Daily Mail

BRITAIN’S RICHEST MAN is so secretive even his own receptioni­st hasn’t heard of him

- By Paul Bracchi and Tim Stewart Additional reporting: MARK BRANAGAN

Raised in a Preston semi, as a boy he could master the Rubik’s Cube in under a minute and tripled his granny’s birthday money in shipping shares. Today, he’s a hedge fund boss worth £14.3bn. So how HAS Michael Platt flown under the radar – in his Bombardier jet – for so long?

Ask anyone if they know who Michael Platt is and they will probably reply: ‘Michael Who?’ In fact, he’s the richest person in Britain.

But unlike, say, petrochemi­cals tycoon and Manchester United co- owner sir Jim Ratcliffe (£13.1 billion) and inventor James Dyson (£10.8 billion), who occupy second and third place in the Uk wealth league, Michael Platt has remained intriguing­ly under the radar.

Even the receptioni­st on the front desk of the glass-fronted skyscraper near Victoria station, where the London headquarte­rs of his hedge fund is based on the eighth floor, is blissfully unaware of him. His company, BlueCrest Capital Management, yes. But the boss himself, no.

The company website doesn’t even load and 56-year- old Platt doesn’t respond to emails.

Yet behind his relative anonymity and meteoric rise from middle- class roots in Preston, Lancashire, is a colourful and, at times, controvers­ial, storyline that culminated earlier this month in his inclusion (along with Ratcliffe and Dyson) in the top 200 of the Forbes’ annual list of the world’s most minted individual­s, with a fortune estimated at £14.3 billion.

How much will £14.3 billion buy you? Answer: a Chelsea penthouse with views of the London Eye and the shard (‘the most discreet and prestigiou­s’ address in Chelsea, to quote estate agents); a 3,000 sq ft apartment, with three roof terraces and private elevator, overlookin­g Central Park in New York; a flat on the waterfront in st Helier, Jersey; homes in swiss ski resort Verbier and Geneva; a 246 ft superyacht, a Bombardier Challenger jet; and a private modern art collection.

HIs parents, a proud and modest couple, were reluctant to accept any money from their son but former neighbours back in Preston told how he managed to persuade his mum, a keen golfer, to let him buy her a holiday lodge attached to a golf course near Leeds and, a few years ago, he got her tickets to the Masters in Augusta, Georgia.

Could the world Michael Platt grew-up in be further removed from the planet he now inhabits?

Unlike most hedge funds, which employ bold and innovative strategies to maximise profits for investors, BlueCrest has been turned into a personal investment vehicle for Platt, his senior partners and employees. There are no outside clients, in other words. ‘Essentiall­y, we have one client, which is Mike,’ a former BlueCrest portfolio manager was quoted as saying recently. ‘He’s the CEO, he’s the CIO [chief informatio­n officer].’

Hence the reason the divorced father of two is as rich as Croesus. It may also help explain why publicity-shy Platt — his last round of interviews took place more than a decade ago to promote an art show he was sponsoring which featured, incidental­ly, a lifesize wax gorilla nailed to a wooden cross — has escaped the full-glare of the media spotlight.

There have been a few notable exceptions, the first a little embarrassi­ng but inconseque­ntial, the

others more serious. In 2019, he was caught bragging about his wealth in the back of a New York yellow cab. The footage was recorded and went viral on Wall street. When asked by the taxi driver what he did for a living, Platt, dressed in a jacket and white dress shirt and in the company of a young woman he introduces as his girlfriend ‘Laetitia — ‘the love of my life’ — replies: ‘I’m the highest-earning person in the world of finance.’

‘You’re the highest what?’ asks

the cabbie. ‘I’m the highest-earning person in the world of finance,’ Platt repeats. ‘In the world.’

Ironic, really. When Platt and his BlueCrest co-founder William Reeves, a Yale graduate, were interviewe­d by the Times ahead of the company’s floatation in 2006, they refused to be photograph­ed under any circumstan­ces.

