
Rio Tinto, Hancock Prospecting to develop $1.61 billion Hope Downs 2 project
June 24 (Reuters) - Australia's Rio Tinto (RIO.AX), opens new tab, (RIO.L), opens new tab and Hancock Prospecting will invest $1.61 billion to develop the Hope Downs 2 iron ore project in Western Australia's Pilbara region, Rio Tinto said on Tuesday.
Hope Downs 2 project, containing the Hope Downs 2 and Bedded Hilltop deposits, is a joint venture between Rio and Hancock Prospecting with both parties holding equal stakes.
The two iron ore pits will have a combined total annual production capacity of 31 million metric tons, Rio said in a statement.
Ore mined from the two sites will be transported to Hope Downs 1 for processing and first iron ore from the project is scheduled for 2027, Rio said.
Rio Tinto expects to invest more than $13 billion on new mines, plant and equipment over the next three years, the company said.
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
British pub landlord 'who bragged of Banksy and supercar collection' is sued over '£330million Crypto Ponzi scheme'
A former pub landlord turned flamboyant Dubai socialite is facing a multimillion-pound lawsuit in the United States over claims he helped run one of the largest alleged crypto scams of recent years. Peter McInnes, 56, originally from Merseyside, is accused of playing a central role in a so-called 'cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme' that lawyers say extracted more than £330 million from unsuspecting investors worldwide. Known online as 'Paddy', McInnes routinely shared selfies and snaps to X, Discord and other platforms under the now-defunct username 'Paddy is Bored' in which he flaunted his luxury supercars and collection of artwork, including several pieces by street artist Banksy. Plaintiffs allege that façade was part of a much darker operation in which McInnes, along with six other defendants, orchestrated a scam that promised investors stunning returns in the crypto market. According to the civil case filed in New York by Burwick Law, a firm that specialises in cryptocurrency litigation, McInnes and his partners cut off communications, blamed 'technical issues' and ultimately vanished. In McInnes' case, his disappearance came shortly after he posted a video from a luxury villa in Costa Rica claiming to have suffered a heart attack days before the companies claimed they were going to repay investors. He recently appeared in Dubai seemingly alive and well, and denies all the allegations against him. In early 2023, a cryptocurrency investment platform labelled TradeAI surfaced, promising investors 'extraordinary profits' - sometimes between 25%-50% in a matter of days. The scheme, headed by mysterious Costa-Rica-based trader Guillermo Gharib, granted access to investors via digital passes in the form of non-fungible tokens (NFTs). Purchasing this digital token afforded investors the opportunity to allocate funds to high-yield 'investment pools'. For months, investors found to their delight that they were able to withdraw their money days after it had been invested with significant profits as advertised, and TradeAI's investment pools quickly filled up as opportunistic moneymakers flocked to get in on the action. But in autumn 2023, the TradeAI platform came to an abrupt halt and withdrawals were suddenly rejected. One investor told The Times: 'You were hitting the button trying to get your money out but the money wouldn't drop.' Investors were told their funds were stuck after Binance, a cryptocurrency trading platform, had frozen an account containing the funds after it had triggered a high-risk alert. They were reassured the money was safe and that it would soon be released. Binance later reported it had no involvement whatsoever with TradeAI. What followed bore all the hallmarks of a classic Ponzi scheme. As investors grew more concerned, TradeAI's excuses mounted until the company announced that a new firm had been appointed to help recover the funds that remained, inexplicably, inaccessible. Said firm, UA3, was reportedly co-founded by McInnes and another British-born businessman named James Abbas Biniaz, based in Dubai. While UA3 was said to be working to reclaim TradeAI's lost funds, the company launched another cryptocurrency venture called StakX, asking victims to reinvest what was left of their capital into something even more abstract - digital investment 'syndicates'. One such fund was 'Paddy's Syndicate', named after McInnes's nickname. Investors were told it was backed by $20 million worth of luxury cars stored in Dubai and a trove of Banksy artwork. McInnes described himself as 'one of the biggest private collectors of Banksy in the world', adding: 'We took them down from the side of buildings and rescued and restored them. And eventually immortalised them on the Blockchain', according to The Times. StakX followed the same pattern as TradeAI, paying out lucrative returns at first before the money suddenly dried up. It was later revealed that Biniaz, co-founder of UA3 and McInnes' partner, was a convicted fraudster, and investors began confronting the reality - that they had spent millions buying securities with no backing whatsoever. In late 2023, the platforms had promised investors their money would be returned in short order. Then in 2024, days out from a stated deadline for the funds to be returned, McInnes shared a video from a bed in a mansion nestled in the hills of Escazú, Costa Rica. He claimed to have suffered a heart attack and posted a breathless video from the bed, sporting a plaster on the left side of his chest and a breathing mask on his face. Company communications promptly ceased shortly after. In December 2024, Burwick Law filed its suit on behalf of 220 disgruntled investors - though many more are believed to have lost money investing on the TradeAI and StakX platforms. The New York-based firm argues the amount invested across TradeAI and Stakx totals $440 million (£330 million). The suit described the companies as 'cryptocurrency Ponzi schemes', but does not claim fraud, instead arguing that investors were mis-sold securities in violation of the US Securities Act. McInnes, through an intermediary, told The Times that he had no knowledge of any proceedings against him. McInnes claimed he 'never had any type of formal business partnership' with co-defendant Biniaz, and added that he had left Dubai for Costa Rica - where he allegedly suffered a heart attack - to provide security for TradeAI chief Guillermo Gharib, who was allegedly being threatened by disgruntled investors. The statement also denied that McInnes had 'any interest in the management, operation or ownership of TradeAI', had 'any financial benefit out of TradeAI either directly or through any third party' or any 'involvement with venture capitalists... in relation to UA3'. Lastly, McInnes rejected claims he had enjoyed 'any financial benefit' through StakX, adding it the company had been established 'in an attempt to restructure and mitigate TradeAI losses'. This alleged crypto scam is not the first controversy to which McInnes has been tied. He is well known in Merseyside for his connections to North Point Global (NPG) - a property developer that was given the greenlight by Liverpool City Council to oversee a quartet of real estate schemes including the infamous 'New Chinatown' development. McInnes was one of the public faces of the company in 2015, boasting of New Chinatown and other developments' 'enormous potential for additional phases and creating a destination of international scale and appeal'. Two years later, the company overseeing the buyer-funded developments was insolvent and its building sites abandoned, ransacked and reduced to fly-tipping hotspots. Some £40 million was owed to creditors when the projects associated with NPG and its subsidiaries collapsed, and has never been repaid. This followed shortly after the Liverpudlian was named in criminal proceedings against brothers Stephen and Peter Clarke, convicted drug dealers and notorious underworld figures in North West England, as well as a third dealer, Anthony Quigley. A detective described McInnes as being 'possibly involved' in laundering money on their behalf, using front companies that were rapidly shut down before accounts could be scrutinised - though he was never charged. McInnes was also never officially listed as a director or owner of NPG, despite marketing materials naming his a chairman of the company and his public promotion of their developments, according to The Times. He has strenuously denied all allegations against him and pointed out in a statement to the Liverpool Echo that the Serious Fraud Office had discontinued an investigation into two of NPG's developments due to 'insufficient evidence'. A representative of McInnes told The Times in relation to his alleged involvement in NPG: 'It is not appropriate to expect a response to matters that came to a formal legal investigatory conclusion some four years ago and which occurred almost a decade ago.' Liverpool City Council bought back the building site from administrators for £10 million in 2024 - almost a decade after awarding NPG the right to build over other trusted developers. After months of silence on social media, McInnes this month re-emerged in Dubai.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Banks get power to suggest how savers can get better returns - but it isn't financial advice
Banks and investment companies will soon be able to offer savers 'targeted support' to help them manage their money better, in one of the biggest shake-ups of financial advice rules for a decade. The firms will be able to make suggestions as to where they could move their money to make it work harder, under new rules being brought in by the City watchdog. This will not fall into the realm of regulated financial advice, for which they would have to meet costly restrictions. Under the plans, The Financial Conduct Authority will allow firms to make generic suggestions on what they could do with their money, based on what other people with similar circumstances to them are doing with theirs. This could include suggesting to people who are holding 'too much' cash, that they could move some of it to stocks and shares to get better returns. It could also be used in situations where firms identify a customer is under-saving for retirement. Under the new rules, firms could suggest an alternative pension contribution rate. The existing regulation has made it difficult for firms to offer anything beyond basic information to non-advised customers without risking straying over the boundary from guidance to advice. Firms including Hargreaves Lansdown and Vanguard are gearing up to offer such services. To participate in targeted support, firms must obtain a 'Part 4A' permission from the FCA, which is permission to carry out regulated financial activity, even if they are already authorised. They must identify the situations, groups of customers, and ready-made suggestions they will offer. These will not constitute personal recommendations, but rather behavioural nudges. Simon Harrington, head of public affairs at the Personal Investment Management & Financial Advice Association said: 'We believe [this] can be transformational to the way in which UK consumers interact and engage with their finances, and pension savings in particular.' At the moment, those who seek formal financial advice relatively late in life and when they already have a significant level of wealth. New clients typically approach a financial adviser with an investment portfolio of over £400,000, and the average advised investor is aged around 60, according to research from The Lang Cat. The FCA found that 7million people hold more than £10,000 in cash which could be making better returns. Of those who did not receive financial advice, but hold £10,000 or more in cash savings, 24 per cent said they don't invest because they don't know enough about it. More than half of savers would welcome support when they need to decide whether to invest excess savings, according to the FCA. Targeted support will not replace regulated financial advice, but it has the potential to help millions of savers who do not, or cannot afford, to receive financial advice. Steven Levin, chief executive of investment platform Quilter, said: 'Targeted support won't replace full advice – and nor should it – but it could become a vital stepping stone on the path to comprehensive financial planning.' Sarah Pritchard, deputy chief executive of the FCA, added: 'These once-in-a-generation reforms will help people navigate their financial lives and give them greater confidence to invest. 'This is a win-win for consumers and firms alike.'


