Gerald Grosvenor, the 6th Duke of Westminster is Britain’s
wealthiest man. The Grosvenor Group has three arms: the property and fund
management business; an industrial division made up of food and energy
investments; and the family office, comprising an art collection of old masters
from Velasquez to Stubbs and Rembrandt. He owns four rural estates including
the family home Eaton Hall in Cheshire, a 10,000-acre plot dating back to the
1440s.
The duke’s company has survived 30 downturns in 340 years
and now has £11.4bn assets under management and made £80.1m in revenue profit
(the combined total of rents, sales, investment returns and trading) in 2014.
It recorded a profit before tax of £681.8m (which includes the market valuation
of its assets), up from £506.9m in 2013. It now has offices in 60 different
cities. Last month Grosvenor committed $30m (£20.6m) to a $200m fund run by RMB
Westport to invest in shopping centres, office buildings and industrial assets,
primarily in Nigeria, Ghana, Angola and the Ivory Coast, over the next eight
years. “It’s an interesting time to get in on the ground and the raw materials
there mean people will prosper in the long term,” Mark Preston, the new executive trustee of the Grosvenor Groupy says. Grosvenor is not planning to open its own
business there, but rather make a small investment through third party RMB
Westport, and watch it grow. African farming may be the next target.
Preston explains part of their economic strategy, “My own rationalisation is
that the great advantage of China is that it is a centrally planned economy which
from a property planning point of view means there is a degree of certainty to
what will be built where. In India you get the delightful chaos of democracy,
with no idea what will change in planning terms from one month to the next.” China’s
economy has been slowing since 2010, sending jitters throughout the world
markets, but this is not a concern for Preston. “Yes these are difficult times,
but that could present a buying opportunity for us. If there is very strong
growth and crazy deals then we’re priced out of the market and will have to sit
on our hands. However severe dips and corrections in the market, that’s our
time. It’s the classic emerging markets story – rapid growth, collapse, rapid
growth, collapse.” Longevity underpins every move Grosvenor makes: “Despite its
[China’s] slowdown the long term growth trend is a good deal better than we are
going to get in Europe. In 100 to 150 years’ time we need to be in China to
reap the rewards,” he says.
Regards the EU referendum he observes, “We absolutely should
not be having a referendum, it shows an extraordinary lack of spine on behalf
of our politicians. We vote in our leaders to be ideologically convinced and
we’re risking instability – like they did with Scotland which was equally
idiotic – asking for an emotional vote based on the news the week before.” Frustrated with both the In and Out campaign
that are giving extreme scenarios, Preston believes the reality is far more
nuanced. “The world will not come to the end if we come out nor ghastly if we
stay in…It’s the uncertainty that will cause the most damage.”
A pragmatic, clear-sighted capitalist with a ready eye on the main chance.If I may be allowed to quote Trotsky, 'The Bourgeoisie...far surpasses the proletariat in the completeness and irreconcilability of its class- consciousness...'If only the working class were as ruthless!
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