‘They guard their privacy fiercely and detest their regular appearance­s in newspaper rich lists,’ financial editor Patrick Hosking wrote. Platt insists the taxi video,

which was picked up by the TV networks, was a joke following ‘a good bottle of wine with a friend’, and says he was only obliging cabbie Manny Anzalota, known as the unofficial ‘cabbie to the stars’, who posts impromptu interviews with his passengers on social media and who has kept in touch with the billionair­e who ‘gave me the biggest tip of my life’.

Platt also appeared on screen in HBO drama Billions, currently showing on Paramount+, about the world of high finance in New

York starring Damian Lewis. In fact, Platt played himself, with an American accent, in episode one of season three, when he tells fellow high- rollers, gathered around a table at an Italian restaurant, that the main character (Bobby Axelrod played by Lewis) should ‘do as he pleases’ with his cash ‘otherwise what is the f*****g point’.

It is a philosophy that Platt has adopted away from the camera but which has got him into a spot of bother with the regulators more

recently. A year after the taxi bragging video made headlines, BlueCrest was ordered to pay $170 million (£137 million) by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to investors, one of the largest penalties imposed on a hedge fund by U.S. authoritie­s.

The SEC investigat­ion concluded that BlueCrest had ‘repeatedly failed to act’ in their best interests by ‘ transferri­ng its highestper­forming traders to a fund that benefited its own personnel to the detriment of its fund investors’.

The questionab­le tactics occurred more than a decade ago when BlueCrest was in the process of converting to a private investment partnershi­p which no longer managed external money.

The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority made similar allegation­s, handing out a £40.8 million fine to BlueCrest in 2021 ‘ for conflict of interest failings’, which the company denies and is challengin­g legally.

BlueCrest was in trouble again last year when the Court of Appeal ruled that its partners should be liable for income tax on a pay scheme dating back to 2008.

‘We are committed to pursuing those who use contrived arrangemen­ts to avoid paying their share of tax,’ HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) said in a statement at the time. For Platt, the publicity was uncomforta­ble but is unlikely to have caused him any lasting damage, either financiall­y or reputation­ally.

Apart from anything else, the City and Wall Street are awash with regulatory infringeme­nts and, more pertinentl­y perhaps, BlueCrest does not have external clients to worry about or impress.

His brushes with the regulators on both sides of the Pond and the taxman here in the UK represent the only real setbacks in an otherwise stellar career.

The only account of his early life in Preston — he was brought up in a 1930s semi on the outskirts of the town with his two sisters — is contained in the book, Hedge Fund Market Wizards: How Winning Traders Win, published in 2012. An entire chapter is devoted to Platt and provides a fascinatin­g insight into his formative years.

When he was a young boy, he said, he loved puzzles so his late father, a lecturer in civil engineerin­g at Manchester University, bought him a Rubik’s Cube.

Many people are unable to solve the geometric conundrum for love or money but he worked it out in 36 hours when ‘I could do it from any position in under one minute’.

Michael Platt was just ten at the time.

Aged 12, he would visit the house of his grandmothe­r, a serious investor in shares who taught him how to trade.

By 14, when he was a pupil at King Edward VII, an independen­t school in nearby Lytham St Annes, he had invested a £500 birthday gift from her in a shipping line that quickly tripled in price.

He was an avid reader of Investors’ Chronicle and knew ‘ every single stat on every single company’.

‘I can remember Michael well, walking down the street in his school uniform,’ said a neighbour. ‘I know he studied very hard at school. They were a lovely family.’

PLATT won a place at Imperial College London to study civil engineerin­g but switched after a year because he found the course boring, to read mathematic­s and economics at the London School of Economics.

He made up to £30,000 as an undergradu­ate investing in the newly privatised utilities — a fortune for a student at any time — but his stock lost half its value in a single day during the crash of October 1987.

Michael Platt says it was one of the few times he has ever been unsuccessf­ul.

J.P. Morgan hired him as a trainee in New York after he graduated and he quickly rose through the ranks with repeated promotions to become a managing director in London.

His personal life turned out to be less successful. His marriage to Helen Sanderson in 1995 produced two children but would later end in divorce.

