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Had the company's estimated 50,000 investors looked past the glossy photographs and past Stanford's buoyant optimism, they might have been skeptical. Steve Wells, a forensic accountant and Western Kentucky University professor, said the bank sugarcoated its numbers by relying on management estimates and ignoring future credit losses. "That's a red flag to me," he said. "Big time." The company also made it hard to tell exactly what the portfolio's investments were. Any accountant who looked at those reports would have told investors to be cautious, Wells said. Yet the numbers were alluring: Double-digit returns, and in tax-free Antigua to boot. The exotic locale only added to the attraction. "A visit to Antigua is part of the overall experience of the Stanford service and quality," a company memo reads. Bank employees were instructed to arrange visits only for clients with $5 million or more to invest. Employees were encouraged to tell their bosses about client interests, such as "amateur sailor," so visits could be personalized. In the company's mid-2008 newsletter, Stanford said his company was not disheartened by "doom and gloom" economists predicting a long recession. "Even the most severe down cycles can bring opportunities that yield significant benefits in the long run," Stanford wrote. "This proven, well-grounded approach when making investment decisions and giving investment advice will benefit you, our clients, in these tumultuous times as never before." Early this year, cracks began to show in Stanford's once unbridled optimism. Regulators noticed an alarming increase in wire transfers as Stanford International Bank tried to move money out of its investment accounts. Clients were prohibited from cashing out, regulators said. As for the billions of dollars invested in the bank's seemingly safe, lucrative portfolio, the SEC has hired a receiver to scour the world looking for it.
[Associated
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