IN THE SECURITIES AND FUTURES APPEALS TRIBUNAL
IN THE MATTER OF a Decision made by the Securities and Futures Commission under sections 194 and 198 of the Securities and Futures Ordinance, Cap. 571 AND IN THE MATTER OF section 217 of the Securities and Futures Ordinance, Cap. 571
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DETERMINATION
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By a Notice of Review dated 28 October 2007 the applicant
herein, SH Tse, applies for review of the decision of the SFC dated
11 September 2007 to prohibit the applicant for life under the provisions of
section 194 of the Securities and Futures Ordinance, Cap 571 (‘SFO’) from
performing certain ‘regulated activities’.
This decision was made under section 194(1)(i) of the SFO and
is a ‘specified decision’ within the meaning of section 217(1) of the SFO.
With the consent of the parties this application was heard by the
Chairman sitting alone, pursuant to section 31 of Schedule 8, SFO.
This review, together with the reviews in SFAT No’s 6 and 15
(in relation to applications respectively made by Hong Kong Forex
Investment Ltd (‘HK Forex’) and one Eddie Chung Ng Chit, (the
Responsible Officer of HK Forex), were heard ‘back to back’ over the same
hearing period, that is, 15-17 July 2008, given that each of these reviews
arose out of the same factual matrix, namely the activities of HK Forex.
In this review the applicant, Mr SH Tse, was represented by
Mr Gerard McCoy SC and Mr Bernard Mak, who both also represented HK
instructed to appear for the SFC in each of these reviews.
Mr Tse is a substantial shareholder in a company known as
Sincere Finance Ltd, of which HK Forex, Sincere Bullion and Sincere
Securities are wholly-owned subsidiaries.
Whilst neither licensed nor registered, as a person in the
management of the business of HK Forex, Mr Tse is a ‘regulated person’ for
the purpose of section 194 of the SFO, and thus, if the SFC is of the opinion
that such person is, or was at any time guilty of misconduct or is not a fit and
proper person to remain a ‘regulated person’, the SFC may exercise
jurisdiction over him in terms of the potential sanctions set out in section
194: in the instant case the SFC concluded that the sanction within section
194(1) (a)/(b)(iv) was relevant in that it decided to prohibit the applicant for
life from doing any of the activities so specified.
In terms of regulatory sanction the position of Mr Tse is
irrevocably bound up with the conclusions of the SFC as to the activities of
HK Forex, and thus there is substantial factual overlap between his case and
the regulator’s case against that company, which is the subject-matter of
SFAT No 6 of 2007, the Determination in which is published on the same
Suffice it to say that the SFC has come to the view that Mr Tse
was guilty of misconduct and was regarded as not fit and proper to be a
regulated person because he consented to, or connived in, unlicensed
activities by the staff of HK Forex or persons associated with or acting
By its Notice of Proposed Disciplinary Action (‘NPDA’) dated
20 July 2007 the SFC gave the applicant herein, Mr Tse, an opportunity to be
heard in relation to its proposal to prohibit him for life under section 194 of
This document, of some 50 paragraphs, noted that HK Forex
was registered on 21 September 1995 as a ‘leveraged foreign exchange
trader’, that it is wholly owned by Sincere Finance Holding Ltd, which also
owns Sincere Bullion Limited, that Mr Tse is the major shareholder and
Chairman of Sincere Finance, and that between June 1995 and March 2002
Paragraph 2 of this NPDA recounted the existence of
investigations conducted by the SFC under section 12 of the Leveraged
Foreign Exchange Trading Ordinance (‘LFETO’) and section 182 of the
SFO “into your conduct in relation to the unlicensed activities that involved
Hong Kong Forex, Sincere Bullion, and Tse’s Macau International
Investment (Macau) Limited (‘Tse’s Macau’)”.
Paragraph 5 of the NPDA noted that “any misconduct of Hong
Kong Forex should be regarded as misconduct on your part” because Mr Tse
was involved in the management of HK Forex, and that the alleged failures
of HK Forex apparently occurred with his “connivance or consent”;
paragraph 6 of this document set out the reasons underpinning the
conclusion as to “connivance and consent”, referring to the applicant’s
control of HK Forex and Sincere Bullion and Tse’s Macau – whose business
included clients referred to Tse’s Macau by staff of HK Forex and Sincere
Bullion, that Mr Tse appeared to be the financial beneficiary of the activities
of these corporate entities, that he should have known that Tse’s Macau was
operating an illegal business “because you have been disciplined twice by us
in relation to these business activities”, and that despite knowledge of the
illegal activities, HK Forex had not appeared to put in place any sufficient
measures to “prevent, identify and deter the unlicensed activities, apparently
for the purpose of ensuring profits for you”.
Within the NPDA there follows a lengthy statement of
‘Grounds for Concern’ which refers to the 1999 and 2004 convictions of HK
Forex in relation to unlicensed activities and disciplinary action (in 1999 and
The invocation of the fact of prior disciplinary actions was a
reference to the unlicensed activities by staff of HK Forex and the
facilitating of the opening and operation of leveraged foreign exchange
trading accounts with Tse’s Macau, with the 2002 disciplinary action
“…HK Forex allowed its staff to introduce clients to trade in ‘black market’ leveraged foreign exchange contracts and Hang Seng Index Futures trading through related Macau entities and that the Macau ‘black market’ activities could not have occurred without the knowledge of HK Forex’s responsible directors and senior management, which included you.”
There follows a recital of perceived regulatory failings on the
part of HK Forex, and the representations which were made by that company,
and reference to Mr Tse’s senior management role in HK Forex at the time
of the earlier disciplinary actions in 1999 (when HK Forex was known as
‘Tse’s Forex’) and in 2002, which resulted in public reprimands for
unlicensed activities both against the company and himself.
