Rene Rivkin

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Rene Rivkin (6 June 1944 in Shanghai, China1 May 2005 in Sydney, Australia) was an Australian entrepreneur, investor, investment adviser, and stockbroker. He was a multimillionaire and the best known and most successful stockbroker in Australia for many years until his dramatic fall from grace with a conviction for insider trading.

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[edit] Early life

Rene Rivkin was born in Shanghai, China to Russian-Jewish parents. It was rumored that they worked in the David Sassoon business, and made fortunes.[citation needed] The family emigrated to Australia in 1951. Rivkin attended Sydney Boys High School and completed a law degree from the University of Sydney. He went on to become the youngest ever member of the Sydney Stock Exchange.

[edit] Career

Rivkin became Australia's most famous stockbroker and published the Rivkin Report, in which he would advise what stocks to buy and sell, and provide market analysis.

With his flamboyant lifestyle and extravagant collections of art and classic cars and an impressive motor yacht, Rivkin was famous for his personality as much as his achievements. He was usually portrayed with worry beads and smoking a cigar. He was believed to suffer from bipolar disorder. [1]

Rivkin sold his share of stockbroking firm Rivkin James Capel after an operation to remove a tumour and the 1987 stockmarket collapse.

[edit] Conviction for insider trading

In April, 2003, following a long running investigation by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), he was found guilty of insider trading after having purchased 50,000 Qantas shares after being made aware of information in relation to an impending merger of Qantas and Impulse Airlines. He was charged with using confidential and market-sensitive information, having purchased - on behalf of Rivkin Investments - 50,000 Qantas shares on April 24, 2001, just hours after speaking to the executive chairman of Impulse, Gerry McGowan. The trade resulted in a profit of $2,664.94.[1]

Rivkin was convicted and sentenced to nine months periodic detention on weekends. His sentence was delayed so he could undergo urgent surgery for a meningioma. His period of custody was punctuated with time served at Long Bay Psychiatric Hospital. After serving two days of his sentence at Sydney's Silverwater Correctional Centre, Rivkin collapsed and was hospitalised. Amidst media accusations that he was trying to avoid jail by feigning illness, Rivkin was treated in hospital for pancreatitis, deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and major depression[citation needed]. More controversy followed when a fellow detainee was paid by The Sun-Herald newspaper to illegally smuggle in a mobile phone and take photos of Rivkin. Rivkin's health concerns meant weekend detention stints were often delayed for weeks at a time.

At the same time, the Australian Securities and Investment Commission and the Australian Tax Office continued investigating Rivkin's shareholdings relating to the Offset Alpine affair.

[edit] Death

Banned for life from having a stockbroking licence following the serving of his sentence, Rivkin lived quietly in his Point Piper mansion. He later moved to the Darling Point home of his elderly mother and was found dead there on 1 May 2005, and was believed to have killed himself. Rivkin is survived by his former wife Gayle and five children, Damien, Jordan, Shannon, Dion and Tara. Two of his sons continue to operate the Rivkin Group in Sydney.

[edit] Biography

  • Main, Andrew (2005) Rivkin, Unauthorised: The Rise and Spectacular Fall of an Unorthodox. HarperCollins: Sydney. ISBN 0-7322-8089-3

[edit] See also

  • List of insider traders

[edit] External links

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