Boss of start-up Metigy confesses to campaign of duplicity

The boss of failed artificial intelligence marketing company Metigy has confessed that he lied to investors, forged bank statements, and fabricated revenue as part of a campaign of deception.

The boss of failed artificial intelligence marketing company Metigy has confessed that he lied to investors, forged bank statements, and fabricated revenue as part of a campaign of deception.

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From 2 February 2026, residential addresses of company officeholders no longer appear on company extracts purchased through ASIC. The reform has been presented as a privacy and safety measure aimed at reducing identity theft and cyber-enabled risks. ASIC has confirmed that residential address information will continue to be collected and

From 2 February 2026, residential addresses of company officeholders no longer appear on company extracts purchased through ASIC. The reform has been presented as a privacy and safety measure aimed at reducing identity theft and cyber-enabled risks. ASIC has confirmed that residential address information will continue to be collected and

At Cathro & Partners, we provide live access to ASIC insolvency statistics through our website dashboard, Cathro Clarity, enabling stakeholders to track insolvency trends and market movements in near real time. When the Small Business Restructuring (SBR) regime was introduced in FY21–22, initial uptake was modest, with just 37 restructuring plans recorded nationally

At Cathro & Partners, we provide live access to ASIC insolvency statistics through our website dashboard, Cathro Clarity, enabling stakeholders to track insolvency trends and market movements in near real time. When the Small Business Restructuring (SBR) regime was introduced in FY21–22, initial uptake was modest, with just 37 restructuring plans recorded nationally

In this episode of The Cut, Simon Cathro sits down with Mitch Taylor, founder of ClaimCloud, to explore a concept still unfamiliar to many Australian creditors: selling creditor claims for immediate liquidity. With over 25 years in credit markets, including time on Wall Street during the GFC, Mitch shares why

In this episode of The Cut, Simon Cathro sits down with Mitch Taylor, founder of ClaimCloud, to explore a concept still unfamiliar to many Australian creditors: selling creditor claims for immediate liquidity. With over 25 years in credit markets, including time on Wall Street during the GFC, Mitch shares why