. Assets and liabilities to Opt-in customers were sold to Qenta. Qenta terminated that deal. From what I know know it should have been terminated almost two years ago due to Qenta's breech. But I did not know they breached until after they terminated the agreement. Qenta admits it still has the $80 million of assets in its possession. Its not my fault if the receiver fails to recover those assets. Hopefully he will. But all of my efforts to consult with him only resulted in his lawyer contacting me to threaten me with litigation if I didn't stop emailing him, or spreading miss-information. I asked for a clarification on what specific information that I have shared was inaccurate. I am still waiting for that reply.When do you start to understand that a bank liquidator DOES NOT NEED banking experience by law???
Ask FINMA (Switzerland), FCA (UK), AMF (France) for example!!!
A liquidator needs to be a lawyer in the respective jurisdiction and this guy is a PR lawyer.
It's sad but that is the current situation law wise. Makes no sense at all.
You brought Qenta, you sold to Qenta that is your ULTIMATE responsibility.
Qenta has possession of the gold, but the bank still owns it on your behalf. But Qenta is tying to get the receiver to agree to sell it and only give the bank the value it would have received on Sept. 30th 2022, when gold was half its current price. I'm trying to make sure he does not agree, but he never replied to any of my emails to convince him not to, and then his attorney warned me to stop emailing him about this or any issues related to the bank.I opted in to keep my gold with Qenta and received the email that they are no longer involved. Please can someone tell me what I need to do in order to claim my holdings? Is there a real-time chat group with other affected people that I can join? Is there a joint legal action group I could join? Would be very grateful for some guidance.
Well the financial problems I know now about started well after I did the deal. But so long as the receiver does not agree to accept Qenta's offer, or anything like it, the bank should recover all of the assets that where transferred to Qenta. I am doing everything I can in my personal capacity to make sure that happens. OCIF vetted Qenta and De Jung too and never found any issues. All they came up with was a Syrian connection, that turned out to be mistaken identity.I said you brought Qenta in the deal not BOUGHT Qenta. From what you know now you never should have done that asset deal with Qenta with a bad reputation and ZERO financial service licence in a credible jurisdiction!