Julius Meinl V | |
---|---|
Born | July 9, 1959 London, England |
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Businessman, Banker |
Julius Meinl V (born 9 July 1959) is a British businessman, active in Austria. He heads a substantial family business which was originally built upon the production and retailing of food products, and which was founded by his great-great-grandfather, Julius Meinl I, in Vienna in 1862.
Contents |
Meinl V was born in London, England to a wealthy family. His father Julius Meinl IV was a fighter pilot for Britain's Royal Air Force. Meinl V was raised Jewish.[1][2] As a boy, Meinl V went to school in Austria, before finishing a degree in banking in Switzerland at the University of St. Gallen.[3]
The Julius Meinl name is synonymous with the family business, and the brand is one of the most well known and prestigious in Austria.[4] The family fortunes were built initially upon the manufacture and sale of quality ground coffee. From this beginning the company grew steadily and successfully, retailing an increasingly wide variety of foods. Over time it become the upmarket grocery multiple, with outlets throughout Austria and in many other Central and Eastern European countries. It also became one of Austria’s largest companies.
In 1938, Meinl V’s grandfather Julius Meinl III (1903–1991) was forced to leave Austria along with his Jewish[5] wife and their son Meinl IV, while the rest of the Meinl family remained in Austria. Meinl V’s mother’s family also fled the Austria, just managing to escape in 1940. Meinl III took his family to Britain. For this “act of treachery” the German government revoked the Austrian citizenship of the Meinl family, denouncing them as “enemies of the Reich”. Meinl family became naturalised British citizens in 1946.
During the course of World War II, Meinl III was in close contact with the authorities in Britain, providing advice and assistance on the manner in which the Nazi Party had extended its influence on Central Europe through the infiltration of the management of large retail organisations. After the war, Julius Meinl III assisted the Central Commission for Germany and Austria in the process of denazification of Austria. Meinl’s contribution involved the identification of significant Nazi sympathisers who were occupying positions of authority in Austria and who had remained undetected. This work merely added to the growing list of those within Austria with a distaste for the name, Meinl.
Nevertheless, the family returned to Austria to begin the task of rebuilding the family business, which they did with considerable success, expanding the range of its retail operations throughout central Europe. It also ventured into banking, building a simple savings business into a small private bank.
After graduating from university in banking, he spent two years in London with Swiss Bank Corporation and a further two years in New York at Brown Brothers Harriman, New York; America’s oldest and largest private bank.[3]
In 1983, at the age of 24, Meinl V assumed the reins of the Meinl Bank.[3] In the early 1990s, Julius Meinl AG reestablished food-retail operations in Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Poland, where it had historically already been present. In 1998/99, the company implemented the divestiture of the food-retailing assets of Julius Meinl AG in Austria and Hungary, following which the group's activities became focused primarily on banking and finance operations. At this time, the activities of Meinl Bank were expanded, covering private and institutional asset management, private banking, and fund management. Meinl Bank became one of the leading Austrian private merchant and investment banks. In 2000, a subsidiary named Meinl Capital Markets was opened in London to provide broking services specializing in hedge funds and exchange traded funds. However, this operation was closed down in 2001. Also in 2001, the subsidiary Meinl Capital Advisors AG was founded to provide corporate finance and investment banking advisory services to governments and private clients.
In 1998, a Central European and Eastern European real-estate company was launched. It was introduced on the Vienna Stock Exchange in 2002 under the name Meinl European Land. In 2007, Meinl Airports International and Meinl International Power, specialized airport and energy investment funds, were additionally listed on the Vienna Stock Exchange. The Group's main area of activity is Central and Eastern Europe. Meinl V was not a director of any of the three funds. Also in 2007, after a controversial repurchase of certificates by Meinl European Land, the name "Meinl" appeared in the Austrian media on a negative basis.[6]
On April 1, 2009, a judge ordered Meinl V to be arrested following an interrogation by Vienna prosecutors. The next day, Meinl V was supposed to be released on a bail of €100 million, but he was held until the transfer of the bail was confirmed, because the judge considered him a flight risk due to his holding a British passport.[7][8] The accusations are: defrauding investors; alleged fraud by purchasing shares to prop up their price; and that unauthorised, non-disclosed buybacks took place in 2007.[9]