Bangkok Post

OUT OF THE SHADOWS

- JEAN-BAPTISTE OUBRIER

A reclusive tycoon is under scrutiny after being declared Britain’s richest man.

LONDON: Reclusive titan of industry Jim Ratcliffe has found himself under unusual scrutiny after being declared Britain’s richest man, with his political leanings and tax affairs coming under the microscope.

The 65-year-old head of the Ineos chemicals group has assets worth an estimated £21 billion ($26.7 billion), putting him top of the 2018 Sunday Times rich list.

He was only 18th on last year’s list but the value of his company, of which he owns 60%, soared last year, propelling him up the ranks and earning him a knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II.

It is a long way from his humble beginnings, growing up in social housing in Manchester, northern England.

After earning a chemistry degree from the University of Birmingham and an MBA from the London Business School, Ratcliffe began a 40-year career in the business world at investment company Advent Internatio­nal Corp before creating Ineos in 1998.

The company went on to become an industrial juggernaut in a country increasing­ly dominated by the service sector.

The group now has annual sales of $60 billion and employs over 18,000 people in 24 countries.

Chemicals manufactur­ed by Ineos are found in various everyday products, from shower gel to medication.

Ineos grew through acquisitio­ns, including the $9 billion purchase of petrochemi­cal group Innovene Inc, a subsidiary of BP Plc.

He acquired the giant Grangemout­h refinery in Scotland as part of the deal,

where he was soon plunged into battle with unions.

The group’s tactics have led to accusation­s of asset stripping, but Ratcliffe told the BBC’s HARDtalk programme in 2016 that it merely pursued “management with more cost effectiven­ess”.

Ratcliffe is also a strong advocate of shale gas, organising in late 2016 the arrival from the United States of the first cargo destined for Britain.

The entreprene­ur even tried his luck finding reserves at home, but progress has been slow in a country reluctant to embrace the shale revolution.

Ratcliffe has continued to diversify his group, entering into the automotive sector with the aim of building the successor to the rugged Land Rover Defender car.

The group will decide in the coming months whether assembly will take place in Britain or on the continent.

The marathon-running entreprene­ur has also invested in the Belstaff motorcycle­clothing specialist and Swiss football club FC Lausanne, despite being a Manchester United fan.

Despite his success, Ratcliffe has longremain­ed a “secret” and “lonely” character, earning nicknames such as “JR” — in reference to manipulati­ve oil baron in the US TV saga Dallas — and James Bond villain “Dr No”, according to a 2014 Financial Times profile.

Privacy is also a hallmark of his Ineos

group, which is not listed on the stock exchange and therefore has no obligation to disclose its accounts.

However, the businessma­n has made his views known on the thorny issue of Brexit, coming out as one of the few bosses to support the move to leave the European Union, like fellow entreprene­ur James Dyson.

“The Brits are perfectly capable of managing the Brits and don’t need Brussels telling them how to manage things,” he told the Sunday Times a year before the June 2016 referendum.

Despite his professed patriotism, Ratcliffe has shifted his fortune to Monaco, according to British media, taking advantage of the principali­ty’s generous tax regime.

The move put him in the sights of pro-EU politician­s, who accused him of hypocrisy.

“It’s strange for someone who presents themselves as highly patriotic and has been given honours to move to a notorious tax haven,” Liberal Democrat leader Vince Cable told the Times. “It’s unfortunat­e that when we make a song and dance about a national hero who’s investing in the UK, they disappear to Monaco.”

Tax concerns had already led him to relocate the headquarte­rs of his company to Switzerlan­d in 2010, before returning to London in 2016, saying he wanted to demonstrat­e his confidence in Britain’s post-Brexit economy.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Jim Ratcliffe poses for a portrait with the Canary Wharf financial district in the background, ahead of a news conference announcing the launch of a British America’s Cup sailing team in London on April 26, 2018.
REUTERS Jim Ratcliffe poses for a portrait with the Canary Wharf financial district in the background, ahead of a news conference announcing the launch of a British America’s Cup sailing team in London on April 26, 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand