Philip Green: Difference between revisions
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===Personal life=== |
===Personal life=== |
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Green is based during the week at a London hotel, spending the weekends with his [[South Africa]]n wife and owner of Arcadia [[Cristina|Tina Green]] and their children Chloe and Brandon in an apartment in [[Monaco]].<ref name=autogenerated1>{{cite news| url=http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/retailing/article437894.ece?token=null&offset=0 | work=The Times | location=London | title=Profile Philip Green The fastest billionaire is on his Marks | date=30 May 2004 | accessdate=22 May 2010}}</ref> |
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Green plays tennis with [[Albert II, Prince of Monaco|Prince Albert of Monaco]] and counts as his friends, [[David and Simon Reuben]], [[Lord Hanson]], [[Philip Colbert]], [[Tom Hunter]], [[Mohamed al-Fayed]] of [[Harrods]], [[Bill Kenwright]], [[David Goodman]], [[Simon Cowell]], [[Michael Winner]] and the Indian tycoon [[Vijay Mallya]].<ref name=autogenerated1 /> |
Green plays tennis with [[Albert II, Prince of Monaco|Prince Albert of Monaco]] and counts as his friends, [[David and Simon Reuben]], [[Lord Hanson]], [[Philip Colbert]], [[Tom Hunter]], [[Mohamed al-Fayed]] of [[Harrods]], [[Bill Kenwright]], [[David Goodman]], [[Simon Cowell]], [[Michael Winner]] and the Indian tycoon [[Vijay Mallya]].<ref name=autogenerated1 /> |
Revision as of 13:43, 19 December 2010
Sir Philip Green | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupation | Businessman |
Spouse | Tina Green |
Children | Chloe and Brandon |
Sir Philip Green (born 15 March 1952) is a Monacan[1], British-born businessman who has assisted his wife to own some of the United Kingdom's largest retailers, including the Arcadia Group.
Shops owned by Mrs Green's Arcadia group, which Mr Green is the CEO of, are currently the target of a campaign against major tax avoiders, led by the UK Uncut activist group.
Biography
Philip Green was born into a Jewish family on 14 March 1952 in Croydon, in South London, and has a sister, Elizabeth, five years his senior. His family moved to Hampstead Garden Suburb, a middle-class enclave in north London, and at the age of nine he was sent to the now-closed Jewish boarding school Carmel College in Oxfordshire. When his father died of a heart attack, Philip was in line to inherit the family business at the age of twelve. After leaving boarding school at 15, he worked for a shoe importer before travelling to the US, Europe and the Far East. It was on his return that he set up his first business with a £20,000 loan, importing jeans from the Far East to sell on to retailers in London.
In 1979, Green bought up the entire stock of ten designer label clothes sellers who had gone into receivership for extremely low prices. He then had the newly-bought clothes sent to the dry cleaners, got them put on hangers, wrapped them in polythene to make them look new, and then bought a place to sell them to the public.
Amber Day
In 1988, he became Chairman and Chief Executive of a quoted company called "Amber Day", a discount retailer. The shares performed well, but then suffered a series of profit downgrades; in 1992 he was forced to resign by the company's leading institutional shareholders. He has not led a quoted company since. Ever since, he has relied upon a close group of like-minded entrepreneurs, including Tom Hunter (a sports shoe millionaire and one of the richest men in Scotland) and the Barclay brothers, to help fund his buccaneering forays into the UK's High Streets.
1990s
In the early 1990s Green bought the department store chain Owen Owen which at the time had about 12 branches trading under the Owen Owen and Lewis's brand names. During his ownership most of these department stores were sold to other operators including Debenhams and Allders or were closed leaving only the Liverpool branch trading as Lewis's. In 2004 this remaining store was sold off.
In 1995 he linked with Tom Hunter to buy sports retailer Olympus as part of a merger. The price was £1, plus the assumption of £30 million in debt. Green and his partners sold the company three years later to JJB Sports for £550 million. Green walked away £73 million richer. That encouraged the Barclay brothers to back him in the £538m acquisition of the Sears retail chain (a different Sears from Sears, Roebuck and Company) in 1999. The subsequent disposal programme (including selling some of the assets, ironically, to Arcadia) raised £729m and confirmed his reputation as a man who could deliver within the retail sector.
