How alleged Ponzi hedge funder Brenda Smith fell from grace — and her Rittenhouse Square penthouse — to a N.J. jail.

In 2017, Brenda Ann Smith was riding high. Trained as an accountant, Smith had spent three years raising $105 million for a hedge fund from 40 investors. She owned a seat on the New York Stock Exchange, where she rang the closing bell in June 2017, an event sponsored by her Conshohocken-based broker-dealer CV Brokerage.
Then in early 2018, it all began to unravel.
That February, one trading bet went sour, creating a $10 million loss that Smith promised to “make up herself,” according to a former colleague, who said he alerted investigators.
Instead, she lied to investors and claimed a gain, prosecutors said.

From February 2016, Smith, 59, ran a Conshohocken-based network of investment companies that included Broad Reach Capital, Broad Reach Partners, and Bristol Advisors, investigators said. She was the only employee of each company for most of that period. The funds “were essentially her alter-egos,” according to court papers.
When FINRA securities regulators began investigating, she refused to cooperate, records show. “Stiff-arming a regulator, that’s a red flag,” said the former colleague.
In July, Smith agreed to be barred from the industry because she had failed to respond to a written request for documents.
Meanwhile, despite all the bravado that she displayed to investors, Smith wasn’t investing the bulk of the millions she had received. according to investigators.
Instead she researched and considered several bizarre investments including a country-themed restaurant, crypto-currency, Russian oil shipments, and Western gold mines. She was “wandering from shiny object to shiny object but never doing anything,” the former employee said.
She also resisted writing checks, instead relying on wires for all kinds of payments.
Then, big money started to disappear.
Smith bought a second passport from the tiny country of Dominica, and with more than $100 million at her disposal, began traveling extensively — to Dubai, Curaçao, and other countries, either to raise money or to siphon off funds from the operation, regulators believe.
SEC complaints and Department of Justice documents paint a story of Smith exaggerating her experience, and shifting money around to pay out early investors with later investors’ money.
In March this year, when one of her clients asked to redeem his $46 million stake, Smith made various excuses why her fund couldn’t comply. She falsely claimed another of her companies, London-based CV International, owned a $2.5 billion HSBC bond and listed other “dubious” assets, including $20.25 million in “securitized crypto-currency,” according to the complaint filed by the SEC.
Smith also allegedly spent $2 million on personal American Express credit card charges, and made her own personal bets on the markets.
After earning a degree from LSU, Smith made her way to Pennsylvania working in fund administration and accounting for family offices, or funds for wealthy families. She then positioned herself as a woman-owned brokerage in Conshohocken by buying a shell company and calling it CV Brokerage.
The State Employees Retirement System paid Smith’s firm at least $20,000 in fees to buy and sell state investments over three years ending in 2019. And her firm is listed as one of several “woman-owned broker” firms given SERS trading business, according to annual reports by SERS. Spokespersons for SERS said it “is the responsibility of SERS’ external managers to decide which brokerage firm to utilize.”
Smith, spun a compelling story about her multistrategy hedge fund at conferences around the country.
According to the pitch, her firm Broad Reach Capital established the fund in February 2016 with a “well-vetted trading strategies, managed by experienced investment managers in a risk-controlled manner, the marketing materials said.
The minimum investment: $250,000.
Smith promised no management fee if results were under 6 percent, but she would take 50 percent of returns above that number.
One of Smith’s backers was an investor out of Montreal, who invested over $31 million in the fund through an entity called SureFire. Expecting to redeem $46 million this year, Surefire executives insisted she send back the money, but Smith never did, court records say. Surefire sued Smith and her fund last month in Montgomery County.
According to federal criminal indictments, Smith conducted the fraud mostly by herself — largely because she controlled every aspect of the firm and its entities.
Smith hired away Michael Galantino from Boenning & Scattergood to raise money from institutions. Smith had no secretary or administrative staff, just some brokers known as “registered representatives” who hung out a shingle under her brokerage firm’s umbrella.
But turnover at the firm was high, and employees left in droves, often writing scathing reviews on Glassdoor.com.
“She had an unusual personality, where she’d appear sweet and other times switch to flip and she would be a different person,” said someone who rented space from Smith at her Conshohocken offices. “If an employee challenged her, she’d run them right over.”
Galantino had a very short tenure. “She quickly put controls on him, had him filling out time sheets every 15 minutes. Here was someone who was brought on to grow her brokerage business,” said the former employee.
Galantino’s LinkedIn page says he worked there for just two months, in April and May. He didn’t return emails or calls seeking comment.
In May 2018, according to the SEC, Smith began paying off early investors with new investors’ money. An investor wired $5.43 million to her fund’s bank account, but within a few weeks, that money ended up in her other side companies and in a real estate deal, according to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s complaint.
