Year Investment and Purchase Price

end: In return, investors are typically promised 10 yearly dividends of about 10% of the sum they have put in, according to The Guardian. At the end of the 10-year investment, Woodhouse buys the room back at 125% of the purchase price, meaning he is promising a profit of 125%. This is a very generous offer. His model is to offer investors the chance of investing in a room in a care home, a hotel or another form of holiday accommodation. But, five years after launching them, none of Woodhouse's four new-build care home investment projects are operational and three have simply never been built. One of the main places where cash seems to have been sent is a company called MBI Consulting UK Ltd, which is 60% owned by Woodhouse and went into administration in August last year. Meanwhile, some of the money provided by private investors to fund these projects appears to have been moved from the company running the project to elsewhere in Woodhouse's business. (news.financializer.com). As reported in the news.

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