Reference also is made to the content of a purported
exculpatory interview with Mr Tse on 15 June 2006 “in relation to the
various unlicensed activities that had occurred over the years at HK Forex”,
the gravamen of Mr Tse’s responses at that interview being that Mr Tse
personally was not involved in the management and that he had taken
measures to ensure elimination of illegal activities, in particular involving
Tse’s Macau, before the regulator proceeded to analyse Mr Tse’s alleged
‘connivance’ in the wrongful activities of HK Forex, Sincere Bullion and
Tse’s Macau: see, for example, paragraphs 25 and 27 of the NPDA, which
“Your apparent control of HK Forex, Sincere Bullion and Tse’s Macau gives rise to the only reasonable inference that staff of Sincere Bullion and HK Forex are all acting for your benefit. Corporate entities under your control appear to be also used interchangeably because the ultimate business goal of these entities is the same, ie. generating profits for you….
Neither you nor HK Forex took any resolute action to prevent, identify or deter unlicensed activities, despite you and Hong Kong Forex’s knowledge of involvement by people associated with or acting through HK Forex and/or its staff in introducing clients to Tse’s Macau.”
In terms of ‘Proposed Disciplinary Action’, the regulator noted
that this is not the first time that Mr Tse had been involved in unlicensed
activities in relation to Tse’s Macau, that leveraged foreign exchange trading
activities at that entity “flout both the laws of Hong Kong and Macau”,
given that Tse’s Macau is not regulated under either Hong Kong or Macau
law, and that repeated failings in this area, allegedly encouraged and
facilitated by Mr Tse, in collaboration with staff of HK Forex, “should not
be tolerated” because they adversely affected investors’ interests.
concluded (at paragraph 38 of the NPDA) that the staff of HK Forex had no
fear of interference from senior management, that “the corporate identities of
HK Forex, Tse’s Macau and Sincere Bullion appear to have been used
interchangeably”, and that “the licensed status of HK Forex appears to have
been used as a disguise to cover up the operations of Sincere Bullion’s
Accordingly, the SFC noted (at paragraph 39) that it proposed:
“to prohibit Mr Tse for life under section 194 of the SFO from doing all or any of the following in relation to any regulated activities:
39.1 applying to be licensed or registered;
39.2 applying to be approved as a responsible officer or a licensed corporation;
39.3 applying to be given consent to act or continue to act as an executive officer of a registered institution under section 71C of the Banking Ordinance; and
39.4 seeking through a registered institution to have your name entered in the register maintained by the Monetary Authority under section 20 of the Banking Ordinance as that of a person engaged by the registered institution in respect of a regulated activity.”
The regulator stated that the penalty of a life prohibition was
appropriate in light of past breaches of HK Forex, “under [Mr Tse’s]
management and control”, which had no adequate internal controls but “had
no regard for the regulatory regime at all”, noting the convictions of HK
Forex and the past disciplining of individuals (for example, Leung Ting Wai,
Randy Li Chi On, Mimi Lee Mei Mei) within the Sincere Finance Group for
unlicensed activities in Hong Kong and in Macau’s ‘black market’. The
“We do not believe any person who is in the ultimate management and has ultimate control of a licensed corporation with such a continuous record of unlicensed activities and a seemingly total
failure to effectively improve its internal controls should be allowed in the industry as a regulated person.”
I have spent a little time on the content of this NPDA, which
also contained 7 Annexures, because its very detail not only illumines the
subject-matter of the present case, but in itself would seem to merit a cogent
and detailed response from Mr Tse if indeed there was to be serious
contention in answer to the equally serious assertions therein.
However, although the NPDA, in usual form, specifically
invited representations from him in answer to these matters, none whatever
was forthcoming. Nor, for that matter, has the Tribunal had the opportunity
to see Mr Tse in the witness box either to refute or to mitigate these
Since no response was forthcoming to the NPDA, on
11 September 2007 the SFC sent a Notice of Final Decision made under
sections 194 and 198 of the SFO to Mr Tse.
Since no representations had been received from Mr Tse this
document is in shorter form than usually is the case; in normal course it
would recount the substance of the representations as received and the
response(s) of the regulator to them. However, in this instance the SFC
“Since you have not provided reasonable explanations for not submitting your written representations in response to the NPDA within the specified time, we have decided this matter based on the evidence set out in the NPDA to you, the two NPDAs to Hong Kong Forex and the two defence submissions from Hong Kong Forex.”
For present purposes suffice it to say that the regulator’s Final
Decision on its proposed disciplinary action was prohibition for life under
section 194 from doing the specified activities as set out in the NPDA.
It is from this Final Decision that Mr SH Tse has seen fit to
However, no witness statement was filed by Mr Tse, nor, as
earlier observed, has he seen fit to go into the witness box pursuant to this
application, contenting himself simply with reliance upon reference to the
evidentiary material within the accumulated case papers, together with the
persuasive contentions of his leading counsel, Mr McCoy SC.
In outlining the arguments on behalf of his client, Mr McCoy
produced an interesting skeleton argument which has served to simplify the
task of the Tribunal in sorting out the wood from the trees in a case which, as
usual, is overly-dependent upon box-files of paper.
For present purposes I allude only to the basic thrust of
Mr McCoy’s submissions, in terms both of his initial written and subsequent
oral presentation, which irrevocably were bound up with the position
adopted by his other client, HK Forex; at this stage it is worth pointing out
that at the initial hearing of its review in January 2008 – at that time ordered
to stand adjourned by the Tribunal to be heard at the same time as the related
cases of Mr Tse and Mr Eddie Ng – HK Forex had indicated through its
counsel, Mr Patterson, that its application for review of liability for the
misconduct alleged was abandoned, and that when actually it was heard the
review would be conducted (as indeed ultimately it was) essentially on the
basis of a plea in mitigation of the sentence of licence revocation as visited
However, the current position of Mr Tse, said Mr McCoy, is
that disciplinary action should not be taken against him personally by reason
of such misconduct as now had been admitted by HK Forex because at the
material times he had had no interest or control in Tse’s Macau, nor did he
“consent or connive” at the misconducts as now admitted by HK Forex –
indeed, leading counsel argued, as against Mr Tse the SFC could not have
justified such findings on the basis of the evidence which they had amassed,
inimitably characterized by Mr McCoy as “a veritable collection of half
truths, theories and occasional surmises surrounded by the odd inference”.
