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The trio of ‘insiders’ who relieved some of Hong Kong’s top bankers of US$32.5m, then disappeared

Accountants are still trying to work out exactly how the cash-advances scheme devised by Stone, Grainger and Zoen managed to dupe so many ‘friends’

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Leonardo DiCaprio as Jordan Belfort in a scene from "The Wolf of Wall Street." For many, in the case of Global Merchant Funding, the money in question – $32.5 million, a pittance by Wall Street standards – is far less astounding than whose money it is. Photo: AP
Bloomberg

Inside Hong Kong’s upmarket American Club, few worked a room quite like Avery Stone.

Over steak dinners and cigars, Stone charmed a Who’s Who of financiers into investing millions in his fledgling business. Then, earlier this year, everything unravelled, and he vanished.

Left behind are the questions, including the big one: How did Stone and his partners at Global Merchant Funding Ltd (GMF) apparently dupe Hong Kong’s princes of finance into believing their business was on solid-footing? Accountants are still trying to piece together the answers.

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“This isn’t a deal that went bad, these guys systematically preyed off their friends,” said Thomas Gallagher, one of GMF’s investors, who had set up Citigroup Inc’s fixed-income prime brokerage in Asia and now works for a hedge fund services firm.

“The fact of the matter is, these guys essentially were in our circle.”

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For many, the money in question – $32.5 million, a pittance by Wall Street standards – is far less astounding than whose money it is.

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