Difference between revisions of "Crispin Odey"

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'''Crispin Odey''' is a London-based [[hedge fund]] manager and the founding partner of [https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/OC302585 Odey Asset Management.] In April 2011 the firm had $6.5 to $7 billion under management, with Odey personally running $4 billion of assets. According to [[Bloomberg]] in November 2017, he is "known for his bearish outlook" on the markets. According to ''The Sunday Times Rich List in 2020'', Odey and his wife [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nichola_Pease Nichola Pease] were worth £825 million.
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'''Crispin Odey''' is a London-based [[hedge fund]] manager and the founding partner of [https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/OC302585 Odey Asset Management.] In April 2011 the firm had $6.5 to $7 billion under management, with Odey personally running $4 billion of assets. According to [[Bloomberg]] in November 2017, he is "known for his bearish outlook" on the markets. According to ''The Sunday Times Rich List in 2020'', Odey and his wife [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nichola_Pease Nichola Pease] were worth £825 million.<ref>''[https://www.theguardian.com/business/2007/sep/02/7 "Short on hope and long on growth"]''</ref>
  
[[Electoral Commission]] records show that Crispin Odey, who once employed Chancellor [[Kwasi Kwarteng]] as a consultant, has donated more than £350,000 to the [[Conservative Party]]. On 27 September 2022, following [[Kwasi Kwarteng]]'s mini-budget and the steep decline in the value of sterling, [https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/OC302585 Odey Asset Management’s] European [[hedge fund]] was up about 145 per cent after Crispin Odey’s firm bet against the pound and government bonds in the gilts market.<ref>''[https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/tory-donor-and-liz-truss-backers-among-hedge-funders-profiting-from-pound-fall/ar-AA12jNSL?li=AAwnS0s "People profiting from fall of pound include Tory donor and 'Liz Truss backers'"]''</ref>
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[[Electoral Commission]] records show that Crispin Odey, who once employed Chancellor [[Kwasi Kwarteng]] as a consultant, has donated more than £350,000 to the [[Conservative Party]].<ref>''[https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/kwasi-kwarteng-crispin-odey-government-bonds-profit/ "Crispin Odey: How Kwarteng’s ex-boss is cashing in on cost-of-living crisis"]''</ref> On 27 September 2022, following [[Kwasi Kwarteng]]'s mini-budget and the steep decline in the value of sterling, [https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/OC302585 Odey Asset Management’s] European [[hedge fund]] was up about 145 per cent after Crispin Odey’s firm bet against the pound and government bonds in the gilts market.<ref>''[ "People profiting from fall of pound include Tory donor and 'Liz Truss backers'"]''</ref>
  
 
Crispin Odey dismissed the idea that he had any kind of trading advantage because [[Kwasi Kwarteng]] previously worked for his firm:{{QB|“There’s a mad idea that one’s behind every twist and turn,” he said. “All I can do is catch the wind now and again.”<ref>''[https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/tory-donor-profit-pound-sterling-b2176258.html "Tory donor makes huge profits from falling pound"]''</ref>}}
 
Crispin Odey dismissed the idea that he had any kind of trading advantage because [[Kwasi Kwarteng]] previously worked for his firm:{{QB|“There’s a mad idea that one’s behind every twist and turn,” he said. “All I can do is catch the wind now and again.”<ref>''[https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/tory-donor-profit-pound-sterling-b2176258.html "Tory donor makes huge profits from falling pound"]''</ref>}}
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In June 2023, Crispin Odey decided to resign from [https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/OC302585 Odey Asset Management] following a ''[[Financial Times]]'' report that 13 women accused him of sexual harassment or assault over 25 years. Mr Odey strenuously denied the claims and told the ''[[FT]]'' they were "rubbish".<ref>''[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-65866895 "Crispin Odey: City boss quits firm after sexual misconduct claims"]''</ref>
  
 
==Background==
 
==Background==

Latest revision as of 20:45, 10 June 2023

Person.png Crispin Odey  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(hedge fund manager)
Crispin Odey.jpg
BornRobin Crispin William Odey
January 1959
Alma materChrist Church (Oxford)

Crispin Odey is a London-based hedge fund manager and the founding partner of Odey Asset Management. In April 2011 the firm had $6.5 to $7 billion under management, with Odey personally running $4 billion of assets. According to Bloomberg in November 2017, he is "known for his bearish outlook" on the markets. According to The Sunday Times Rich List in 2020, Odey and his wife Nichola Pease were worth £825 million.[1]

Electoral Commission records show that Crispin Odey, who once employed Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng as a consultant, has donated more than £350,000 to the Conservative Party.[2] On 27 September 2022, following Kwasi Kwarteng's mini-budget and the steep decline in the value of sterling, Odey Asset Management’s European hedge fund was up about 145 per cent after Crispin Odey’s firm bet against the pound and government bonds in the gilts market.[3]

Crispin Odey dismissed the idea that he had any kind of trading advantage because Kwasi Kwarteng previously worked for his firm:

“There’s a mad idea that one’s behind every twist and turn,” he said. “All I can do is catch the wind now and again.”[4]

In June 2023, Crispin Odey decided to resign from Odey Asset Management following a Financial Times report that 13 women accused him of sexual harassment or assault over 25 years. Mr Odey strenuously denied the claims and told the FT they were "rubbish".[5]

Background

Crispin Odey was born in East Yorkshire, the only son of (George) Richard Odey. His father was from a family of Yorkshire industrialists, and his grandfather George Odey, "a formidable bully", had been the Conservative MP for Beverley. His mother was from the Clitherow family. In 1980, his sister Caroline married the Hon. Henry David Montgomery, the son of David Montgomery, 2nd Viscount Montgomery of Alamein and (heir apparent to the viscountcy). They have three children.