BHS, Arcadia, Topshop
Green came to public attention in 1999 when he attempted to make a £9-billion hostile bid for Marks and Spencer (M&S). However, the leaking of the bid forced up M&S's share price. The board of M&S were also hostile to the bid and sought to block it. Eventually Green gave up and purchased the ailing retail chain British Home Stores for £200 million. His takeover came when everyone else had dismissed the company as a failing brand and unfixable. Green put up £50 million of his own money and borrowed another £150 million to seal the deal. Green completely turned the company around and the chain is now[when?] thought to be worth over £1.2 billion. Since Green took over, profits have tripled to over £200 million per year.[citation needed]
Next, Green purchased the Arcadia Group, which owns well-known High Street chains such as Burton, Dorothy Perkins, Evans, Miss Selfridge, Outfit, Topshop/Topman and Wallis in 2002. The company was sold to Tina Green [2], with Philip acting as CEO. The Arcadia Group has been enormously profitable, and currently has pre-tax profits of around £380 million per year.
Recently[when?] he had added the Etam UK chain to the group. Green paid £850 million, and repaid the £808 million he had borrowed to finance the deal in two years, a move that stunned commentators when it was announced.
When The Guardian newspaper investigated a proposed takeover of Safeway in 2003, Green responded to queries about Arcadia's accounts by insulting and swearing at the journalists.[3]
On 20 October 2005 Green awarded Arcadia shareholders a £1.3-billion dividend.
Other activities
Green is a supporter of the The Fashion Retail Academy. He is also a supporter of the industry charity Retail Trust.[4] Green was knighted on 17 June 2006.
In May 2007 after the disappearance of Madeleine McCann in Portugal, Green donated £250,000 as a monetary reward for any useful public information.[5] He also provided the McCanns with the use of his private jet to allow them to fly to Rome for a Papal visit and back in time to put their twins to bed.[6] Green intends to increase the reward money to £1 million for the safe return of Madeleine.
He was reportedly the BBC's first choice to front the UK franchise of The Apprentice; however during that period in 2004, he was too busy with Arcadia's attempted takeover of Marks and Spencer.[7]
Personal life
Green is based during the week at a London hotel, spending the weekends with his South African wife and owner of Arcadia Tina Green and their children Chloe and Brandon in an apartment in Monaco.[8]
Green plays tennis with Prince Albert of Monaco and counts as his friends, David and Simon Reuben, Lord Hanson, Philip Colbert, Tom Hunter, Mohamed al-Fayed of Harrods, Bill Kenwright, David Goodman, Simon Cowell, Michael Winner and the Indian tycoon Vijay Mallya.[8]
Among Green's more extravagant items are a 208 ft/£32 million Benetti yacht Lionheart[9] and a £20 million Gulfstream G550 private jet .[8] For his birthday, his wife bought him a solid gold Monopoly set, featuring his very own acquisitions.[10]
Green has been described as "flash". For his son's Bar Mitzvah in 2005, he spent £4 million on a three-day event for over 200 friends and family in the French Riviera. He also hired Andrea Bocelli and Destiny's Child to perform.[11] For his 50th birthday he flew 200 guests in a chartered Airbus A300 to a hotel in Cyprus for a three-day toga party, where they were serenaded by Tom Jones and Rod Stewart, who was reportedly paid £750,000 for a 45-minute set. For his 55th birthday he flew 100 guests 8,500 miles in two private jets from London Stansted Airport. They arrived at the exclusive Maldives resort of Four Seasons: Landaagiraavaru, an eco-spa on a private Indian Ocean island.[12]
In 2009, he purchased a London golf club, Duke's Meadows, and built a number of tennis courts to expand his new acquisition.
His business hero is the late Sir Charles Clore, who built the Sears Plc UK retail empire from next to nothing in the 1950s and 1960s.[13]
Football involvement
He is a keen football fan and is a Tottenham Hotspur supporter.[14] In 1987 he suggested to Irving Scholar the Spurs Chairman that Tony Berry be appointed to the board.[15]
In 1991 he helped Terry Venables raise the last £500,000 needed to purchase shares in the club.[15]
He was also involved in the transfers of Rio Ferdinand from Leeds United and Louis Saha from Fulham to Manchester United.[15]
He is heavily involved with Everton Football Club due to his friendship with chairman Bill Kenwright, but has no intention of formally investing in the club.[16] He arranged for another friend, Planet Hollywood's owner Robert Earle to purchase shares from former director Paul Gregg during a struggle for control of Everton in 2004.[17] He offers business advice to the club alongside Tesco CEO Terry Leahy and helps negotiates player transfer fees with agents.[18]
Efficiency review on government spending
In August 2010, Green was asked by the recently elected Prime Minister, David Cameron, to carry out a review of government spending and procurement.[19] Green's summary report, Efficiency Review by Sir Philip Green,[20] published in October 2010, identified significant failings in government procurement processes leading to excess expenditure and recommended consolidation of procurement.
Criticism
Tax avoidance
Green became the target of activist group UK Uncut in November 2010 for his history of corporate tax avoidance. The group targeted Green specifically as a Government advisor.[21]
On the 4th December 2010 campaigners staged a sit-in at Green's flagship London Oxford Street Topshop store, and in Brighton a few glued themselves to the branch windows, while other high streets in towns and cities across Britain saw similar protests in a day of action against the tax arrangements of rich individuals and big businesses.
Green, the Arcadia retail group tycoon, became the focus of anger over the programme of government cuts that campaigners said could be avoided if tax dodging was stamped out, bringing in some £25bn a year to the public purse and reducing the national debt.
Taveta Investments, the company used to acquire Arcadia in 2002, is in the name of Green's wife, Cristina Green, a Monaco resident, avoiding £285 million in tax that would be payable if a UK resident owned the company.[22] When Green paid his family £1.2bn in 2005, it was paid for by a loan taken out by Arcadia, cutting Arcadia's corporation tax as interest charges on the loan were offset against profits.[23]
Excessive pay
Green has fallen under criticism for taking excessive pay, earned through his shareholdings in Arcadia. In 2005, he declared a dividend in Arcadia, in which he had a holding of 92% of the shares. This meant he earned £1.2 billion in a single year. Green defended himself by saying, "So far as I'm concerned we are in the risk business. We risk our reputation and our money when we buy things. We don't have a guarantee on the back we can get a refund when we haven't got it right."[24]
Asset stripping
There have also been accusations that Philip Green is an asset-stripper as seen with his experiences with Owen Owen and the purchase of the UK arm of Etam which have seen a wide sell-off of stores. Philip Green denies this accusation.[25]
Worker rights
Arcadia has been criticised for the pay and conditions of both overseas and UK workers by anti-sweatshop groups such as Labour Behind the Label, No Sweat and the student activist network People & Planet.[citation needed] Sir Philip Green denied Sunday Times allegations in 2007 that his firm used overseas sweatshops where workers in Mauritius were paid pitiful wages.[26] In 2010, Sir Philip was again accused, this time by Channel 4's Despatches programme of still using sweatshops - in Britain, where workers were paid less than half the legal minimum wage.[27]
Involvement in Government Cuts
On 29 November 2010, following protests against university fee rises, protesters occupied the flagship Oxford Street branch of Topshop, to highlight Green's involvement in the government spending cuts. They chanted "Philip Green's taxation could pay for education". Similar protests and occupations were set up at several stores owned by Mr. Green, including Glasgow, Edinburgh, Liverpool, Leicester, York, Bristol, Portsmouth, Southampton and Cambridge.
