The Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA) imposed a Dh5.7 million fine on two companies accused of breaching the legislation by carrying out unauthorized financial services activities.
The firms are Adenium Energy Capital Ltd (Adenium Cayman), a Cayman Islands registered company now in liquidation, and Adenium Energy Capital Advisors Ltd (AECAL), a DFSA authorized firm also now in liquidation.
The two individuals are Wassef El Sawaf, the former CEO of Adenium Cayman and the former Senior Executive Officer of AECAL, and Youssef Fouad Chaker, the former Chief Legal Officer of Adenium Cayman and a former Licensed Director of AECAL.
Adenium Cayman and AECAL belong to the Adenium Group, which invested in and managed solar energy projects in a number of countries.
The DFSA found that Adenium Cayman engaged in unauthorized financial services activities, including illegally marketing unregulated Collective Investment Funds.
It also found that AECAL was knowingly involved in Adenium Cayman’s breaches and itself breached a number of DFSA rules relating to customer on-boarding, client classification, capital requirements, and systems and controls.
El Sawaf and Chaker were knowingly involved in Adenium Cayman’s and AECAL’s breaches, and breached a number of DFSA’s laws, the authority added.
The DFSA imposed the following financial penalties: Dh4,613,483 on Adenium Cayman; Dh354,337 on AECAL; Dh483,301 on El Sawaf, and Dh271,471 on Chaker.
The fine on AECAL was reduced because the company agreed to settle the matter. Had that not been the case, the DFSA would have imposed a fine of Dh506,199.
The fine on El Sawaf was reduced by 20 percent as he cooperated with the authorities, and another 30 percent was reduced later after he agreed to settle the matter. The fine on him initially would have been Dh863,037. The fine on Chaker was also reduced by 20 percent initially and 30 percent later on for the same reasons. Initially, he was to have been fined Dh484,770.
The chief executive of the DFSA, F. Christopher Calabia stressed that DFSA does not tolerate DIFC based corporate groups with only one entity regulated by the DFSA creating the impression that all the financial services are regulated by the latter and taking on clients with entities that, in reality, aren’t under DFSA’s regulation.