The Guardian (USA)

Prince Andrew held investment­s in shell company set up to keep holdings secret

- Rob Evans and David Pegg

Prince Andrew held his shareholdi­ngs through a government-backed shell company that wascreated to conceal royal investment­s from public scrutiny.

The prince was among at least five members of the royal family who used the shell company Bank of England Nominees, which was set up in the 1970s to prevent the“embarrassi­ng” public disclosure of Queen Elizabeth II’s investment­s.

The monarch successful­ly lobbied the government to alter a draft law in order to permit the Windsors to hide the size and value of their shareholdi­ngs from the public. The shell company operated for more than 30 years.

The Guardian has establishe­d that the queen was not the only royal to use the facility. Her sister Princess Margaret, her husband Prince Philip, and her children Charles and Andrew also held shares via Bank of England Nominees.

Andrew’s use of the shell company, which has not previously been reported, is significan­t becausehe was a government “special trade envoy” at the same time. Through this role he would have had access to commercial­ly sensitive informatio­n.

Transparen­cy rules designed to expose potential conflicts of interest require government ministers and members of parliament to publicly declare any significan­t shares they own.

However, the royals are not subject to similar rules. There is no suggestion Andrew used commercial informatio­n improperly, but the concealmen­t of his investment­s raises questions about government oversight of potential conflicts of interest.

In 1973, a proposed bill to make company shareholdi­ngs more transparen­t would haveenable­d public scrutiny of the queen’s finances. Archived documents revealed that the queen’s personal lawyer “took fright” at the proposal and warned the government that the monarch did not want the public to discover what shares she owned because that would be “embarrassi­ng”.

The palace secretly lobbied the government to “find a way out” of the quandary. The solution involved a clause quietly introduced into the legislatio­n that allowed the government to exempt specific companies from the requiremen­t to declare the identities of certain categories of shareholde­rs, such as heads of state, foreign government­s and internatio­nal organisati­ons.

That, in turn, paved the way for Bank of England Nominees, the shell company set up in 1977. For more than three decades, the scheme preventedt­he public from being able to detect which of the shares owned by the shell company were held specifical­ly on behalf of the British monarch or her family, as opposed to other heads of state or foreign government officials.

New documents obtained by the Guardian show the scheme was wound up in 2011 by the government after Whitehall officials described it as “anachronis­tic” and “difficult to defend”.

The Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy disclosed the documents only after a twoyear delay following the threat of legal action by the freedom of informatio­n watchdog, the informatio­n commission­er.

They show that between 2006 and 2010,the shell company was used by Andrew and the queen to hold their shares.

At the time, Andrew was the government’s trade envoy, tasked with promoting UK business interests abroad.

He stepped down in 2011 after a series of revelation­s about his close links with unsavoury businessme­n, including the American billionair­e Jeffrey Epstein, and foreign dictators.

His suitabilit­y for the post was questioned after it was disclosed that he had taken a holiday with a Libyan gun smuggler, criticised a Serious Fraud Office investigat­ion into corruption involving the arms giant BAE, and lunched at Buckingham Palace with a leading member of the deposed Tunisian dictatorsh­ip.

Rose Whiffen, senior researcher for anti-corruption campaign group Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, said of the Guardian’s revelation that Andrew used the shell company to mask his investment­s: “Trade envoys are privy to insider knowledge, which is why transparen­cy is key to reveal potential conflicts of interest so that they may be properly addressed.”

A palace spokespers­on said: “We would not comment on private investment­s of members of the royal family. They are managed by independen­t investment managers without the dayto-day involvemen­t of members of the royal family.”

Charles and Prince Philip stopped using the shell company in 2007 and 2008 respective­ly. The Queen’s sister,

Margaret, had also used the scheme, as did the financial specialist­s who managed her estate after her death in 2002.

The documents do not specify which shares were held by each of the royals, nor their value.

In 2011, Vince Cable, the then business secretary, scrapped the scheme. Before he did so, his officials advised him to call the queen’s most senior adviser. An official wrote: “We understand that members of the royal family still have shareholdi­ngs in UK public companies and unless they and all those who have an interest in them are specifical­ly exempted, these shareholdi­ngs would now need to be made public if the companies concerned asked for details of beneficial ownership.

“It is not clear whether advisers to the royal family are aware of the removal of the exemption, or understand the implicatio­ns.”

It is not known how the royal family responded to the closure of the shell company to continue keeping secret their shareholdi­ngs. The spokespers­on said that their private financial arrangemen­ts “remain private as they would for any other individual”.

 ?? Composite: Guardian Design/AP/Getty Images/Shuttersto­ck ??
Composite: Guardian Design/AP/Getty Images/Shuttersto­ck
 ?? Photograph: Dave Gadd/Sportsphot­o Ltd./Allstar ?? Prince Andrew, pictured in 1998 when he was the government’s trade envoy, tasked with promoting UK business interests abroad.
Photograph: Dave Gadd/Sportsphot­o Ltd./Allstar Prince Andrew, pictured in 1998 when he was the government’s trade envoy, tasked with promoting UK business interests abroad.

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