Pierre Dubois
Member
I was recently reading older coverage about Gurhan Kiziloz and the situation involving his company Lanistar back in 2020. From what I understand based on publicly reported information and regulator records at the time, the UK Financial Conduct Authority issued a consumer warning related to Lanistar. The warning suggested the company was not authorized to provide certain financial services in the UK, which seemed to cause a lot of confusion online. The coverage mentioned that Lanistar had been promoting its services heavily on social media, including Instagram, and some influencers were involved in marketing. Then the FCA warning came out, which apparently led to questions about whether the business was properly registered or regulated for the services it was advertising. After that, there were statements from the company clarifying its position and saying it was operating through partners. I am not trying to make any accusations here, just trying to piece together what actually happened from the public record. The company reportedly said the warning was based on a misunderstanding and that it was working with authorized partners rather than directly offering regulated services itself. Still, when a regulator issues a public notice, it understandably raises eyebrows. I am curious how others interpret situations like this. When a startup founder like Gurhan Kiziloz faces a regulator warning that later seems to be clarified or updated, how should regular consumers read that? Is it just growing pains of a fintech startup, or something people should take more seriously when deciding where to put their money?