In this connection leading counsel reviewed (at pages 3-15 of
his skeleton argument) the basis upon which the SFC had taken its
disciplinary action against Mr Tse, in the particular context, for example, of
the control of ‘Tse’s Macau’, and suggested in this regard that the regulator
had ignored a slew of relevant evidence which would have suggested that “a
much more reasonable inference is that Tse was not even marginally
connected to the operation of Tse’s Macau”, whilst “the theories of the SFC
in this regard had not even been put to Tse in interviews, so that Tse’s
denials could and should not have been blithely ignored by the regulator”;
“Tse was only interviewed once. The theories of the SFC identified above (and indeed the other theories relied on by the SFC) were not even put to Tse by way of subsequent interview. The SFC sought to propose the most draconian order against Tse based on its rejection of his clear denials in the absence of a hearing, or an opportunity to deal with the accusations before an impartial and independent tribunal. Whether Tse filed any representation to the SFC after the NPDA was issued was hence neither here nor there…”
Thus, Mr McCoy’s first theme, if I may shortly term it, was
insufficiency of “hard-core evidence”.
His second broad theme was that the SFC, consistent with their
view of the evidence, also had arrived at the erroneous conclusion that HK
Forex was “rotten to the core”, and that, to the contrary, this was “an
overestimation of the problem”, and that of the 70 Account Executives as
divided into 12 groups operating within HK Forex, the “diseased group was
Group 1”, headed by Ms Mimi Lee “of ill fame”, the operative in charge of
that specific group, and that all convictions of HK Forex had emanated from
the activities of that one group; or, as Mr McCoy graphically expressed the
position, “the cancer was isolated in Group 1, which meant the great and
severable bulk of the activities were completely legitimate and of no
It was accepted by Mr Tse, leading counsel said, that he was
involved in the governance of HK Forex and Sincere Bullion to the extent
that he had received periodic reports from senior management of those
entities, and he indeed that he had been consulted on important decisions and
measures to remedy regulatory breaches by those companies.
In this context Mr McCoy accepted that the decision in Re MarketWizard Systems (UK) Ltd [1998] 2 BCLC 282, construing the term
‘involved in the management’ also should inform the construction of the like
term ‘involved in the management’ as was used in section 193(2)(a)(ii) of
the SFO: thus, in light of the significant discretion and advisory role played
by Mr Tse in these companies, Mr Tse indeed was “concerned or [had] taken
part in the management” of HK Forex for the purpose of that subsection.
Mr Tse further agreed, said Mr McCoy, that unfortunately HK
Forex had failed to take sufficient internal control measures, and hence, to a
certain extent, misconducts admitted by HK Forex were attributable to
However, whilst his client had understood that a period of
prohibition perhaps was called for, his position was that a prohibition for life
was “blatantly excessive and disproportionate in the circumstances”, not
least when it was considered that Mr Eddie Ng, the Responsible Officer of
HK Forex, and a man with far more ‘hands on’ responsibility on a daily
basis, and a person on whom Mr Tse had relied to give him appropriate
information, had been given “only” a 3 year suspension of his licence.
Accordingly, on a comparative basis it was submitted that the
length of prohibition invoked upon Mr Tse “should in any event be shorter
than the suspension [3 years] to be imposed on Eddie Ng”, not least since, as
he put it, his other client, HK Forex, had now had had the “cancer cut out”
from its corporate body, and that presently it was undergoing a period of
interim suspension – dating from the initial hearing on 28 January 2008 – so
that if and in so far as its own application for review were to enure in a
favourable outcome resulting in the lifting of the order for licence revocation,
as in the circumstances should be the situation so that the company now
could return to being a functioning company, so should the period of
Mr Tse’s prohibition appropriately be tailored. That, at any rate, appeared to
be the principal thrust of his submission in Mr Tse’s individual case.
In addition to the twin themes of his address, as summarised
above, Mr McCoy had a third, and more ambitious submission which
appeared to be of relatively recent origin, and which had not been articulated
It was this. He said that whilst he accepted that Mr Tse was a
‘regulated person’, for the purpose of the SFO he was neither ‘registered’
nor ‘licensed’, and that as a consequence the SFC had applied incorrect
criteria in purporting to invoke a lifetime prohibition upon him. This was,
said Mr McCoy, a ‘jurisdictional point’; if correct, the Code of Conduct
could and did have no application to his client, who thus was governed
solely by the normal strictures of the common law, which involved only the
general obligation upon citizens not knowingly to break the law, and that in
this proceeding, which fundamentally involved ‘fitness and properness to be
licensed’, his client could not be at risk, because the SFC decision-making
process was flawed in that “it imposed inapt criteria”. Although he accepted
that this argument provided a basis for judicial review, Mr McCoy
nevertheless maintained that this was a nettle with which this Tribunal now
should grapple: “having got here, we ought to be able to finish here, that is
In his submissions Mr McCoy SC clearly had to walk a difficult
Since his client pointedly had ignored both the invitation from
the SFC to respond to the very detailed NPDA, and thereafter had spurned
the opportunity to enter the witness box at the hearing of this application,
and thus to inform the Tribunal of just how erroneous was the SFC’s case
underpinning the life prohibition visited upon him, it strikes me that in order
to succeed in this endeavour the points as now made by leading counsel
must be regarded as so fundamentally cogent (and determinative) in face of
the wealth of evidential material presently available against Mr Tse that it
simply would not open to the Tribunal entertaining this application to
The fact remains, however, that viewed from the applicant’s
perspective the persuasive burden upon him in the circumstances was set
high, and light of all that I have read in this case, and indeed in the
application for review of HK Forex – with which application, as I have
earlier observed, Mr Tse’s own case irrevocably is entwined – this strikes me
as a daunting task indeed. Given the provisions of the legislation governing
the operation of this Tribunal, the niceties and rules of civil evidence do not
apply, and in substance perhaps the outstanding benchmark for the operation
of the Tribunal in hearing these applications remains only the rigorous
application of fairness to both parties – which no doubt explains the
stipulation in the SFO that a Hong Kong judge is to be appointed to referee
these applications by persons such as Mr Tse who are disgruntled by the
disciplinary sanctions handed out by the SFC qua market regulator.