Personal style
Green has been criticised for what some see as an overly aggressive personal style. He has a reputation for colourful language[citation needed] and in 2003 made a string of expletive-laden outbursts to the Guardian's financial editor, Paul Murphy. Mr Green said: "He can't read English. Mind you, he is a fucking Irishman." He later apologised to the Irish, after customers threatened to boycott his stores.[28]
References
- ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010/dec/19/big-business-defensive-tax-protesters#payday
- ^ http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/news/article.html?in_article_id=338128&in_page_id=2
- ^ "Days of anger, shouting, abuse and threats". The Guardian. London. 4 March 2003. Retrieved 2009-04-25.
- ^ http://www.retail-week.com/retail-trust-raises-over-1631m/1975420.article
- ^ Harry Potter Author Adds To Reward |Sky News|MADELEINE
- ^ Finding Madeleine
- ^ Randall, Jeff (13 June 2008). "The Apprentice is to real business what Monopoly is to property". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
- ^ a b c "Profile Philip Green The fastest billionaire is on his Marks". The Times. London. 30 May 2004. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
- ^ Philip Green's Lionheart Yacht - Luxist
- ^ Robinson, James (28 June 2009). "Sir Philip Green: man with a fine attention to retail". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
- ^ "Billionaire hires Destiny's Child". BBC News. 14 May 2005. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
- ^ Vasagar, Jeevan (12 March 2007). "Pack your shorts, it's time for Sir Philip Green's birthday party". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
- ^ Entrepreneurs - Times Online
- ^ Peston, Robert Who Runs Britain pp.97-98
- ^ a b c Bose, Mihir (Telegraph). "Green oils the wheels of so many deals in football". London: 26 Oct 2006. Retrieved 14 January 2010.
{{cite news}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ "Everton chief executive resigns". BBC.co.uk. 30 July 2008. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
- ^ "Green at heart of Everton battle". thisismoney.co.uk.
- ^ Conn, David (14 September 2005). "Darkness returns to issue of agents' dual payments". London: Guardian. Retrieved 14 January 2010.
- ^ "Sir Philip Green to lead Government Efficiency Review". Cabinet Office. 11 October 2010. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
- ^ Green, Sir Philip (11 October 2010). "Efficiency Review by Sir Philip Green" (PDF). Cabinet Office. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
- ^ Tayloy, Matthew (29 November 2010). "Philip Green to be target of corporate tax avoidance protest". Guardian Unlimited. London. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
- ^ Mathiason, Nick (27 March 2005). "Where the rich stash their cash". The Observer. London. Retrieved 2009-04-25.
- ^ "Analysis: The rich get richer in poor old Britain". Independent on Sunday. London. 19 March 2006. Retrieved 2009-04-25.
- ^ BBC News, 'Arcadia nets Philip Green £1.2bn' (20.10.2005) BBC News Online, (see video for comments)
- ^ Spotlight: Day in the life of a deal maker - International Herald Tribune
- ^ http://www.abcmoney.co.uk/news/152007119104.htm
- ^ http://www.metro.co.uk/tv/846566-dispatches-was-excellent-but-probably-didnt-affect-trend-hungry-fashionistas
- ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2003/mar/05/2
External links
- Forbes.com: World's Richest People 2004 entry
- Forbes.com: World's Richest People 2006 entry
- Vincent, Sally (23 October 2004). "How I did it". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2009-04-25. Interview with Green discussing his life.
- Times Online interview with Philip Green, December, 2007 (video)
- Growing Business meets Sir Philip Green
- Rushton, Susie (5 July 2007). "Philip Green: The king of the high street in his most outspoken interview ever". The Independent. London. Retrieved 2009-04-25.
- Davidson, Andrew (24 October 2004). "The Andrew Davidson interview: Philip Green". Sunday Times. London. Retrieved 2009-04-25.
- The Guardian's portal for article on Green
- Long, Camilla (8 April 2009). "It's the pop of Topshops". The Australian. Retrieved 2009-04-25.. Interview with Green.
- Stewart Lansley and Andy Forrester, Top Man, How Philip Green Built His Hight Street Empire, Aurum, 2006
- The British (retail) invasion