Derek M Quinlan is an Irish businessman prominent in the field of real estate investment and development. A former tax inspector at the Irish Revenue Commission, he formed investment syndicates of high-net worth individuals and to buy properties across the world. His principal investment vehicle was Quinlan Private, a private equity firm with offices in Dublin, London and New York. Quinlan's period of greatest prominence and success coincided with the peak of the global real estate bubble in 2004-7[1]. In 2009, he resigned from Quinlan Private and moved to Switzerland to live in a villa on the shores of Lake Geneva owing huge sums. His loans have been transferred since to Nama (National Asset Management Agency of Ireland) which, in an effort to recoup some of the money, seized various assets, including his private collection of 16 paintings.
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Quinlan was born in Dublin in 1947, the son of an Army Officer. He attended Blackrock College and University College, Dublin. He began his career as an accountant with Coopers & Lybrand before joining the Irish Revenue Commissioners as a tax inspector. In 1989 he went into private practice, founding Quinlan Private as an asset management firm for high net worth individuals.[2] He specialised in investing in tax designated areas in the 1990s in Ireland supporting Irish government policy in relation to property renewal,regeneration and job creation.
In 2004 Quinlan headed an investment syndicate that bought The Savoy Group for £750 million, giving it control of landmark London hotels including Claridges, The Connaught Hotel and The Savoy Hotel. Quinlan outbid competing buyers, including Saudi Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal. Some months later, Quinlan sold The Savoy Hotel to the Saudi prince for £250 million,[3] while retaining the other hotels in the group, subsequently renamed The Maybourne Hotel Group.
In 2006 Quinlan headed another syndicate that bought the Irish Glass Bottle development site in Dublin's Ringsend for €413 million. Anglo-Irish Bank was the principal lender. As of 2009, the site remained undeveloped and the value was written down to €60 million. In 2010, Anglo-Irish Bank's loan on the site was transferred to Ireland's National Asset Management Agency.[4]
In 2007 Quinlan Private acquired Irish hotel chain Jurys Inns for €1.165 billion. Some months later, Quinlan obtained a €200 million investment in Jurys from the sovereign wealth fund of Oman, as part of a plan for further international expansion of the chain.[5]
Also in 2007, Quinlan participated in syndicates which bought the London headquarters building of Citibank for €1 billion, and the Madrid headquarters building of Banco Santander for €1.5 billion.
The financial crisis of 2007-2010 severely impacted Quinlan's business model, which was predicated on acquisition using maximum leverage.[6] His Irish property assets in particular suffered precipitous declines in value.
In 2009 Quinlan resigned from Quinlan Private and moved to Switzerland to concentrate on negotiations with lenders to restructure his personal debts of €600 million. He personally owed Anglo-Irish Bank alone €300 million. Other major lenders included Bank of Scotland (Ireland), Allied Irish Bank, Bank of Ireland, Royal Bank of Scotland and Barclays.
As of 2010, he was actively trying to sell assets, including his personal residences in Dublin, New York and Cap Ferrat.
In May 2010 Royal Bank of Scotland moved to repossess his yacht.[7] In April 2011 a receiver was appointed on behalf of the National Assets Management Agency (NAMA) to take charge of a number of properties owned by Quinlan, after he had failed to repay loans to the agency totalling hundreds of millions of Euros.[8]
“When I started in this business, I quickly understood how the mathematics work, that you get as much leverage as possible, [and buy property] with a good covenant and a good location.”[6]
"The bears now tell us that there was too much debt in the market and that the economy is too polarised. The bears see no way out for Ireland. I do."[6]
"If you don't believe in yourself then why should anybody else"
Quinlan currently resides in London with his wife Siobhan and their three children