I say this at the outset because, notwithstanding the skill with
which Mr McCoy SC invested his task, in light of all the circumstances of
this case, particularly when taken together with the regrettable history of the
activities of HK Forex, it seems to me likely to be difficult indeed to
persuade any fair-minded Tribunal that the SFC had got Mr Tse’s case
“plainly wrong”, and that in terms of the sentence as handed down that it had
hopelessly ‘over-egged the pudding’ such that, in accordance with
established principles – as so frequently laid down in past Determinations of
this body – this Tribunal thus would be constrained to interfere.
Whilst it does not greatly matter (and also probably is not the
concern of the SFAT), I am minded to venture the further comment – as was
made to counsel during the hearing of this application – that I remain mildly
surprised that the SFC has gone to the trouble of disciplining Mr Tse in the
manner that it has, namely in terms of a life prohibition from making
application to be licensed or registered in relation to the stipulated regulated
It is abundantly clear that Mr Tse never has sought either to be
licensed or registered, and throughout his career in forex and forex-related
activities that always he has been content to remain in background control;
moreover, were he to deviate from his established modus operandi, and
actually apply to the regulator to become licensed and/or registered, the
historical facets of his career thus far almost inevitably would preclude
favourable reception of any such application. So that when looked at from a
macro perspective there seems to be little practical point – on either side –
arising from imposition of the current sanction.
Be that as it may. This Tribunal is seized with this application
for review of an existing SFC decision, and therefore must decide the case
on the basis of all the material which has been assembled (doubtless at
considerable expense) for its consideration.
For this purpose I take Mr McCoy’s basic ‘submission themes’
First, I am unable to accept the contention that there was
insufficient evidence available to the SFC to arrive at its conclusions, in
particular in this context that the SFC finding as to Mr Tse’s control of Tse’s
Macau was wrong because it had failed to consider relevant evidence in his
favour, and also in its further conclusion that Mr Tse had ‘connived’ or
‘consented’ to the misconduct that undoubtedly had occurred at HK Forex.
In this regard Mr Beresford, who conducted the case for the
SFC with typical thoroughness and attention to detail, has reminded me of
the historical backdrop when, in 1999 and 2002, both HK Forex and the
applicant were publicly reprimanded in relation to unlicensed activities at
HK Forex and ‘black market’ leverage forex trading and Hang Seng Index
futures trading through Tse’s Macau; in this context he made the point that
notwithstanding Mr Tse’s resignation following the disciplinary action in
2002, the method of soliciting business for HK Forex and Tse’s Macau
clearly did not change, and that unlicensed persons, principally staff of
Sincere Bullion, were being both encouraged and facilitated by staff of HK
Forex to ‘lure’ clients to open leveraged forex trading accounts either with
Mr Beresford said that in all the circumstances of the case there
was no conceivable reason why – as the applicant now asserts – the SFC
should have taken Mr Tse’s bare interview denial at face value, and whilst he
accepted that Mr Tse is not on record as a shareholder of Tse’s Macau,
Mr Beresford pointed to facts which, he maintained, did not lead to any
conclusion other than that the applicant was in de facto control of the
operation of Tse’s Macau, and that the three registered shareholders of that
He pointed to the fact that the two operational bank accounts
held by Tse’s Macau with the Wing Hang Bank HK and Macau had as
authorized signatories thereto the applicant himself and the applicant’s son,
Bryan Tse, and that these two persons were the only two authorized
signatories (out of five) capable of operating the bank accounts of Tse’s
Macau because the company chop needed in order to operate these accounts
The same Bryan Tse also had stated in his interview with the
SFC that, in terms of Tse’s Macau, “it’s [his] father’s business”, and that he
had been made to be one of the authorized signatories for Tse’s Macau and
that the applicant would prepare cheques for him to sign; he also had
admitted that he himself knew nothing about the business of Tse’s Macau,
nor had any idea who provided funds for the business and the operation of
the bank accounts: Bryan Tse simply had signed cheques which were
During his detailed submission Mr Beresford referred to the
various matters relating to the running of Tse’s Macau as were set out in his
skeleton argument – for example, that the other two shareholders, a
Mr Zhang and a Ms Crystal Yang – both resided outside Hong Kong or
Macau, and were not authorized signatories of bank accounts of Tse’s Macau,
and he stated that, notwithstanding that the applicant had said that he did not
know who was in charge of the management and daily operation of Tse’s
Macau, it was “incredible” that it could seriously be maintained that the
person with control of the bank accounts, namely, the applicant and his son,
to whom Mr Tse personally gave instructions, were not immersed in its
Mr Beresford pointed out that the name ‘Tse’s Macau’ was
printed on the applicant’s name card under the name ‘Sincere Finance’, and
that unlicensed staff in the Sincere Group and several clients had confirmed
to the SFC that they had been told by staff of Sincere Bullion/HK Forex that
Tse’s Macau was related to companies within the Sincere Group.
He further noted that certain individual clients – namely, Wong
Ngai Lai, Au Lai Ping, and Wong Chi Yin – all had been asked to deposit
monies into the Hong Kong Wing Hang Bank account, and that there could
be no doubt that this same account was the operational bank account of Tse’s
Macau, which the applicant controlled: the bank transfer records showed that
the applicant was “asked” to sign an authorization of transfer of funds from
the HK Wing Hang account to the Macau Wing Hang account amounting to
over HK$7 million over a span of 7 days.
