The Citizen (Gauteng)

UK ‘Oracle’ goes belly up

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London – The spectacula­r fall from grace of Britain’s star investor, Neil Woodford, has tarnished the reputation of London’s City finance district and hurt market confidence, according to analysts.

Few commentato­rs imagined that Woodford Investment Management, which once boasted billions of pounds in assets under management, would spectacula­rly collapse this month, having taken on too much risk.

The group’s flagship Equity Income Fund was suspended in June to stop it haemorrhag­ing cash.

Woodford was then forced to quit and liquidate the fund on October 15.

One day later, Woodford quit his two other funds in what he described as a “highly painful decision” – and added that the whole business would be wound up.

The news has sparked big losses for Woodford’s customers, who include pension funds, wealthy individual­s and other fund managers.

“We have seen the complete demise of the most famous fund manager the UK has seen for years,” Adrian Lowcock, head of personal investing at brokerage Willis Owen, said in a statement.

“Investors knew the scenario was bad but the indication from Woodford thus far had been that the [Equity Income] fund would reopen,” Lowcock said.

“This collapse will shake the funds industry to its core.”

Woodford, 59, forged his name as the nation’s top stockpicke­r in a glittering 30-year career in the asset management business, most of which was at investment manager Invesco Perpetual.

He had been regarded as a safe pair of hands after reportedly guiding his funds away from the dotcom bubble crisis in the early 2000s, successful­ly backing traditiona­l stocks like tobacco instead of technology.

The outspoken Woodford – nicknamed “Britain’s Warren Buffett” by media after the legendary US investment guru – also carved out a reputation as an activist investor willing to hold company CEOs to account.

In 2014, Woodford establishe­d his Woodford Investment Management in an industrial estate on the outskirts of Oxford, which earned him the new moniker, the “Oracle of Oxford”.

At its peak in 2017, the business had total assets of £14 billion ($17.9 billion) under management.

Yet, five years later, the business model hit the rocks as a series of disastrous investment­s turned sour.

In particular, Woodford had ploughed cash into a number of unlisted healthcare and technology companies, as well as poor stock market bets.

As more and more investors started asking for their money back, Woodford encountere­d difficulty raising sufficient cash quickly enough.

The Financial Times described Woodford as Europe’s biggest investment scandal for a decade, labelling him the star fund manager who fell to earth. –

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