Categories
Email Loan Scams

Loan Scammer – Hudson Finance Company

Loan Scam – paulhudsonbank@gmail.com

The below loan scam email was sent to an email address that exists only to catch scam emails. It has never been used to register on any site, only to communicate with scammers.

Email headers

Reply-To: paulhudsonbank@gmail.com
From: Hudson Finance Company <uknprivate848@gmail.com>
Subject: From Hudson Finance Company
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Bcc: [Redacted]

Email body

From Hudson Finance Company,

We are currently offering a non-secured loan with no collateral required for 2% interest rate for a period of 10 years. The Investments Funds can be used for trade finance, constructions, credit enhancement, government funding, property investment and all round range of funding. We focus on start-ups, early stage, Project funding, business funding, credit line and all round range of investment that need funding. We have provided over $1 Billion in business loans to over 17,000 business owners just like you.

TERMS:

2 % INTEREST RATE
10 YEARS DURATION
$100,000.00 to 500Million USD / EUR REQUIREMENT:

We use our own designated risk technology to provide you with the right business loan so you can grow your business. Our services are fast and reliable, loans are approved within 24 hours of successful application. We offer loans from a minimum range of $100,000.00 to a maximum of $500 million.

Contact me through my direct email : paulhudsonbank@gmail.com if you are interested in our services so as to provide you with more information.

PLEASE DO NOT REPLY IF YOU ARE NOT INTERESTED.

Yours Service.

Mr.Paulley Hudson

Hudson Finance Company
Tel:(740)-578-9716

Why is this a loan scam?

  1. It was sent from a totally different email address to the one that you are asked to reply to.
  2. The email addresses used are both free Gmail addresses.
  3. The email was mass-mailed to many recipients using BCC.
  4. The email gives no indication of where the company offering the loan are based or who they are regulated by.
  5. The ridiculous upper amount of loan being offered.