Mr Beresford thus invited the conclusion in light of the
accumulated evidence that staff of HK Forex and persons acting through HK
Forex had been able to engage and assist in unlicensed activities without fear
of interference from senior management of HK Forex, and that in fact the
identities of HK Forex, Tse’s Macau and Sincere Bullion were de facto
interchangeable, and thus that in all the circumstances, as uncovered by the
SFC investigations, the SFC reasonably had concluded not only that
Mr SH Tse controlled the operation of Tse’s Macau, but that he must have
been the beneficiary of this operation.
All that had emanated from Mr Tse in this context, said
Mr Beresford, was a bare denial at interview of control of Tse’s Macau, and
that such a denial did not suffice to overcome that which Mr Beresford
described as “the overwhelming inference” that the applicant had been in
control of Tse’s Macau. Nor had there been any necessity to conduct another
interview before issuing the NPDA, in which the SFC contentions had been
outlined in detail; the hard fact remained that Mr Tse neither had responded
to the NPDA nor exercised his right, within his application for review to this
Tribunal, to give evidence repudiating such conclusions.
True it is that in the course of his skeleton argument (at page 3
of this skeleton argument et seq) Mr McCoy had taken the opportunity to
attack the inferential conclusions and “theories” on the part of the SFC about
his client’s control and beneficial ownership of Tse’s Macau, HK Forex and
Sincere Bullion, and the further “assumption upon assumption” that Tse had
gone out of his way to get HK Forex to condone unlicensed activities by its
employees in favour of Tse’s Macau; he further maintained that these
“theories” flew in the face of Mr Tse’s evidence to the SFC that he had
handed over management and daily operation of Sincere Bullion to one
Leung Ting Wai, of HK Forex to Mr Ng Chit Chung (‘Eddie Ng’, whose
application for review is SFAT No 15 of 2007), and that he had asked one
Mr Anthony Yu On Lee to “keep an eye on the administration of HK Forex,
Sincere Bullion, Sincere Securities and Sincere Finance, leaving his
approval to be required only for “special and non-recurrent expenses”.
Mr Tse also had told the regulator, said Mr McCoy, that he had told Eddie
Ng, Leung and Anthony Yu that if they found staff members referring clients
to Tse’s Macau, that this must immediately be reported to the SFC: “I also
told them anybody who would not follow my instruction will be fired
Mr McCoy warmed to this theme in his written argument by
submitting that the assertion of Tse’s interest in Tse’s Macau was the
erroneous “building block” upon which the SFC had maintained that Mr Tse
therefore had exercised his control over HK Forex in order to condone
unlicensed activities, and that the SFC had failed to consider relevant
evidence, namely that there were other signatories to the Wing Hang Bank
account in Macau, and that there was a ‘Mr Chan’ at Tse’s Macau
responsible for handling matters relating to the opening of accounts: “this is
a piece of independent evidence showing that the operation of Tse’s Macau
did not necessarily involve Tse” was how leading counsel expressed the
Mr McCoy also sought to draw favourable inferences from
various detailed references to account information of the Macau Wing Hang
Bank account in 2001 and 2004 – he noted that the Hong Kong Wing Hang
account of Tse’s Macau was opened only on 29 January 2003 – and that a
resolution of Tse’s Macau dated 19 July 2004 indicated that the Macau Wing
Hang account of Tse’s Macau could be operated by any 2 signatures out of
Mr Tse, Bryan Tse, Wong Tung Shan, Fong Chung and So Kin Keung.
In turn this led to the conclusion pressed on the Tribunal by
leading counsel that “a much more reasonable inference” is that Tse was
“not even marginally connected to the operation of Tse’s Macau”, which lent
credence to Tse’s answer to the SFC that he and his son only were involved
as authorized signatories in the sense that Mr Zhang and Crystal Yang had
asked them to operate the accounts for their (Zhang and Yang’s) convenience.
Mr McCoy asserted – at least in his extensive written
submission, although many of these points pointedly were not individually
articulated at the actual hearing, and were dealt with by an encompassing
reference to the skeleton argument – that the “SFC could not reject the
denials of Tse”, that the SFC plainly was wrong in taking its action against
Tse on the premise that he had an interest or control in Tse’s Macau, that
Tse’s admitted involvement in the management of HK Forex did not lead to
the conclusion that he had a like involvement in Tse’s Macau, that the
admissions of misconducts by HK Forex was “irrelevant” to the issue of
whether the directors or controllers of HK Forex had “consented to or
connived” at such failings, and that the SFC “theories” ignored the primary
fact that his client had handed over his managerial functions in the Sincere
Group pursuant to undertakings given by him in 2002, and that there were
no facts to demonstrate that he had retained control of substantial managerial
functions in any of the Sincere Group companies: “the SFC proceeded on
the basis that all the individuals concerned were willing to risk their career
or reputation and acted as Tse’s protégé or dummies. In this regard, the SFC
was oblivious to the background, personal characteristics and evidence of
the individuals concerned…” was how this point was expressed.
It also strongly was suggested that in dealing with Mr Tse the
SFC wholly had ignored the position taken by Mr Eddie Ng, who basically
personally had accepted responsibility for the failings of HK Forex, and
further had denied the involvement of Tse in such failings.
In context of this latter submission I note that I did not have the
opportunity to see Mr Ng in the witness box, either in his own application
for review nor in this one, albeit now having heard the 3 applications
together – namely that of Mr Ng, together with Mr Tse and of HK Forex – it
is clear to me that strategically Mr Ng occupied a pivotal dual role as a
convenient object of blame and as an apologist for Mr Tse.
In order to avoid the obvious conflict Mr Ng was represented
by separate counsel, Mr Oderberg, notwithstanding a clear factual
commonality of interest with HK Forex and Mr Tse, who both were
represented by Mr McCoy SC. This enabled Mr McCoy, on behalf of
Mr Tse, not only to single out Mr Ng for the greater part of the blame for the
regulatory infractions which had occurred within HK Forex, but at the same
time to treat Mr Ng’s 3 month licence suspension as a higher range
comparator for the purpose of sentence to be levied on his client.
