- Christopher Flinos, the former head of the collapsed crypto firm Hayvn, has resurfaced as a mortgage broker in suburban Melbourne after being banned from financial services roles in the Cayman Islands and Abu Dhabi for fraud and money laundering violations.
- Regulators in the UAE and the Cayman Islands found that Flinos’ firm funneled client funds through an unlicensed shell company and fabricated documents, with fines totaling over US$10 million issued against him and Hayvn.
- Although he is not a registered company director or an accredited broker in Australia, Flinos was working at a mortgage firm with his brother, a business he is able to legally operate in due to a lack of direct oversight in the country.
Many Aussies probably remember Christopher Flinos, once the glossy frontman of Hayvn, the super regulated and very compliant crypto-payments shop that imploded under fraud findings.
Well, he resurfaced as a mortgage broker in suburban Melbourne, sharing a desk in his brother’s firm in Black Rock.
Flinos was banned in Abu Dhabi for 15 years and stripped of directorship rights in the Cayman Islands after regulators found Hayvn funneled client transactions through an unlicensed shell, fabricated hundreds of documents, and disguised crypto trades with fake wind farm invoices.
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Flinos’ Shady Business
Flinos built a career on selling “safety” in crypto custody, even invoking the collapse of FTX as proof Hayvn’s regulated model was different. Less than a year later, his empire collapsed under its own fraud. The Caymans labeled him “not a fit and proper person” to run a company; the UAE concluded he systematically deceived regulators and banks.
Abu Dhabi’s watchdog said the misconduct was “intentional and deliberate”, handing down fines of US$3.3M (AU$5.14M) against him personally and US$7.1M (AU$10.8 million) against Hayvn entities.
So, the bottom line is that he’s banned in both Abu Dhabi and Cayman Islands, unable to offer any form of financial services. But what’s funny about this story is how everything turned out. The man once bragging on YouTube about Hayvn being the Middle East’s biggest business for virtual assets, now occupies a desk inside a mortgage office shared with other small firms.
But here’s the catch: his profile at Balcombe Financial (the broker), quietly scrubbed after media inquiries, described him as a “director” focused on partnerships, though filings show he is not a registered company director and Loan Market Group confirmed he has no broker accreditation or access to lending platforms.
There’s absolutely no criminal charge, and he’s not being prosecuted or investigated by any authority as of now. I guess you have to appreciate the hustle? Anyway, the man can legally sit in a mortgage office under his brother’s license in Australia, free from direct oversight.
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