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
The bitcoin treasury rush that has sent small British companies shares rocketing by as much as 6,011%
Shares of London-listed businesses that have begun stockpiling Bitcoin have soared in recent weeks in a trend analysts warn is reminiscent of the 'meme craze'. Ten London-listed companies have unveiled a strategy involving the purchase of Bitcoin in the past month, according to analysis from AJ Bell. The strategy sees companies buy and build a treasury pot of the cryptocurrency, with the aim of asset appreciation. It means investors can build exposure to the price of bitcoin without buying the crypto asset directly. Among the 10 new launches is investment group VaultZ Capital, whose shares have climbed 643 per cent in the four weeks since it announced plans to build a bitcoin treasury and change its name to Helium Ventures. Another is metals explorer Bluebird Mining Ventures, which revealed on 5 June that it was holding Bitcoin on its balance sheet as a treasury reserve asset. Its shares have enjoyed a 507 per cent jump. Meanwhile, shares in software firm Pri0r1ty Intelligence (PR1) have surged 147 per cent since 29 May, when it started allowing customers to pay in Bitcoin. PR1 then declared last Friday that it would utilise Bitcoin for 'treasury management purposes'. Skyrocketing: Smarter Web Company shares have escalated by over 6,000 per cent since it adopted a 'Digital Assets Treasury Policy' in April Other firms to undertake a 'bitcoin treasury strategy' include Vinanz, Vault Ventures, TruSpine Technologies, and Panther Metals. Dan Coatsworth, an investment analyst at AJ Bell, said acquiring bitcoin can help firms diversify their cash reserves and counteract inflation and geopolitical risks. Bitcoin can also help smaller public businesses with limited cash reserves avoid the need to continually raise new funds on the market. All 10 groups to launch a bitcoin strategy over the past month are small-cap stocks, with several listed on the Aquis Exchange. Coatsworth said the astonishing share price spike of companies 'deviating from their day job and loading up on bitcoin has the hallmarks of the meme craze'/ At the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic, many retail investors on social media forums like Reddit drove up the price of some stocks like GameStop, a struggling video game retailer. GameStop shares skyrocketed by nearly 10,700 per cent between April 2020 and January 2021, leading to many hedge funds and short sellers losing massive sums before quickly diving in early February. Other stocks that soared in value but experienced a major downturn after attracting a large following on social media included rental store chain Blockbuster, cinema owner AMC Entertainment, and headphones maker Koss Corporation. 'Investors need to take care in these situations,' cautioned Coatsworth. 'Prices can often move fast – both up and down – and valuations have moved out of kilter with the underlying fundamentals of the company.' He pointed to IT service management provider Smarter Web Company, whose shares have rocketed more than 6,000 per cent since it adopted a 'Digital Assets Treasury Policy' in April that includes bitcoin. The firm is currently valued at £623million but would only receive £42million from selling its entire bitcoin supply at current market prices. Coatsworth said: 'It's important to judge a potential investment on specific factors, including an understanding of what the company does, the value of its underlying assets, and its future prospects. 'It can be a mistake to choose an investment simply because its share price is racing ahead or there is a lot of hype on social media.'