Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Corks pop in Mayfair as Johnson victory hands rich $2bn windfall

- Tom Metcalf, Edward Robinson, Ben Stupples and Viren Vaghela

CHAMPAGNE was flowing in London’s Mayfair as the news hit.

Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ves were not just winning, they were trouncing Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour across the UK, including working-class northern towns far removed from the West End.

Michael Spencer, founder of interdeale­r broker Icap and long-time Tory donor, threw a celebratio­n at Scott’s, an upscale seafood restaurant in London, according to a source. About 200 guests toasted Johnson’s triumph.

The result was a “crushing national repudiatio­n of the dangerous and divisive neo-Marxist policies” embraced by Labour’s leadership, Spencer said.

Spencer and his peers had plenty to celebrate. Corbyn consistent­ly attacked the ultra-wealthy during the campaign, as well as pushing for nationalis­ation of utilities, higher taxes and another referendum on a deal to leave the European Union.

Peter Hargreaves, one of the biggest supporters of Britain’s decision to leave the European Union, said he was relieved by Johnson’s victory. He blamed Labour’s dismal showing on Corbyn’s lack of appeal even in the northern heartlands.

“I was in contact with lots of friends in the north and they were quite surprised how many Labour voters weren’t going to vote for Corbyn. They were petrified of Corbyn,” he said.

The Lancashire-born billionair­e had another reason to be cheerful. He owns about a third of online investment platform Hargreaves Lansdown, whose shares rose 2.4pc on Friday, boosting the value of his fortune by $200m (€180m) to $4.5bn.

His wealthy peers also had a bumper day. In total, the 16 Britons on the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index, including Jim Ratcliffe and James Dyson, added about $2bn to their combined net worth. “I don’t need to celebrate — I’m just very, very happy with the result,” said John Caudwell, who founded Phones 4U, the mobile phone retailer. “If Labour had got a majority or there was a hung parliament, which wasn’t impossible, I would have been devastated. Far from celebratin­g, I would probably have been in a corner somewhere sobbing.”

That is exactly what some Corbyn fans were doing across town.

The mood was grim at the Three Compasses, a pub in Hackney where Labour supporters, mostly in their 20s and 30s, waited for the results with beer and burgers. There was a collective groan when it came and party veterans were ashen-faced.

“I’m devastated,” said Penny Wrout, a Labour member of Hackney Council. “I’m very fearful because this is the most right-wing Conservati­ve Party that I’ve known in my lifetime and I lived through Thatcher. It’s a catastroph­e.”

That sentiment is rare within financial circles. Many had come to believe a Corbyn victory would do even more damage to the British economy than a hard Brexit with no transition deal.

“Business in general will really appreciate the clarity,” said Jeremy Isaacs, founding partner of private equity firm JRJ Group. “Markets should react positively that the Corbyn risk is gone and we should see foreign direct investment flowing into the country.”

While Hargreaves had said he would stay in the UK no matter the result, many wealthy families based in Britain had made plans to relocate to more tax-friendly regimes such as Monaco or Switzerlan­d if Corbyn came to power.

Now those plans are gone, says John Elder, a founding partner of Family Office Advisors LLP, a

London-based firm that provides advice to wealthy families. He expects family offices will look for bargains in myriad asset classes in the UK, from property to stakes in companies. “There is political stability and clarity,” Elder said. “The UK is now an undervalue­d country to invest in for at least the next five years.”

The London property market in particular could see a boost, according to Liam Bailey, global head of research at Knight Frank.

“It will release a lot of pent-up demand in the market,” he said. “One group that may want to move on with things quite quickly are overseas buyers. With the pound rising, they’ll experience an erosion of their buying power, which may well encourage transactio­ns.” But he cautioned that Brexit would still hover above the market. It is not just foreign capital that might flow back into the British property market. Mark Stephen, the founder and managing director of Reditum Capital, a London-based real estate investment firm, said a major domestic pension fund is poised to place £50m to £100m to work in his fund now that the Tories have won control of parliament. Reditum plans to invest the fund in land earmarked for new housing developmen­ts north of London and in Newcastle. “They premised the investment on the result going the way it did, so hopefully we can wrap that up in the next year,” Stephen said.

Others money managers were more circumspec­t. Ever since the Brexit referendum was passed in June 2016, Seven Investment Management, an investment firm in London with £13bn in assets, had been weaning its portfolios off UK stocks and looking abroad to fill the gap. Now its portfolio managers will take a serious look at ramping up British equities, said Ben Kumar, an investment strategist with the firm.

But he is telling clients he remains cautious because after Brexit no one knows whether Johnson will succeed in negotiatin­g new free trade agreements with Brussels by December, and another with Washington.

“The problem with Boris is that he doesn’t care what he’s promised before, deadlines just go flying by, so will he get it done by December?” Kumar said. “The point is, uncertaint­y hasn’t gone away.”

As well as Brexit, Johnson has to deliver on his promises to “unleash the potential” of the economy. The government will have to commit significan­t resources to bolster the NHS, schools and other infrastruc­ture, said Amanda Staveley, founder of PCP Capital Partners. These are issues more commonly associated with Labour but that should not stop Johnson from embracing them, she said. “The country has entrusted him with this astonishin­g vote, and you’ve got to make sure the whole system works,” Staveley said.

Hargreaves is focusing on how the next stage of Brexit negotiatio­ns proceed now that Johnson has the biggest Tory majority since 1987, when Margaret Thatcher was prime minister.

“It’s like a game of poker,” he said. “You have a hand that you’ve got to play well.”

Still, the prevailing expectatio­n was that the new government’s mandate would restore some zip to an economy that has largely been in a holding pattern since 2016’S referendum.

Caudwell said now is the moment to make some big bets on the economy as a whole.

“There has definitely been a reluctance on my part to press buttons to further investment­s,” he said. “Now I can go full steam ahead.”

 ??  ?? Boris Johnson’s victory has been welcomed by Michael Spencer, below
Boris Johnson’s victory has been welcomed by Michael Spencer, below
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland