Ethos Global, run by Dr Theo Koutrakides and his wife, Jennifer Hersch, was put into liquidation by court order in July 2017. It had raised over £700k on Crowdcube just a year before. That liquidation has gone nowhere since. Before the liquidation, the good Doctor and his wife had set up Soma London England, which operates from a unit paid for in large part by Crowdcube investors. It has just filed accounts showing large losses and its BS in very negative territory. How is that even possible?
We have been talking to the good doctor - or rather we have been asking Qs and he has been avoiding them. And we have written about them here. He had promised to gift all Crowdcube investors in Ethos equal value shares in his new Soma but he hasn't done that. One thing is consistent - he rarely does what he says he will. We have also been trying to help some investors find out what is going on. I have to say we have not had much luck - Crowdcube have done their usual 'it's nothing to do with us'.
This is an email we had today from Dr Theo in response to our chasing him -
This is an email we had today from Dr Theo in response to our chasing him -
Hi
Rob,
Thank
you. It has been a hard last few months that has now produced results that new
shareholders will be happy to hear. After meeting a number of deadlines incl.
filing annual accounts, I am now returning back to writing and completing my
response as I will also notify shareholders of some good news.
I
need to also await responses from Crowdcube, our tax advisors and solicitors to
validate the information in my response before this can be published. I would
like to promise a specific date, although this is dependent on receiving the
necessary confirmations, which should be this side of the year. Our past
investors will all have their shares.
Theo
He has previously made several promises to give me his written explanation and his deadline for this was the 10 December 2018. This email says nothing and is full of confused, irrelevant statements. Nothing new there.
Ethos made certain promises and declarations in its Crowdcube pitch which were not quite right. The company closed its only unit in Cambridge shortly after raising on CC, where it had stated the unit was a cash cow. Turned out the Landlords, who forced the company into liquidation, hadn't seen things the same way. It seems unlikely that the major dispute between the company and its landlords was not in process before the CC raise. The CC pitch made not mention of it. CC apparently did not pick this up in their due diligence.
For some unknown reason the liquidator, Adam Harris of Mazars LLP, has not filed a single thing since they started - which is odd. He has refused to answer phone my calls. Meanwhile, the good doctor and his wife continue to use the assets paid for by the money pumped in Ethos by CC investors, in their new unit in London. This is apparently owned by Soma, although we imagine the law may have something to say about that.
Soma London England was called Ethos London, when the good doctor incorporated it in February 2017, before Ethos was forced into liquidation. He is the sole shareholder and the company has no investment filed at CH. The Crowdcube pitch was full of the new London unit and its fitting out works started before Ethos ceased to trade. Dr Theo continues to gather more debts as he 'trades'.
The only problem here is a simple one. Crowdcube allowed Dr Theo to take over £700k off investors in 2016 on the basis of false information. These investors are still no clearer now as to what has happened. Both Ethos and Soma studios had and have a decent revenue stream. The London unit turned over £500k in its first 13 months to March 2108; albeit making a large loss in the process. The Cambridge unit was popular. But the way the business is run is an issue. Laws are in place to prevent this sort thing. The picture is fairly complete and its image is clear to us. When will something be done about it?
The only problem here is a simple one. Crowdcube allowed Dr Theo to take over £700k off investors in 2016 on the basis of false information. These investors are still no clearer now as to what has happened. Both Ethos and Soma studios had and have a decent revenue stream. The London unit turned over £500k in its first 13 months to March 2108; albeit making a large loss in the process. The Cambridge unit was popular. But the way the business is run is an issue. Laws are in place to prevent this sort thing. The picture is fairly complete and its image is clear to us. When will something be done about it?
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