Wendel advises anyone who has been approached in this way to exercise extreme caution, and reiterates that Wendel does not carry out any direct selling of banking or financial products to the public.
The phishing attacks about which we have been informed have taken place through emails and unsolicited phone calls in which the perpetrators fraudulently try to obtain personal data or get people to make a bank transfer or electronic payment.
Please exercise the utmost vigilance and remember the following advice:
- Never click on any link in any email that asks you to go online in order to reactivate a bank account, check suspicious transactions or provide banking details.
- Always check the sender’s email address. The email addresses of Wendel employees are always in the format initialfirstname.surname@wendelgroup.com, and no other extensions are used (wendelgroup.eu, wendelgroup.fr, etc.).
- Be wary of offers that seem too good to be true, promises of high, risk-free returns and demands for you to take decisions or other action rapidly.
If you think you may have received a fraudulent approach claiming to be from Wendel, a Wendel group entity or one of its staff members, please contact us by email at fraud-alert@wendelgroup.com
You can also consult the blacklist compiled by the Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF) and the Autorité de Contrôle Prudentiel et de Résolution (ACPR), which can be viewed at https://www.abe-infoservice.fr/liste-noire/listes-noires-et-alertes-des-autorites
If you have been the victim of a fraudulent attack, you can:
- report the incident to your local police as soon as possible;
- report the phishing email or website using:
- the https://phishing-initiative.eu/contrib/ website, which can block access to the sites reported to it;
- the https://www.internet-signalement.gouv.fr/PharosS1/ website, which alerts the police about illegal websites.