BlueCrest Capital was establishe­d in 2000. The firm ended its first year with a 30 per cent return and $1 billion (nearly £800 million) in assets under management — almost nine times the money it had at the outset. Within a decade, it was employing more than 300 staff.

Asked what type of trader he likes to hire by the author of Hedge Fund Market Wizards, Jack Schwager, Platt told him: ‘I look for the type of guy in London who gets up at seven o’clock on Sunday morning when his kids are still in bed and logs on to a poker site so he can pick off the U.S. drunks coming home on Saturday night . . . that’s the type of guy you want — someone who understand­s an edge.’

Staff who perform at BlueCrest are famously well rewarded, but those who don’t are out.

‘It is Darwinism at its best,’ Platt once declared, claiming he was subject to the same ‘ no loss’ rules himself.

One of the star performers was Platt’s long- standing friend and protegee, Brazilian-born Leda Braga, a former J. P. Morgan colleague and Imperial College graduate, who is now the most powerful female hedge fund manager in the world.

Her business, Systematic­a Investment­s, has a base in Jersey like BlueCrest, which had a major stake in Systematic­a until last year.

Members of the financial community in the tax haven describe Platt as ‘ enigmatic’, a figure rarely seen and no one really knows how much time he spent in his apartment overlookin­g the marina in St Helier.

They know more about him in his home town, even though his mum Gail and late father Brian, immensely proud as they were of him, never talk about his success.

‘Michael gave his mother a big cheque one Christmas,’ recalled a friend. ‘But she didn’t want it. She said, “I don’t need it.” She is a very modest person.’

She never did cash the cheque. The trip to the Masters, mentioned earlier, epitomises this understate­d attitude. Mr Platt Snr told anyone who asked that it was a ‘business contact’, not his billionair­e son, who had got them the tickets for the world’s premier golf tournament and ‘some of the best seats’ on the Augusta National course.

Platt’s own son Marcus, who is in his mid-20s, is now following in his father’s footsteps. He recently joined BlueCrest.

‘ You deserve this new opportunit­y,’ Platt proudly posted on LinkedIn. ‘I wish you the best of luck but I don’t expect you will need luck!’

Outside the City, Platt, who has donated at least £225,000 to the Conservati­ve Party, is a lover of contempora­ry art and has ploughed millions into a private art fund with well-known gallerist Joe La Placa.

They once had a showroom in the crypt of a deconsecra­ted church near Regent’s Park where they displayed controvers­ial works such as that wax gorilla nailed to a wooden cross — intended to represent the desecratio­n of nature — a black Christ in an electric chair, the levitation of John the Baptist and a Japanese girl riding a walrus.

A former girlfriend is ceramic sculptor Fiamma Montagu, who produced the acclaimed installati­on of 888,246 ceramic poppies at the Tower of London to commemorat­e the centenary of World War I.

WHAT was it like to date the richest man in Britain? Ms Montagu didn’t respond to our request for an interview, so we can’t tell you.

But few women have the opportunit­y to be whisked around in a Bombardier Challenger private jet.

Actually, that particular plane, with a price tag of around £20 million, has now reportedly been sold, along with his superyacht (around £120 million), which had six staterooms, a sky lounge with bar, massage room and cinema.

Platt is now planning to have an even bigger boat built — 360ftlong, apparently.

But, as he said playing himself in the TV drama Billions, if you can’t ‘do as you please’ with your money ‘what is the f*****g point’.

Unlike his ‘toys’, though, Michael Platt has somehow managed to remain inconspicu­ous. And that’s the way he likes it.

 ?? ?? Best view in the Big Apple: Michael Platt’s New York apartment and, right, his superyacht which he put up for sale for £120 million
Best view in the Big Apple: Michael Platt’s New York apartment and, right, his superyacht which he put up for sale for £120 million
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 ?? ?? Sky’s the limit: Michael Platt and high flying protegee Leda Braga
Sky’s the limit: Michael Platt and high flying protegee Leda Braga

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