Werner Boehm and his blog Fintelegram along with his kid Alexander, changed again the company behind their blogs.
Both blogs are connected but with a different business model. Here is explained.
In recent times, Werner Boehm, with his new financial journalism landscape has seen a troubling trend emerge with outlets like Fintelegram. This outlet has gained notoriety for its penchant for negative coverage, often painting targeted companies as nothing short of scammers. Understandably, some businesses have felt compelled to engage the services of individuals like Werner to preemptively mitigate such damaging portrayals.
In stark contrast to this unethical approach stands Payrate42, an entity dedicated to providing objective reviews primarily for payment providers and forex brokers. Here, transparency is key: companies can opt for a positive review by paying a fee, while those unmentioned in Fintelegram receive a neutral rating (yellow). Unfortunately, should a company find itself in Fintelegram’s crosshairs, whether due to direct mention or the machinations of a rival, the consequences are dire—a red review awaits, casting shadows that are often difficult to dispel.
The question arises: how does a company become a target for Fintelegram’s critical scrutiny? Shockingly, it can be as simple as having a competitor or other malicious actor pay for negative articles to be regularly published about them.
Werner, the orchestrator behind this scheme, demands a monthly fee of 300€ for his services. To potentially remove damaging content, companies must also subscribe to a whitelist and pay an annual fee, akin to what many would equate to a protection racket—a term fittingly likened to the “new Austrian Mafia.”
This underhanded practice not only tarnishes the reputation of legitimate businesses but also threatens the integrity of financial journalism itself. Such practices must be exposed and addressed swiftly to uphold fairness and transparency within the industry.
In conclusion, as consumers of financial news and stakeholders in ethical journalism, we must remain vigilant against such exploitative tactics. The integrity of our industry depends on it.
Circum Point LLC, another company in Delaware.
In May of 2020, Werner and his scam friends opened a long list of Delaware companies with the clear aim to use all of them to clean the money coming from their online extorsion.
We suppose Werner changed the company behind Fintelegram in the last months because the previous one was already under fire for legal civil and criminal cases, and then it was time to change again the company.
This company is behind the following websites:
www.fintelegram.com
www.payrate42.com
www.irate42.com
Well, the last 2 shares also another company together, the Bright Landlords LLC
[…] However, amidst the legitimate sources of information, there lurks a controversial figure – Fintelegram. This website claims to provide critical reviews and investigative reports on various financial […]