McAL chief: Probe them
Sat, May 29, 2010 - 1:50 AM
by Stacey Russell
INVESTIGATE because someone ought to be booked!
This call came yesterday from Gerry Brooks, group chief operating officer of Trinidad and Tobago-based Ansa McAL regarding the financial debacle of both CL Financial and Stanford’s Antigua Bank.
He was the featured speaker at the Barbados Chamber of Commerce and Industry’s 184th annual general meeting at Hilton Barbados where he contended that the Caribbean’s financial reporting and oversight “has failed us badly”.
“Two recent failures, one in Antigua and the other Pan Caribbean conglomerate have left a $15 billion trail of red ink across the region. . . . yet one is yet to see a harmonised, regional, integrated, deliberate response to either of these events as even the most vulnerable citizens and institutions have lost their pensions and investments.
“It is my view that the Caribbean and CARICOM must undertake a comprehensive assessment of both issues. Additionally, a forensic analysis needs to be conducted; where is Mr [Bernard] Madoff today, where is Mr [Allen] Stanford?” he declared.
Madoff a former stock broker, investment advisor and non-executive chairman of the NASDAQ stock market in New York, who pulled off the largest Ponzi scheme in United States’ history was jailed last June for 150 years, while the US Securities and Exchange Commission filed civil charges against Stanford for what they called fraud “of shocking magnitude” in selling $9.2 billion in securities, “promising . . . improbable high interest rates”, in which Stanford’s Antigua Bank was implicated.
On January 30, 2009 the T&T Government announced a bail-out package for T&T-headquartered CL Financial that has financial tentacles throughout the Caribbean.
CLICO (Barbados) Holdings Ltd, one of its subsidiaries, has since had a run on the company.
“Not a single individual has been brought to book by any Caribbean agency. There needs to be put in place a coordinated, comprehensive response. Much more can and needs to be done,” Brooks stressed.
The attorney-at-law said the revamping of the Caribbean’s financial regulatory system was a prerequisite for building solid Caribbean companies and suggested that the region took a page from the book of governments and institutions within the European Union that were “working industriously to backstop institutional failures in Greece, Portugal and Spain.”
“One major banker indicated to me that he deals with 15 different regional regulators, many of whom have different reporting requirements and timelines,” he added, noting that this did not offer real protection to policyholders.
- Editor's Choice
Recent Comments
- Paul Worrell commented on ‘Gone to heaven’ together
- MIKE LINDO commented on Stoute defence of talent show
- MIKE LINDO commented on Bobby Brown reacts to Whitney's death
- Marc Menard commented on Hair row
- Bim Bum commented on Not in US!









Share your thoughts
Please sign in or register to post your comments.
Page 1 of 1 pages
Who will cast the first stone? This is the Caribbean the rich and the powerful support the Political Parties.The Politicians are lock and stock in their pockets.The Caribbean is not the USA or a G8 Country. We all know that there should be deeper investigations into those matters, and that persons should be held accountable. Will it happen?
There is a lot of cleaning up that should be done in Public Company and the Civil Service.
- 0
- 0
Comment LinkPage 1 of 1 pages