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Thursday, March 28, 2024

FTC Sues Raging Bull, Jason Bond, & Jeff Bishop, Alleging $137 Million Fraud

Courtesy of ZeroHedge View original post here.

The FTC filed a lawsuit in Maryland federal court on Monday alleging that subscription stock website Raging Bull – led by Jeff Bishop and Jason Bond, who you likely recognize from the world's most annoying YouTube advertisementshas defrauded consumers of over $137 million. 

To make matters worse, the FTC alleges that the company used Covid-19 to sell stock picks to potential customers using "deceptive marketing", according to Law360. The FTC accused "Raging Bull and its operators of false or unsubstantiated earnings claims, misrepresentations regarding Raging Bull's services, and violations of the Restore Online Shoppers' Confidence Act."

In its complaint, the FTC railed against the gurus, claiming they didn't beat the market or make anywhere near the returns they would advertise:

"The majority of consumers do not beat the market or make the kinds of returns advertised. Many consumers have lost substantial sums of money in the stock market following defendant's strategy or trade recommendations; some consumers have even lost tens of thousands of dollars on just a few trades. When consumers try to cancel their subscriptions, many find they cannot do so easily."

Jason Bond Picks YouTube ad

The FTC noted that the company's disclaimers often stood at stark odds with the promises that the company would make in its marketing materials:

"In a complete about-face, the disclaimers say instead that consumers 'should never invest in the securities of any of the companies mentioned based solely on information contained on our website' and should assume 'all information provided regarding companies is not trustworthy unless verified by their own independent research.'"

Raging Bull also didn't verify testimonials it used, nor did it track its customers to see if they actually made money using their service, the regulator alleged. 

The suit also contends the company made fake claims regarding its advertising and credentials. One claim, that guru Jason Bond was invited to speak at Harvard Business School, was actually a result of the service paying for Bond to speak "on or near Harvard's campus for promotional purposes; Bond was never invited by the school or any of its affiliates."

The regulator also noted that the "gurus" incurred "substantial and persistent losses" from their own trading:

"…income is primarily derived from subscription fees consumers pay to Raging Bull and not from stock and options trading. Bond has incurred substantial and persistent losses as a result of his own stock and options trading activities."

The FTC is seeking an asset freeze and a permanent injunction against the company. 

Most of FinTwit, having been subjected to countless marketing materials from the site at one point or another, widely celebrated the FTC's suit:

Here is an example of one such Jason Bond ad referenced in the complaint:

You can read the entire FTC vs. Raging Bull complaint here

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