Werner Rey
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2008) |
Werner Kurt Rey (born October 6, 1943 in Zürich) is a Swiss entrepreneur former bank clerk, who made a name for himself in 1976 when acquiring the majority of the venerable but loss-making Bally Shoe company and selling his stake soon later with a profit of around 60 million Swiss francs. Subsequently, his investor and venture capitalist career took off from that of an initiator of hostile take-overs to that of a USD billionaire white knight[1] in various international M&A deals ranging from real estate to engineering works, electronics, media and financial services, in which he himself served occasionally as guarantor to institutional lenders.
Through his companies, Werner Rey held controlling participations in the Metallwerke Selve AG in Thun, the commodity inspection company Inspectorate International, the holding company Omni Holding AG, the Swiss media conglomerate Jean Frey AG, the temporary employment agency Adia Interim (today part of Adecco), and a substantial 30 percent of the established Sulzer group, among others.
His career took a turn during the 1990/91 recession, and, while no allegations of wrongdoings were raised against Werner Rey in connection with the collapse of his multi-billion Omni Group, he was charged in 2001 with a controversial judgment for attempted fraud in relation to the public offering of Inspectorate in 1986 at which both the underwriting bank (witness of the prosecution) and the shareholders incurred spectacular gains of up to triple of the stock’s nominal value.
[edit] References
- ^ Fortune Magazine, 1990; List of Billionaires http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/1990/09/10/73983/index.htm