Botswana Guardian

Oppenheime­r family taps Asia’s wealthy

-

The family office for Nicky Oppenheime­r and his son, Jonathan, has set up an outpost in Singapore to boost its Asia exposure and partner with the region’s wealthy.

Edoardo Collevecch­io, the former chief of staff for Oppenheime­r Generation­s, is moving from London to build and lead its team in Singapore, while Yi Ling Ong joins from Temasek Holdings as head of investment for the Asia unit, the company said in a statement. The investment firm, which represents a branch of the dynasty that founded mining giant Anglo American and turned De Beers into the world’s largest diamond producer, said it hopes a presence in the city- state will help drive investment­s between Asia and its home market of Africa. “Over the next 20 or 30 years, the synergies between Africa and Asia are going to be substantia­l,” Collevecch­io said in an interview. “We want to be here at the start of that journey.” The Oppenheime­r family has a combined net worth of $ 8.2bn, largely through the 2012 sale of their stake in De Beers for about $ 5bn, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. The Oppenheime­rs join a growing number of billionair­es turning to Singapore as fortunes surge across Asia. Google co- founder Sergey Brin and vacuum- cleaner billionair­e James Dyson have both set up investment firms to manage their wealth in the city- state, known for its high standard of living, political stability and plethora of tax treaties. Bridgewate­r Associates’ Ray Dalio also signalled in 2020 he would open a family office there to run his investment­s and philanthro­py in the region. The number of family offices in Singapore rose fivefold between 2017 and 2019, according to government data. “We look forward to deepening relationsh­ips with like- minded partners,” Jonathan Oppenheime­r, the family office’s executive chair, said in the statement.

The Oppenheime­rs trace their fortune to the 1917 formation of Anglo American in SA. The firm later took control of De Beers, where Nicky Oppenheime­r was chair from 1998 to 2012. Oppenheime­r Generation­s, which was created after Anglo American bought the family’s 40percent stake in the diamond firm, now has more than two dozen employees in SA, the UK and Jersey, according to LinkedIn data. Its other investment­s include Tana Africa Capital, a private- equity joint venture set up a decade ago with Temasek to invest in African companies.

“This is an incredibly exciting challenge,” Collevecch­io said about Asia. “We see so much potential.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Botswana