Worldspreads

Worldspreads Group
Public company
Traded as AIM:WSPR
Industry Financial services
Fate Special administration
Founded 2000 (2000)
Defunct 2012 (2012)
Headquarters Dublin, Ireland
Services Online trading, CFDs, Spread Betting
Number of employees
66
Website www.worldspreads.com

Worldspreads was a financial spread trading company registered in Ireland but operating from London that offered trading on financial markets. The company became bankrupt in March 2012 after it was reported that the company did not have enough funds to meet its client liabilities. There were reports that it had been misusing client funds and not keeping them segregated as required under its license, possible for a number of years prior to its demise. The failure of the business generated criticism of regulators and auditors for not having spotted the activity.[1][2]

History

The company was founded in 2000 as a sports spread betting business. It went on to expand into financial spread trading which became the dominant part of its business.

The company sold the Irish part of its business to a group of local manager for €9.9M in 2007.[3]

In 2008 it relocated the bulk of its operations to London from Dublin and listed on the London-based Alternative Investment Market (AIM) and obtained a license from the UK Financial Services Authority. It expanded over the following few years opening offices in a number of European countries and growing its market share of the UK financial spread betting market.

Bankruptcy

On 19 March 2012 Worldpsreads entered administration.[4] On that date it appeared that there was only £16.6m of the £29.7m of customer money left that should have been in the business to cover customer balances.

The demise of the company followed the departure of the company's finance director, Niall O'Kelly. It was suggested in a Reuters article as not unconnected. The irregularities emerged soon after his exit.[5]

Worldspreads had over 5000 spread betting customers at the point it went in special administration. Almost all clients were covered under the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme and were paid compensation by the scheme.[6][7]

References

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