By mid-2018, the former colleague said he alerted regulators that Smith was covering up the losses at the fund.
“She controlled the business – similar to Bernie Madoff – the marketing, the finance, the compliance, the reporting. She produced the return stream every month. She gave that number to Sanville & Co.,” her auditors. The firm, which has an Abington office, didn’t return calls for comment.
After the losses, her behavior became more erratic. According to the federal indictments, between 2016 and 2018, the fund’s actual balances dropped from over $100 million down to just $2 million, and regulators said it’s unclear where the money went.
“A lot of it went out to entities she controlled,” said one person close to the investigation. “Where it went, we just don’t know yet.”
The SEC last week initiated a freeze on Smith’s assets and bank accounts. Investigators are tracing money in accounts she set up in Louisiana, Brazil, Curacao, and elsewhere.
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Viking Sun aims to break the record for ‘longest continuous passenger cruise’
The ‘world’s longest cruise’ will set sail from London on Sunday and embark on an epic 245-day journey spanning six continents, 51 countries, 111 ports and covering 55,700 nautical miles. The eight-month cruise will be operated by the 930-guest Viking Sun liner with tickets for the voyage, called the Ultimate World Cruise, starting from a staggering £66,900 per person.
It is hoped that when the vessel returns to London in May 2020 it will have set the Guinness World Record for the ‘longest continuous passenger cruise’.
Viking is promising that the ship, which will depart from Greenwich, will fully circumnavigate the globe ‘bringing guests to some of the world’s most legendary cities, iconic landmarks and far-flung destinations’.
Guests will begin the first leg of their cruise with calls to some of the coastal destinations in the UK and Ireland including Dover, Dublin, Liverpool, Holyhead, Belfast and Edinburgh.
It will then allow guests to explore Scandinavia, the Caribbean and destinations throughout South America before calling on the remote tropical islands of the South Pacific.
Viking Sun will then continue its journey along the coast of Australia and through Asia before returning to the Mediterranean and Europe.
Stunning locations guests will visit on the way will include the sprawling Great Barrier Reef, the lush Amazon rain forest, the famous Pyramids in Egypt, the majestic Norwegian fjords, the architectural wonder of Machu Picchu and the ancient marvel of Angkor Wat. It is hoped that when the vessel returns to London in May 2020, it will have set the Guinness World Record for the ‘longest continuous passenger cruise’. Pictured is one of the lounges onboard Viking Sun
On the ship itself, guests will have access to two swimming pools, a fitness centre, two cinemas, a theatre and LivNordic spa, where the brave can try the traditional Nordic bathing ritual and snow grotto, as well as eight dining options.
To keep meals exciting and varied for the full 245-day itinerary, Viking says guests will be treated to a different menu each day with ‘delicious, destination-inspired food at the heart of the 680,000-odd meals that will be consumed’.
There will also be an onboard historian and guest lecturers, who will ‘shed light on each destination’s history, art, architecture, music, geopolitics, natural world and more’ as well as live musical performances covering different genres, time periods or cultural highlights from the region.
If a 245-day cruise is too long for some passengers, they also have the choice of sailing on one of two shorter segments.
First, there is the 127 World Treasures journey from London to Los Angeles, which starts at the weekend. Remaining cabins start from £41,390 per person.
Included in the price of the trip is an excursion at each port of call, unlimited onboard Wi-Fi, all gratuities and service fees and a business class airfare.
Torstein Hagen, chairman of Viking, said: ‘For more than 20 years we have been committed to connecting travellers to culturally immersive experiences that allow them to explore the world in comfort.
‘Our Ultimate World Cruise is the most extensive itinerary available in the industry, nearly double the length of our previous world cruise itineraries. I am pleased to offer such a unique experience for our guests.’
Wendy Atkin-Smith, managing director of Viking UK, added: ‘We broke our own Guinness World Record in 2014 when we christened 16 new river ships in one day. We only launched ocean cruises in 2015 so to already be attempting the world record for the longest continuous passenger cruise four years later is remarkable.
‘Everyone at Viking UK is particularly proud and excited that the cruise is setting sail from Greenwich. We can’t wait to hear all our guests’ stories when they get back.’
Neil Foster, vice president creative consultancy EMEA APAC at Guinness World Records, said: ‘We’re very excited to be working with Viking Cruises on what promises to be one of the most exciting commercial cruise itineraries launched to date.
‘Securing a Guinness World Records title is no easy feat and we wish the passengers and crew of the Viking Sun the best of luck with their attempt. Our adjudicators look forward to seeing the Viking Sun return and hope that they will be crowning the voyage as the longest ever continuous cruise.’
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