幫你強化英語


Currently Victor runs an English discussion group on Saturdays. Email him if you are interested to join.

Professor VICTOR FUNG (馮強教授) deanfungenglish.blogspot.com ; deanfungenglish@gmail.com MPhil (Cambridge) Teach academic English writing to associate-degree & high-dip students in Beacon College (遵理英专); Chair professor, Ta Kung Int'l Media Institute; Tel: 34117632 author of :錯在哪裏?常見英語病句>>(7.2013) 读香港时事学英语>>;你一定要懂的字彙570>> 900個詞彙助我成為南華早報首位華人副總編輯>>(7.2014). freelance jobs: (1) write speeches for executives; (2) teach (in workshops) English writing, English editing, PR writing, crisis communication and media management; (3) polish essays for AD, undergraduate and graduate students.


SERVICES: Polish essays/theses for AD, undergrad and graduate students;
ENGLISH WRITING N EDITING, TRAINING,
SPEECH-WRITING FOR EXECUTIVES
3-hour training in Crisis Communication
Contact: deanfungenglish@gmail.com

馮強,中大新聞傳播和英文系一級榮譽畢業(全班考第一),劍橋大學及港大碩士。曾任職《華爾街日報》及加拿大《金融郵報》記者、《南華早報》副總編輯、《讀者文摘》總編輯、香港兩所大學公關處處長,現任香港浸會大學傳理學院國際新聞和財經新聞碩士課程主任。2009年出版《瘋讀社論、強化英語》。2010年在《
最後六任港督的聲音》一書內分析多位前港督發表的講詞。他在2011年5月出版<<生活英語小智慧>>一書。
他目前是3项新闻奖的评判。馮強繼續寫強化英語的書,幫助讀者在學習、職場和人生上更上層樓。(女兒奔奔考IELTS試獲9分滿分。)1. Author: <<瘋讀社論強化英語>> 2. Co-author: << 最後六任港督的聲音>> 3. Author: <<生活英語小智慧>>; 4. Author: <<學會演說、改變你的人生>> 7.2011; Blog: deanfungenglish.blogspot.com/<<巔峰[強化英語]日報>>;twitter.com/deanfung1; facebook.com/victorkfung; www.linkedin.com/pub/victor-fung/33/893/31b;Guitarist of the band "南山浪人"; Motto: "no envy & no fear" (bio: V graduated 1st in his JLM class, became China correspondent 4 the WSJ/Asia,deputy chief editor of the SCMP, chief ed of Reader's Digest and PR director at 2 varsities be4 becom' a teacher in '08.)


VICTOR ALSO DOES SPEECH-WRITING FOR CORPORATE SENIOR EXECUTIVES AND ENGLISH TRAINING































2012年8月28日 星期二

swindlers get away with murder


HK Opinion
H03 China Daily Hong Kong Edition Victor Fung Keung
2012-08-29

It is a shame investment swindlers get away with murder

Hong Kong and mainland compatriots: Beware of scammers!

On Aug 22, 2012, local newspapers reported that mainland and Hong Kong investors were swindled of HK$40 million in an alleged pyramid (or Ponzi) scheme. It bewilders me why people, after reading about so many scams in the past, still fall victim to such frauds.

In the latest case, more than 500 people were lured into joining the scheme over the past 12 months. Investors were told that the more money they invested, the bigger the return would be. The investors then were classified, depending on their amounts of their investments, as diamond, gold, silver or bronze members. They were also led to believe that if they recruited new investors, they would get hefty commissions. Their money was supposed to have been invested in mainland and Macao properties.

A few days ago, the Kowloon-based investment company closed its doors and the alleged scammers disappeared with HK$40 million. The Hong Kong police were called in to investigate.

This is just another sad saga. The trend seems to be one in which more and more trusting mainlanders take part in such investment plans and get fleeced.

Another major scam was exposed in May this year, when several investors from Hong Kong and the mainland complained to the police that a Kwun Tong-based company that took their investments had ceased to exist. These investors bought en primeur wines, or wine futures, through the company. (Wine futures give investors the chance to buy into a particular vintage before the wine is bottled. When the wine is delivered, usually in two years, the investors can sell it on the open market to make a profit).

Many local scammers seem to have taken a page out of Bernie Madoff’s book. Madoff was sentenced in 2009 to 150 years in a US jail after admitting that he used a Ponzi scheme to swindle $18 billion out of his investors’ pockets. In June this year, Allen Stanford, a Texas banker, was sentenced to 110 years in prison for bilking his investors out of $7 billion. The US government estimated that US citizens lose $40 billion a year in investment scandals.

In Hong Kong, many young women have been tricked by swindlers that they (or their bodies) look great and have the potential to become models. Once the gullible young women are persuaded to audition for modeling agencies, they invariably would be told that a photographer would take a few pictures of them but they needed to have a make-up done and perhaps a hair-do. The upshot would be that these women would part with their money, anywhere from HK$800 to HK$3,000 each. The more trusting ones would be lured (and often coerced) into signing “modeling contracts” requiring them to spend thousands of dollars to attend some facial or other “beauty” courses.

Sadly, despite repeated warnings from the police, scores of young people still fall victim to such scams every year as they dream of becoming supermodels and stepping into a career under the limelight. Some cases remain unreported because the victims are afraid of being labeled as “stupid and ignorant” once their stories hit the headlines.

As the middle classes of Hong Kong and the mainland are growing rapidly, more people are expected to pour their savings into all sorts of investment schemes since the interest rates offered by banks are at their historic lows (one-year fixed deposits in Hong Kong would yield a 0.15 percent return). Many eager investors have become willing victims of ruthless swindlers on both sides of the Shenzhen River.

These are the tips I offered in May to my graduating students:

Avoid one-man firms or those which do massive marketing through the Internet. Check them out first; stick with trusted and big investment firms that have been around for at least 5 years; be skeptical if the investment returns, eg 10 percent or higher per annum, are too good to be true; shun companies which ask you to refer new customers, in exchange for higher returns on investment; and when in doubt, leave it out (or check with regulatory authorities first before taking the plunge).

Folks in Hong Kong and the mainland: protect your hard-earned savings and keep vigilant of investment scams!

Greed is always bad.

The author is coordinator of the B.S.Sc in financial journalism program at Hong Kong Baptist University.




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