Daily Mail

LSE comes clean on departure of Rolet

- by Victoria Ibitoye

THe stand- off between investors and the board of the London Stock exchange is set to escalate as directors prepare to publish evidence they say shows outgoing boss Xavier Rolet was overly domineerin­g.

Board members are reportedly considerin­g whether to fend off a shareholde­r revolt over his surprise departure with emails revealing a dismissive, overbearin­g manner.

A five-man committee is preparing a dossier outlining his run-ins with executives and directors over the past two years to quash rumours that the chief executive was forced out unfairly.

Rolet announced he would be stepping down last month. At the time, both sides said it was an amicable decision and Rolet would leave by the end of 2018.

But senior investors called on the board to explain why he was off, given his assurance months earlier that he would be staying.

one top-ten shareholde­r claimed Rolet, 58, had said his retirement was ‘postponed’ and he was ‘back in the seat’ at an investor meeting in June – four months before he decided to quit.

Another shareholde­r at the open day said Rolet had reiterated his commitment to the LSe six weeks after being put forward for reelection as chief executive – garnering 99.5pc of investor support.

Sir Chris Hohn, founder of The Children’s Investment Fund, sent an explosive letter to LSe chairman Donald Brydon demanding that he explain why Rolet was leaving – and even suggested Brydon had forced him out.

Sir Chris used his 5pc holding in the LSe to force it to call a shareholde­r meeting before Christmas to vote on whether Brydon himself should be sacked and Rolet reinstalle­d.

But LSe directors are fighting back, with one person close to the board saying there had been ‘an accumulati­on’ of incidents in which Rolet clashed with them.

The board committee, led by Paul Heiden, a senior non-executive director, is considerin­g publishing emails sent by Rolet. To maintain his independen­ce, Brydon is not on the committee.

one associate said Rolet was ‘a passionate, opinionate­d person’, adding: ‘If he differs from you he will end up doing what he wants.’

A source close to the LSe said: ‘ The facts, not the opinions around this issue, will be set out.’

Rolet has run the LSe for more than eight years, and is credited with changing it from an £800m business to one worth £14bn.

But his star fell after his attempt to sell the LSe to Deutsche Börse was blocked by the eU in March.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom