A former Australian company director has pleaded guilty to taking more than A$1.5 million (about US$1 million) from investors who were told their money would go into foreign exchange trading.
Trent Bowden entered the plea in the Perth Magistrates Court on June 26, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) said.
Bowden admitted three charges of dishonestly using his position as a director to benefit himself. He ran Trent Bowden Trading Pty Ltd, the company ASIC says collected the investor money between March 2019 and November 2023.
Funds Raised for FX Trading Spent Elsewhere
Instead of trading the money, Bowden spent it on personal expenses, payments to other investors and other costs unrelated to foreign exchange, according to the regulator.
That pattern, paying existing investors with fresh deposits, is a feature of the bigger FX Ponzi cases ASIC has taken to court before.
The charges sit under section 184 of the Corporations Act, which covers directors who act dishonestly. Each of the three counts carries up to 15 years in prison, and the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions is running the case.
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ASIC has not said how much, if any, of the money has been recovered. The figures and the account of how the funds were used come from the regulator, which still framed the specifics as allegations even after Bowden admitted the charges.
ASIC Keeps Pressing Forex Scam Cases
Bowden's plea lands in a steady line of criminal cases ASIC has brought against people who raised money on the promise of currency trading.
Last year a Sydney financial services director was jailed for a forex scam that took about $940,000 from eight investors, most of them his own clients.
Others have drawn longer terms. Daniel Ali, former director of DanFX Trade, received more than seven years in prison after pleading guilty to fraud, in the same week ASIC permanently banned another Melbourne director over $650,000 in misappropriated client money.
Collapsed licensed firms have fed the same enforcement push. Forex Capital Trading, an Australian broker whose customers lost at least $54 million, saw its sole director banned for a decade and fined after ASIC pulled its license in 2020.
What separates Bowden's case is scale and structure. He was an individual operator moving money through a private company, not a licensed broker with thousands of accounts, which is why the charges turn on directors' duties rather than financial services rules.
Sentencing Due in August
The matter is next listed in the Perth District Court on August 21 for a sentence mention. Bowden has not been sentenced yet, and the guilty plea only settles the question of liability, not the penalty.
These cases can take years to close out. The former director of collapsed FX and CFD provider Berndale Capital pleaded guilty in 2024, nearly six years after ASIC canceled the firm's license.