He was educated at Harrow School, where his father had been head boy, and graduated from Christ Church, Oxford in 1980 with a degree in history and economics. Soon after graduation, he found out that his father had huge debts, and the trustees made him responsible for Hotham Hall, a 4,000-acre estate that had been in his mother's family since 1720. Aged 23, he sold everything. According to Odey, his father was a "wastrel from beginning to end", and survived on handouts from his son.

Career

After graduation, Odey qualified as a barrister but instead of taking up a legal career, he joined Framlington fund managers, and then left to work for Barings International, where he managed the Baring European Growth Trust. He ran continental European pension funds at Framlington and Barings.

Odey founded Odey Asset Management in 1991. George Soros was one of the original investors, seeding Odey $150 million. Odey suffered large losses in 1994 when the Federal Reserve unexpectedly lifted interest rates (one of his funds lost 44 per cent of its value), but went on to thrive, for instance by foreseeing that the value of insurers would rise after the September 11 attacks on New York in 2001. Through the early part of the 2000s, Odey worked closely with Hugh Hendry, whom he had recruited and who ran Odey's top performing Continental Europe Fund. Hendry left in 2005 to establish Eclectica Asset Management. In reference to Hendry, Odey himself said: "Odey in the 1990s was a one-man band; Odey in the 2000s was a two-man band".

According to The New York Times, Odey "came to prominence during the 2008 financial crisis when he shorted banking shares, a lucrative wager that helped him to earn almost £28 million that year". That year his return was 54.8 per cent. He had been bearish about the position of banks for a number of years, shorting Bradford & Bingley as early as 2005, questioning the German landesbanks and warning consistently about the dangers of debt and inflated house prices. He continued his short positions into early 2009 but in April took longer positions as he predicted the market rally of that year. The Times newspaper selected Odey as a "Business Big Shot" in 2008.

In May 2009, Odey attracted some controversy for saying in The Times that he would leave the country to avoid paying 50% income tax. He was at the centre of further controversy in 2009 when it was suggested that he financially backed anti-EU campaigners in the Irish referendum on the Lisbon Treaty while some hedge funds had taken out specific bets on the insolvency of the country in the event that the vote not be carried. The Treaty passed by a margin of 67.1 per cent to 32.9 per cent. In faxes sent to RTÉ and TV3, Odey denied that he had funded the Libertas 'no' campaign.

In May 2010, Odey Asset Management formed a new investment management firm with Geneva's Bruellan Wealth Management called Odey Bruellan. [Odey Asset Management's Odey European Inc. fund was ranked No. 5 on Bloomberg's 2012 list of the 100 Top-Performing Large Hedge Funds.

In 2016, it was reported that Odey saw his personal fortune plummet by £200 million after profits at Odey Asset Management suffered a significant decline. His salary was slashed because profits were down nearly 45% from the previous year.

In 2016, Odey was a "prominent" backer of Brexit, arguing it would allow the UK to govern itself. Later that year, his hedge fund won about 15% of its value following the results of the Brexit referendum. He told the BBC on the morning of the result that he had made £220 million speculating that the markets would fall, saying "'Il mattino ha l'oro in bocca' – the morning has gold in its mouth". Overall, his flagship fund made losses of almost 50 percent in 2016, and in 2016, and the firm's operating profits dropped from 44.3 million pounds to 18.6 million pounds.

In June 2017, the Daily Telegraph reported that his fund had profited from the drop in the value of the pound that resulted from a hung parliament. In August 2017, he remained an investor in Sky. After initially backing the Fox bid for Sky, in November 2017, he opposed the bid, after Sky's financial results proved "better than people forecast."

Assets under management at the fund dropped from $11.7 billion at the start of 2015, to $5.5 billion in September 2017. Also, funds in his flagship fund, Odey European, fell from €2.5 billion at the start of 2015 to €184 million. The Financial Times chalked the losses in part to "poorly timed" trades. On 5 January 2018, The New York Times reported that Odey Asset Management had lost more than a fifth of its value in 2017, dropping around 20.5 percent.

The New York Times reported that Odey's fund's "performance has suffered heavily after he took a negative stance on the outlook for the global economy and bearish positions against shares that have not borne fruit." He had also made "bets against the Fed", explaining to his clients that "it would certainly be simpler to follow the market. But then we would be ignoring the fundamental data". He had also assumed there would be a crash resulting from high interest rates.

In February 2019, less than two months before the then Brexit date, Odey again bet against the pound.[6]

Personal life

Crispin Odey was briefly married to Rupert Murdoch's eldest daughter, Prudence, although the pair quickly separated. The marriage lasted 15 months.[7]

He subsequently married Nichola Pease, deputy chairman of JO Hambro Capital Management and a member of one of the founding families of Barclays Bank. Nichola is younger daughter of Sir Richard Pease, 3rd Baronet, and a sister of Carolyn Varley (wife of John Varley) and Richard Pease, a funds manager. Odey had no children by his first wife, and three children, two sons and one daughter, by his second wife.

In May 2020, Crispin Odey was charged with indecent assault following a complaint by a woman over an incident in 1998. Odey denied the charge at Westminster Magistrates' Court on 28 September and he was bailed to appear at Hendon magistrates' court on 17 February 2021. Following a trial at Westminster Magistrates' Court in March 2021, Odey was cleared of the charge.[8]


[[Display born on::January 1959| ]]  

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