I not only reject the sentence comparison argument, given that
for my part I regard Mr Ng as having been fortunate indeed in terms of the
lenience with which he was treated by the regulator, but further, and as is
clear from the Determination in Mr Ng’s application – SFAT No 15 of 2007 –
neither do I accept the contention that it was Mr Ng’s actions (or lack of
them) that were the primary problem, and that Mr SH Tse was merely the
peripheral player that Mr McCoy wished to paint him; as I expressed the
position in Mr Ng’s Determination (at paragraph 65 thereof), “in my
judgment it would have been difficult to do anything in that organization
[HK Forex] absent Mr Tse’s clear imprimatur”.
A good deal more was said in Mr McCoy’s written skeleton,
such as the suggestion that it was illogical for Mr Tse to have preferred the
interest of Tse’s Macau over that of Sincere Bullion and HK Forex, and that
“reputational damage to the Sincere Group, his flagship, was necessarily of
much greater concern to Tse”, and that the matters referred to in the NPDA’s
sent to HK Forex also did not support the SFC’s theories.
There is no necessity, however, to descend further into detail;
the essential flavour of the detailed written submission is apparent from the
As to the allegation regarding the ‘connivance and consent’ of
Mr Tse, whilst there was no dispute that the applicant was involved in the
governance of HK Forex and Sincere Bullion, and that he had had the
authority to give (and indeed did give) instructions to senior management of
HK Forex and Sincere Bullion from time to time, nevertheless the
contention of Mr Tse appears to be that he was always “one step removed”
from daily operation and colleagues, and thus that he could not have
“connived” in the misconduct committed by the staff of HK Forex.
Mr Beresford’s robust response to this was that given the
repeated pattern of misconduct and unlicensed activities that had taken place
since 2002, and given the prior disciplinary history of HK Forex going back
to 1999, it should have been eminently clear to the applicant that what was
occurring represented a stark repetition of matters for which the applicant
himself specifically had been reprimanded in the past. Thus, said Mr
Beresford, the regulator had not been looking at isolated incidents, but a
“systemic pattern of similar compliance failures/offences arising from the
operation of HK Forex from its inception in 1995”, and further that the
applicant’s apparent control of HK Forex, Sincere Bullion and Tse’s Macau
gave rise to “the only reasonable inference” that staff of these companies
ultimately were acting for the applicant’s benefit, and that corporate entities
under the applicant’s control appeared to be used interchangeably by staff,
depending on circumstances and convenience, and all towards the end of
Nor, said Mr Beresford, in light of the continuation of the like
pattern of misconduct and unlicensed activities, was there any evidence that
the applicant had made any serious attempt to prevent or deter such
unlicensed activities, despite his undoubted knowledge of the involvement in
these matters of persons associated with or acting through HK Forex, or of
its staff in introducing clients to Tse’s Macau. Moreover, the fact that the
5 convictions as outlined in the 1st NPDA to HK Forex did not involve a
‘Tse’s Macau element’ did not mean that the applicant should not be held
responsible for compliance failures, which all stemmed from the same root
cause, namely grossly inadequate internal control measures at HK Forex,
which the applicant and senior management of HK Forex could have
implemented but manifestly failed to do so: as counsel observed, “the
applicant’s unwillingness to comply with the regulations and his continued
willingness to accept business from unlicensed sources demonstrate that he
In terms of the ‘connivance and consent’ element of the charge,
Mr McCoy’s skeleton argument maintained that “looking at the evidence in
the round” it could not have been the case that Tse had consented or
connived to certain incidents, which he thereafter itemized, stressing in this
context the interview given by Eddie Ng to the SFC, which suggested the
existence of routine meetings to advise staff as to what could or could not be
done, and that efforts had been made to put the companies back “on the right
track” notwithstanding the problems of recent years. Moreover, said leading
counsel, Mr Tse himself had told the SFC on 15 June 2006 that in speaking
to Zhang Dacheng and Crystal Yang he had informed them that he had
wanted them “to cease doing business for people in Hong Kong”, and that he
also had told the regulator that “I have also told Ng Chit Chung, Eddie,
Leung Tin Wai and Yu On Lee that if they found any staff members referring
clients to Tse’s Macau to open accounts there, they must immediately report
to the SFC and act as witnesses…”
Thus, the argument went, it was clear that Mr Tse had only
known of these incidents in their aftermath when they had been reported to
him by Eddie Ng, and that there was no evidence that he had controlled HK
Forex nor had consented to or connived in its misconduct, although it is
accepted (at paragraph 37 of the written submission) that “a certain degree
of neglect on the part of Tse was involved” in terms of instituting
appropriate supervision – “Tse could have asked Eddie Ng to think of
additional measures to monitor the activities of account executives in Hong
Kong” – and that he could earlier have taken up with Zhang and Yang of
Tse’s Macau that there should be no acceptance of clients referred to them
by HK Forex: “Had Tse acted more proactively at that time, the misconducts
by Cherie Yu, Mimi Lee and her subordinates might well have been
avoided” was how Mr McCoy put this point.
In terms of the thematic submission that there simply was
insufficient evidence available to the SFC to conclude that a life prohibition
was appropriate – “blatantly excessive and disproportionate in the
circumstances” was the advocate’s denunciation – I find myself wholly
unable to agree with Mr McCoy’s dismissive summation. In my view the
arguments put forward by Mr Beresford, which I accept, are overwhelming.
As to Mr McCoy’s second basic theme, focusing upon the
position of HK Forex, I deal with that more fully in the Determination in that
company’s own application (SFAT No 6 of 2007), but in so far as Mr Tse is
concerned I am constrained to say that consider it extraordinary, in face of
abundant evidence gathered by the regulator, and in light of the history of
events, that this gentleman should have considered it appropriate to launch
this review, and to brief leading counsel seriously to suggest that in terms of
the punishment handed down that the SFC had been “plainly wrong” and
“excessive” in the circumstances.
To the credit of Mr McCoy SC, however, sensibly he chose not
to refer in any detail to the written submissions as were placed before the
Tribunal (it may well be that he was afforded no opportunity to have any
input prior to being retained), and – as the transcript makes clear – in the
event he chose to couch his oral argument in far more general terms; hence
my characterization earlier in this judgment of his broad ‘themes’.
From a purely forensic viewpoint this clearly was correct
strategy, but at the end of the day I reject his fact-based characterizations,
and his attempt to draw favourable or, as he put it, “more reasonable
inferences” from the veritable mass of documentary material assembled by
the SFC in the course of the disciplinary action, and thereafter for the
conduct both of this, and of the two related reviews of HK Forex and
For the avoidance of doubt, I have no intention whatever of
placing a blush favourable to Mr Tse (or, for that matter, to HK Forex or
Eddie Ng) on the assembled material when the ineluctable fact is that neither
Mr Tse nor Mr Ng chose to avail themselves of the opportunity to give
evidence and to reject, on oath, adverse conclusions and inferences drawn by
the regulator in the face of abundant – it may be thought overwhelming –
In my view the situation is to the contrary. When a person
pointedly refuses to go into this witness box to explain his position, he is in
no position to complain if a tribunal declines to afford him the advantage of
regarding his case in the most favourable light. This point was recently
made in Court of Appeal in CACV 69 of 2008, (unreported) Judgment dated
26 February 2009, in which an alleged adverse possessor of land, seeking to
maintain title thereto, sought to request the court to draw from the available
evidence inferences favourable to her interest, notwithstanding that she had
declined to enter the witness box at the trial of the action and to tell the first
instance judge precisely what had, or had not, factually occurred to underpin
the element of animus possidendi which was said to have existed in order to
underpin the adverse possession she claimed. At the trial the judge had held
against the claimant on the adverse possession claim, in the course of which
he drew inferences adverse to the claimant from the available evidence in
terms of an implied licence granted by the landowner to the claimant’s
deceased husband; on appeal leading counsel for the claimant sought – as
indeed Mr McCoy valiantly has sought to do in this case – to overthrow the
findings of the judge below on the basis of certain favourable inferences
which she maintained should have been drawn in favour of her client.
This approach specifically was rejected, and the appeal
dismissed, and on the point of the drawing of appropriate inferences, one of
the members of the Court of Appeal observed as follows (op cit. at
“…in the particular circumstances of this case the die effectively was cast when the defendant chose not to give evidence in the court below.
Whilst …it is not for this court to speculate upon her reason for not so doing, the hard fact remains that in the context of animus possidendi, the one person who could have shed the greatest light upon the situation was available, yet pointedly was not called; accordingly the learned judge below…was left in the unenviable position of having relatively little hard evidence to work with, and
of having to draw an inference from such evidence as was available as to the implication of a licence…
Notwithstanding the considerable skill with which [leading counsel] invested her argument, against the background wherein one person who could be relied upon to know and to give the ‘best evidence’ as to the contemporaneous situation deliberately chooses not to testify, it seems to me that counsel is in difficulty in asking this court now to interpret such evidence as was before the judge in a manner advantageous to her client’s case.
In fact, it seems to me that the position is to the contrary – if, as here was the case, the defendant widow specifically elected to deprive the court below of the best available evidence as to the relevant intention to possess, then any doubt in the evidence …falls to be resolved against and not in favour of the defendant, who – by analogy with the position of a party responsible for material non-disclosure upon any issue – thereafter cannot be heard to complain if, as a consequence, an unfavourable inference then is drawn by the trial court against the defendant’s interest…”
Accordingly, if this approach be correct, as naturally I consider
that it is, it simply was not open to Mr McCoy to consider parts of the
evidential material as has been assembled for the case against Mr Tse and/or
HK Forex, and thus to submit (at paragraph 17 of the written submission)
that the inference which should thus be drawn is not such as was drawn by
the SFC, but that “a much more reasonable inference” in favour of his client
was to be gleaned from the material there under scrutiny.
Nor, for that matter, do I understand why it should, or indeed
could have been said (at paragraph 19 of the written submission) that the
SFC improperly had rejected Mr Tse’s denials as to relevant issues “in the
absence of…an opportunity to deal with the accusations before an impartial
and independent tribunal”. I am not entirely sure what was meant by that
description – for my part I entertain the modest hope that this Tribunal
accords with that characterization – but in any event in this review there was
a golden opportunity for Mr Tse to enter the witness box and to give
evidence to establish his case and clear his name, and at a stroke to remove
any question of such adverse inference as is said wrongly to have been
Regrettably, however, this did not occur, and in my judgment
the matter ends there – unless, as earlier commented, the material upon
which the regulator chose to act is so plainly deficient and non-probative
that it would be dangerous to permit any adverse findings made on such
Patently, however, this is not the case. To the contrary, it has
been difficult to sit in this Tribunal absorbing the accretion of evidence in
this, and the two other associated reviews involving HK Forex and Mr Ng,
without it becoming crystal clear not only that there was a cogency and
internal logic to the regulator’s case, and the conclusions espoused therein,
but that such evidence as was assembled reveals that which in my judgment
Mr Beresford was correct to characterize as “a rampant culture” among the
staff of HK Forex to engage in unlicensed activities, and that such activities
involved Tse’s Macau – in which context I note, as a postscript, the presence
of an ‘incentive scheme’ for staff arising from the referral of business to
Mr Beresford’s submission not only that there
plainly was sufficient evidence against Mr Tse, whose consent and/or
connivance at the prevailing situation I have no reason whatever to doubt,
but that having regard to the totality of the evidence and the circumstances
of repeated offences committed by HK Forex and its staff, the SFC was
entirely justified to take the view that it has, and to invoke the most serious
Indeed, I would go so far as to say that in my view it takes a
certain gall, twinned with an obvious lack of remorse (and perhaps even a
lack of embarrassment) on Mr Tse’s part, to suggest, via the mellifluous
words of senior counsel, that this was not, and could not, be the case on the
totality of the material and accumulated evidence now before the regulator,
and thereafter placed before this Tribunal.
This clearly is sufficient to dismiss this application for review
in limine. However, there remains for consideration Mr McCoy’s third
‘thematic submission’, which is that of jurisdiction. If he is correct, that is
the end of the matter. Jurisdiction is jurisdiction; either it exists or it does
not, and merit has no part to play.
To repeat the nub of the argument: it is submitted that since
Mr Tse is of a particular class of person – described by Mr McCoy as “an
unusual animal…who is regulated, but not registered or licensed” – the
necessary consequence is that the Code of Conduct, which applied to
‘licensed’ and ‘registered’ persons only, had no application to him and to his
activities: “the approach of the SFC was to borrow erroneously the series of
duties that apply to registered and licensed persons and to wrongly transpose
them to regulated persons” was how Mr McCoy put it; thus that the SFC, as
regulator, had imposed “inapt criteria” in deciding, as they now have, to
impose a lifetime prohibition upon Mr Tse – whom, it is said, is governed in
his activities solely by the negative strictures of the common law, as is every
other citizen of Hong Kong, so that his only obligation was “not to
I suspect that this concept, enthusiastically promulgated by
leading counsel, was the product of late-night reflection, possibly aided and
infused by injudicious amounts of caffeine, and that, whilst at the time it
may have seemed cogent, it is one of those ideas which palls when ventured
in the cold light of the courtroom.
Certainly Mr Beresford thought so.
His immediate response was that the answer to this proposition
was to be found within section 193 of the SFO, and in particular within the
provisions of subsections (2) and (3), subsection (1) having dealt with the
definition of four specific types of ‘misconduct’.
Accordingly, subsection 193(2)(b)(ii) provided that where an
“intermediary” (for which, for present purposes, one could interpose HK
Forex) is or was at any time guilty of misconduct of four stipulated
categories as the result of the commission of misconduct occurring with the
consent or connivance of, or attributable to any neglect on the part of a
person involved in the management of a business of a registered institution,
such conduct shall be regarded as misconduct on the part of that person, and
‘guilty of misconduct’ shall be construed accordingly.
Thus, said Mr Beresford, that which the SFC had found was
that HK Forex’s misconduct was as a result of the commission of conduct
occurring with the consent or connivance of a person involved – namely
Mr Tse – in the management of the business, then the result is that Mr Tse is
deemed guilty of misconduct under subsection 2(b)(ii).
In this connection Mr Beresford stressed that, in the case of
Mr Tse, the SFC did not find against him on the alternative basis of ‘neglect’
(as, to the contrary, had been the case with the disciplinary action against
Mr Ng and HK Forex), and that the Notice of Decision as issued against
Mr Tse read, at paragraph 3 thereof:
“As a result of our investigations, we preliminarily found that you are a person involved in the management of Hong Kong Forex and that you are guilty of misconduct and you are not fit and proper to be a regulated person because you consented to or connived in the unlicensed activities by HK Forex’s staff or people associated with or acting through HK Forex and/or its staff who induced clients to trade in leveraged foreign exchange contracts either in Hong Kong Forex or Tse’s Macau. Accordingly, any misconduct of Hong Kong Forex should be regarded as misconduct on your part because you are a person involved in Hong Kong Forex’s management and Hong Kong Forex’s alleged failure has apparently occurred with your consent and connivance…”
Having proceeded thus, counsel said, the application of the
Code of Conduct to Mr Tse – Mr McCoy’s allegedly “inapt criteria” – was
statutorily imported through section 193(3), which made specific reference
to “any code of conduct published under section 169 or any code or
guideline published under section 399 as are in force at the time of the
occurrence of, and applicable in relation to, the act or omission”; in fact,
Mr Beresford noted, the main Code of Conduct was published under
section 399, and as to the statutory definition of ‘regulated person’, this
occurred at section 194(7), which provided that such was any one of a
licensed person, a responsible officer of a licensed corporation, or (and this
was applicable to Mr Tse) “a person involved in the management of the
Accordingly, counsel for the SFC concluded, there was no basis
for the sweeping assertion that the SFC had had no jurisdiction over Mr Tse.
I agree with and accept Mr Beresford’s submissions. It strikes
me as an extraordinary suggestion that the obligations of a ‘regulated person’
in the position of Mr Tse were neither more onerous nor extensive than the
simple common law obligation of the normal citizen in the street not to
contravene the law. I decline to accept Mr McCoy’s suggestion that in this
proceeding Mr Tse was, in effect, ‘bomb-proof’ (“you can’t touch us”), and
I have little hesitation in dismissing this ambitious submission as to lack of
It follows from the foregoing, therefore, that none of the
submissions as pressed on the Tribunal in this review by Mr McCoy have
found favour, and this conclusion necessarily must result in the dismissal of
As a postscript, on 3 November 2008, a short supplementary
written submission “identifying or emphasizing certain points of mitigation”
was received by the Tribunal. Whilst the heading of this document
specifically referred to SFAT 6 and 10 of 2007, I took the view that it was
more relevant to the application for review of HK Forex in SFAT No 6 of 2007, and accordingly I specifically sound to the matters therein in the
Determination of that application, which is to be published at the same time
as the Determination in this application by Mr Tse, and which views apply
equally to this case. Suffice it to say that nothing in this supplementary
submission affects my view of the merits, or the result of, the present
Consequent upon the foregoing, the order of the Tribunal is as
The application for review by Mr Tse Shiu Hoi in SFAT
There is to be a costs’ order nisi that the costs of and
arising from this application are to be paid by the applicant to the respondent, such costs to be taxed if not agreed;
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