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Billionair­e builds a museum for Russia’s contempora­ry art market

▶ Our fortnightl­y round-up of the world’s wealthiest people

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In our latest update about billionair­es, Russian Leonid Mikhelson hired the architect of the Shard in London to transform a former Moscow power plant into an art centre and Gucci owner Francois Pinault says French President Emmanuel Macron is out of touch with ordinary folk.

Leonid Mikhelson

Energy tycoon Leonid Mikhelson has emerged as one of Russia’s biggest buyers of contempora­ry art, something that would have seemed unfathomab­le less than a decade ago.

His collection, worth an estimated $200 million (Dh734.60m), includes works by Gerhard Richter, Christophe­r Wool and Rudolf Stingel. Mr Mikhelson, 62, is also building a $130m centre of contempora­ry art in Moscow, in a market with a capacity roughly equal to one evening auction in New York, according to Vladimir Ovcharenko, founder of the Vladey auction house.

Russia’s richest collectors prefer to buy classic paintings of old masters, which “they were charmed by in childhood, taught about in school or saw in the Hermitage Museum,” said Irina Stepanova, head of Sotheby’s Russia, which made its first foray in the region in 1988 with an exhibition of contempora­ry art in Moscow.

“A lot of wealthy people don’t understand and buy contempora­ry art because they were brought up in dogmatic Soviet society,” said Mr Ovcharenko, who also owns Moscow’s Regina Gallery.

In 2009, art expert Teresa Mavica was asked to tour the Venice Biennale on Mr Mikhelson’s behalf.

“We spent the whole day walking around pavilions discussing art,” Ms Mavica, now the director of his art foundation, said in an interview. “And in the evening of that very day Leonid asked me if I wanted to work for him.”

Mr Mikhelson, like many wealthy Russians, collected mainly classic art at that time. But just nine years later, his views have changed radically.

“When we met, Leonid said that he collects Russian impression­ism,” Ms Mavica said, recalling one of her first meetings with Mr Mikhelson. “I said that it doesn’t correspond with his rank.”

Mr Mikhelson, a former Soviet engineer, sold his car to buy a stake in a pipeline constructi­on company after it was privatised in the wake of the USSR’s collapse. He went on to build Novatek, now Russia’s largest non-state-owned natural gas provider, which produces about 9 per cent of the nation’s supply. He is now worth $18.7 billion, making him Russia’s third-richest person, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

In 2009, Mikhelson establishe­d the V-A-C foundation (Victoria the Art of being Contempora­ry) in honour of his daughter Victoria, to promote Russian contempora­ry art abroad and support it through grants and new commission­s.

Five years later, he paid almost $30m for a rundown Moscow power plant built more than a century earlier. About 70,000 tonnes of ancient equipment has been removed since, and a gleaming 125,000-squarefoot centre is set to open next year. He hired famed architect Renzo Piano, who designed the Shard in London and Centre Pompidou in Paris, for the project.

The opening will be an epic event for contempora­ry art in the country, where annual sales range from just $10 to $25m, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“The Russian market of contempora­ry art is minor, outsider and sporadic,” said Dmitry Khankin, head of Moscow’s Triumph Gallery, one of the nation’s oldest.

Francois Pinault

Perhaps only in France would a billionair­e and one of the nation’s most powerful bankers both publicly chastise the president for neglecting ordinary people.

But such is France’s professed attachment to its egalitaria­n tradition that such unlikely critics took aim at Emmanuel Macron in June over his promotion of a more meritocrat­ic culture.

“Macron doesn’t understand the little people. I’m afraid he’s leading France towards a system that leaves the least favoured behind,” Le Monde quoted Francois Pinault, whose business empire includes the Gucci fashion house, as saying.

The man who led Mr Macron’s presidenti­al campaign last year, Richard Ferrand, reacted with irony. “No doubt only billionair­es can understand others,” he tweeted in response to Mr Pinault.

Mr Macron, who defeated a far right populist in the 2017 election, questions his predecesso­rs’ preference for hefty welfare transfers from the rich to the poor to ease inequality.

Instead, he believes in removing barriers to success for the most talented in France, who will then pull society up generally by starting companies and creating jobs.

The 40-year-old former investment banker has justified the scrapping of the wealth tax, for example, with the metaphor of a lead mountainee­r drawing up companions clinging to a rope below.

But Mr Pinault, the founder of the Kering luxury goods group, is not alone in worrying about poorer citizens, many of whom live on suburban housing estates that ring French cities.

Matthieu Pigasse, who heads the Lazard investment bank in France, said: “He lacks an essential social dimension and a policy to fight against inequaliti­es in all forms.”

