Hüsnü Özyeğin

Hüsnü Özyeğin
Born 1944
Izmir, Turkey
Alma mater Oregon State University, Harvard University
Occupation Founder & Director of FIBA Holding
Net worth US$2.7 billion (April 2015)[1]

Hüsnü Özyeğin (born 1944) is a Turkish businessman in the finance sector, and a self-made billionaire. He is the owner of FIBA Holding, a group of mostly financial companies in Turkey including Fibabanka and Credit Europe Bank. He has a net worth of US$2.7 billion as of 2011.[2]

Background

The son of a doctor, Özyeğin was born in 1944 in Konya, Turkey. He graduated Robert College, an elite academy in Istanbul[3] in 1963, and claims that he went to the US with just a thousand dollars in his pocket. There, he studied civil engineering at Oregon State University in Corvallis, Oregon, USA, receiving a BS degree. Being more interested in finance, he attended the School of Business at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts and obtained an MBA.

Career

Following his return home after three more years in the USA, Özyeğin was offered a post in Pamukbank, which belonged to his schoolmate, Mehmet Emin Karamehmet. In 1977, at the age of only 32, he was appointed general manager of this bank and he held this position until 1984. Then he transferred to Yapı ve Kredi Bankası to become its general manager, a much larger bank in Turkey acquired that year by the same friend. There he succeeded in leading the money-losing bank to a profit over the next two years.

Özyeğin led Yapı ve Kredi Bankası until 1987, when he decided to establish his own bank, the Finansbank at the age of 43. He expanded it to a bank with more than 200 branches operating in nine countries out of Turkey, mostly in Europe. He later founded several finance companies and brought them under the Holding Fiba, which has around 8,500 employees in 20 companies. Over the next few years, he invested in high-demand industries such as real estate, energy and retail, building condominiums and shopping centers across the main domestic business districts. In 1996, he entered the retail business purchasing the supermarket chains Gima, Endi, Spar and Greens. Furthermore, Özyeğin signed a franchising contract with the British retail chain Marks & Spencer, and then purchased also the Sakura Bank.

In 2005, Özyeğin sold the supermarket chain named GIMA to Sabancı Holding, and acquired in exchange the five-star hotel Swissotel in İstanbul from its Japanese owners. In April 2006, he sold 46% of the shares of the Turkish branch of Finansbank, worth US$2.774 billion, to National Bank of Greece, the largest and the oldest commercial bank in Greece. He sold his remaining 9% stake for US$700 million in 2008.[4] He was expected to remain the bank’s chairman of the board of directors for two more years.

The non-Turkish part of Finansbank was placed under the Dutch holding and rebranded into Credit Europe Bank. Özyeğin is the main shareholder and board member of this bank. At the end of 2008, Credit Europe Bank N.V. employed over 6,000 professionals working in the euro-zone countries Belgium, Germany, Malta and the Netherlands as well as in China, Dubai, Russia, Romania, Switzerland, Turkey and Ukraine, serving more than 3 million customers worldwide.

Özyeğin was awarded the "Businessman of the Year" in 2000 by the Turkish magazine "Ekonomist". In a recent interview for the Creating Emerging Markets project at the Harvard Business School, he describes his commitment to expanding education opportunities for women.[5]

Özyeğin University located in Istanbul, Turkey was founded by the Hüsnü M. Özyeğin Foundation. Its establishment was approved by Foundation Act No 5656 published in the Official Gazette No 26526 on May 18, 2007.[6] Özyeğin plans to spend up to $1 billion over the next 15 years on the university.[7]

See also

References

  1. "A New Breed of Billionaire | New York Times". nytimes.com. 2007-12-14.
  2. Hüsnü Özyeğin - Forbes, Forbes.com. Accessed 4 November 2011.
  3. "A New Breed of Billionaire | New York Times". nytimes.com. 2007-12-14.
  4. Hüsnü Özyeğin - Forbes, Forbes.com. Accessed May 16, 2011.
  5. http://www.hbs.edu/businesshistory/emerging-markets/pages/profile-detail.aspx?profile=hozyegin
  6. "Official web site of Özyeğin University - History (Turkish)".
  7. "A New Breed of Billionaire | New York Times". nytimes.com. 2007-12-14.
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