Admin HOLDING 100 Cr (minimum) PPP HSBC ONLY
We Can Give Good Reasonable Returns.
10 Cr to 100 Cr for 45 Days Holding Offer: 100% only
100 Cr to 500 Cr For 40 weeks holding Offer: 10% to 15%/Week Depends on Market
Initially, please send the following:
1) Current Dated Min 15 Days Bank statement, signed and stamped by 2 bank officials
2) LOI (Letter of intent)
3) Authority to verify (Bank Verification Letter)
4) CIS (Customer Information Sheet)
5) COLOR PASSPORT & PAN COPY of account holder
6) Bank Conformation Letter(BCL)
DON'T PUT DATE ON ANY OF THE DOCUMENTS.
After deal booking, rest of the documents Required.
NOTE: PLEASE CONTACT DIRECT INVESTORS ONLY
DREAMBIZ TRADE HOLDINGS – India
Know About PPP (Private Placement Program) Fund Blocking /Cash Holding HSBC only
A “Private Placement Program” is an organized buy/sell investment where a PPP trader accesses discounted bank instruments, and then resells them at a higher value. Before the PPP trader purchases the discounted instrument from the bank, they get a contractual commitment from an exit buyer who agrees to buy the note at a higher value. This exit buyer is usually a PPP trader also, but they don’t have the direct connection to the bank issuing the instrument, so they buy it from another trader. In short, the entire PPP business is designed to provide private placement financing for investors who have project funding needs. Though private placement investors can earn high yields, they must realize that most proceeds must be directed towards an approved project.
In today’s private placement investment business, some people are successful, but unfortunately, most are not. The fact is, there are very few traders who are really in the PPP business, and it is very tough to access them via the internet. Though we have seen private placement programs work, most private placement brokers have no real connections. Despite these negative statements about private placement, remember, you CAN be successful!
If you want to find a real private placement fund, you have to focus on education first. The PPP investors, who focus on yields rather than common sense, are never successful despite hundreds of “close” calls. The reality is, if you are looking for a PPP that trades bank instruments, you must have 50M or more in liquid assets. Even at 50M, you usually have to partner with another investor to meet the 100M minimum of most real PPP traders. All in all, if you make sure you know the facts of private placement before you move forward, it will save you years of time waste and frustration.
Good Luck!
INVESTOR RISK
When investors hear about the opportunity to earn high profits, the first reaction is almost inevitably to assume that the risks must be commensurably high. Otherwise, one assumes that every investor would place funds in such programs. In fact, the risk to the investor’s capital in a properly structured Bank Credit Instrument trading program is almost nil. The means employed to eliminate risk vary with the type of program and include:
1. Investor’s funds are deposited in investor’s own name and own account in the trade bank and cannot be removed without investor’s instruction or encumbered in any way. The investor is the sole signatory on the account. Investor does not place his/her funds with the Program Manager or Introducing Broker. The bank holds the funds throughout the investment.
2. Investor gives the bank or the Program Manager a very limited power of attorney, which authorizes the purchase and resale of specific types of bank instruments from a specific category of banks, (e.g. A-AAA rated, top 100 World or top 25 European). The Program Manager can have no further influence over the funds.
3. the bank will typically offer a CD, U.S. Treasuries or a Bank Guarantee, which it holds in custodial safekeeping. These instruments pay a modest money market rate of interest to the investor at maturity (usually one year and one day from deposit) in addition to any
Profits derived from the trading program. The investor holds the safekeeping receipt.
In instances where the investor actually purchases and owns the credit instrument, i.e., “direct Programs”, ownership is typically limited to a matter of hours, or utmost a few days, before the instrument is resold. The price of these credit instruments is not known to fluctuate significantly even with sizable changes in interest rates or bond prices.
Given these very secure procedures, why then isn’t everyone investing in these programs? There are several reasons:
Most programs operate with $100 million or more and are meant for large investors. Relatively, few programs have been structured to accept small investments of $1 million or less. The banks bind Program Managers and Investors to very strict confidentiality agreements and it is very difficult to find the Program Managers or Investors willing to disclose their activities. Most programs are operated in the top European banks or domestic branches of top European banks and are therefore harder for U.S. citizens to access, research and invest in with confidence.
Investor behavior depends on “perceived” risk rather than actual risk. While the actual risk may be very low, the “perceived” risk of a little known and somewhat obscure sounding business does dissuade many investors from getting involved. This is especially true because only specialized back room departments of the bank are involved with these transactions. Most bank officials have no knowledge of them, particularly in the United States. Knowledgeable banking officials are sworn to secrecy and would never divulge the existence of this market for fear of disturbing large depositors who would clamor for higher deposit yields.
There have also been several highly publicized instances of fraud, which has prompted the SEC and Federal Reserve to issue warnings. Although to our knowledge no fraudulent programs have been discovered that utilize the secure investment procedures that we have outlined in this technical report, the fraudulent activities usually arise when investors give up control of their funds to phony trade managers who use Ponzi scheme- type payouts.
While the risk to principle can be completely eliminated, there may be no guarantee that the profits will actually be fully earned, i.e., best efforts trading. In some programs this presents a potential interest or dividend earnings loss from the time when funds are placed in the program until the date of first payout. Typically this period is only two to three weeks. In programs for small investors, it can be as long as eight weeks. For large investors, this potential earnings loss presents a real risk. Often, a minimum return secured by a bank guarantee is used to offset this risk factor.
Good trading programs are difficult to find, costly and time consuming to verify, quickly
Oversubscribed and frequently closed before interested investors can arrange the necessary funds. Literally dozens, perhaps hundreds of programs are offered annually. Many are nonexistent repackaging of the same programs by different people or first time efforts that never get off the ground. The fundamental question, - which should be asked by a potential investor when reviewing program procedures - is “How does this program protect my principle from loss?” If complete protection of principle is provided for in the procedures, the potential investor has established a sound basis for moving forward.