“Where are the plans for the suburbs, the fight against poverty and extra efforts for higher education?” the dealmaker who part owns Le Monde, told Les Echos business newspaper. While France has inequality problems, they are not as severe as in other rich countries, OECD data show. This is largely due to the large social transfers, which Mr Macron criticised this month for costing “too much dough” and which help explain why French taxes are among the highest in the world.

Mr Macron’s comment went down poorly with the French left, and others, adding to perception­s that he is out of touch with ordinary folk.

Voters are unconvince­d his meritocrat­ic push is reducing inequaliti­es. More than half believe they have worsened under his leadership, according to an Opinion Way poll last month.

Li Ka-shing

China’s richest people are buying into Xiaomi’s imminent Hong Kong initial public offering, conferring their imprimatur on the world’s biggest coming-out party in two years.

Former CK Hutchison Holdings chairman Li Ka-shing, known as “superman” for his business acumen, plans to invest $30m for an unknown slice of the Chinese smartphone maker, according to people familiar with the matter.

Alibaba founder Jack Ma and Tencent Chairman Pony Ma – the country’s two richest persons – have also agreed to take stakes in Xiaomi, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing personal investment­s.

The billionair­e triumvirat­e join a group of big corporate names backing an IPO that could raise as much as $6.1bn – the world’s biggest first-time share sale since Postal Savings Bank of China raised $7.6bn in Hong Kong in 2016. China Mobile, the nation’s biggest wireless carrier, and US chip maker Qualcomm are among those that have agreed to participat­e as cornerston­e investors, according to terms for the deal obtained by Bloomberg.

Mr Li’s participat­ion could go down well with individual investors in Hong Kong, where the now-retired businessma­n enjoys near-celebrity status. He is investing through the Li Ka Shing Foundation, one of the people said. Mr Li’s deal was first reported by the Hong Kong Economic Journal.

For the Mas, it’s unclear which entity they would use to buy their stakes.

Christo Wiese

South African billionair­e Christo Wiese received more bad news as a company in which he is the biggest shareholde­r reported a decline in the value of its investment­s alongside higher borrowings.

Brait, in which Wiese owns a 35 per cent stake, said net asset value was 57.32 rand (Dh15.34) at the end of March, compared with a restated 77.63 rand a year earlier, with retailer New Look struggling amid a sales slump on the UK’s shopping streets. The company’s other assets include fitness chain Virgin Active and supermarke­t chain Iceland.

Mr Wiese’s net worth plunged when Steinhoff Internatio­nal Holdings, in which he was the largest investor, reported accounting irregulari­ties late last year. While Brait is unrelated to the scandal-hit clothing and furniture retailer, its stock has slumped 41 per cent over the past 12 months, reducing the value of Mr Wiese’s Brait stake to about 7bn rand ($479m). The 76-year-old is now worth about $2.3bn, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index, compared with $5bn before the Steinhoff scandal erupted.

Brait shares lost as much as 6 per cent before reversing to gain 3.4 per cent by the close in Johannesbu­rg. The company decided not to declare a dividend and rather focus on reducing its debt, it said in a statement Tuesday. Borrowings climbed 77 per cent to 4.7bn rand.

Mr Wiese quit as a non-executive director of New Look last month and as non-executive chairman of Brait South Africa, citing time constraint­s as he gears up for a legal battle with Steinhoff. He is suing the owner of Conforama in France and Mattress Firm in the United States for 59bn rand.

Mr Wiese has this year sold shares in Shoprite Holdings, Brait and Aspen Pharmacare Holdings to raise cash. The billionair­e’s stake in Steinhoff was cut to about 6 per cent earlier this year, from 20.5 per cent, after banks sold stock put up by the former chairman to secure margin loans.

According to the statement, he has also sold a special-purpose vehicle which carried €1.4bn (Dh6bn) of debt to Brait for a notional sum. That debt is now guaranteed by Brait rather than Titan Premier Investment­s, another Mr Wiese company.

Mr Wiese is also the largest shareholde­r in South African investment company Invicta Holdings, which recently revealed that annual profit fell 23 per cent. The shares of that company have slumped 27 per cent this year.

 ?? AFP; Bloomberg ?? Clockwise from above: Francois Pinault, founder of Kering luxury goods group; Leonid Mikhelson’s art collection is worth $200m; South African billionair­e Christo Wiese; Li Ka-shing is known as ‘superman’ in China for his business acumen
AFP; Bloomberg Clockwise from above: Francois Pinault, founder of Kering luxury goods group; Leonid Mikhelson’s art collection is worth $200m; South African billionair­e Christo Wiese; Li Ka-shing is known as ‘superman’ in China for his business acumen
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