Financial Times Europe - 19.10.2019 - 20.10.2019

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12 ★ FT Weekend 19 October/20 October 2019

T


he Crazy Bear in Stadhamp-
ton, an hour’s drive from
London, was the perfect
setting to celebrate Britain’s
most successful investment
company launch. Garish chandeliers
hung between wooden beams as guests
jostled for space among the ice buckets
filled with magnums of champagne.
At the centre of the bar was Neil
Woodford, the UK’s best-known stock-
picker. By his side was Craig Newman,
his ambitious business partner and
minder. Giddy optimism filled the air.
“Things got really out of control — peo-
ple were absolutely hammered,” says
one person who was there.
It was May 2014 and the pair had
recently left their longtime employer,
Invesco Perpetual, to set up on their
own. The launch of Woodford Invest-
ment Management was a resounding
success. In just three months, the com-
pany’s founders had navigated the
fiendish regulatory application process,
gaining approval in near-record time.
Meanwhile, a handful of financial
institutions, made rich by Mr Woodford
over two decades, agreed to move bil-
lions of pounds to the new venture. St
James’s Place, the popular wealth man-
ager, chipped in £3.6bn.
Having spent years battling col-
leagues and bosses at Invesco, Mr Wood-
ford and Mr Newman were finally free
to build their own business the way they
wanted — away from restrictive compli-
ance managers with the power to rein in
risky investments.
The party carried on until 4am. Hours
later police were called to the Woodford
offices in a dreary business park on the
outskirts of Oxford. A senior employee,
still heavily intoxicated, was seen driv-
ing his car around the car park. The
police arrested Grant Wentzel, Wood-
ford’s head of trading, who had been
behind the wheel. Mr Wentzel, who
declined to comment, was acquitted of
the drink-driving charge.
Mr Woodford’s career is a story
packed with spectacular highs and
crashing lows — the star fund manager
who fell to earth. Once described as the
investor who made Middle England rich
and the “the man who can’t stop making
money”, he was forced this week to close
his business, which once managed
£15bn, after trapping hundreds of thou-
sands of savers in his flagship fund and
sparking Europe’s biggest investment
scandal for a decade.
His dramatic downfall is about more
than a high-powered financier who lost
his midas touch. It is a tale of hubris,
obstinate conviction and misplaced loy-
alty. It exposes the flaws of a timid regu-
lator and an industry in thrall to its star
performers. Over four months, the
Financial Times interviewed dozens of
Mr Woodford’s former colleagues, busi-
ness contacts, clients and friends — and
gained access to a trove of confidential
documents — to build up a detailed pic-
ture of an investor who became a house-
hold name, how he fell from grace and
how much investor money has been
squandered.

The early years
Neil Woodford was born in 1960 and
grew up in Berkshire, the son of a post-
card printer. After studying economics
and agricultural economics at Exeter
university, he began investing at Perpet-
ual, an upstart fund management busi-
ness in the genteel surroundings of
Henley-on-Thames, in the late 1980s.
It was here that he established his rep-
utation as a contrarian fund manager
who took bold bets on unloved compa-
nies. Some of his biggest calls paid off
spectacularly — including avoiding
technology companies during the dot-
com bubble and selling out of banks in
the run-up to the financial crisis. His
faith in controversial businesses such as
tobacco companies long after they were
seen as toxic by more ethically driven
rivals also boosted returns.
During his 26 years managing money
in Henley, Mr Woodford built one of the
strongest performance records among
UK-focused investors. Savers who
invested £1,000 with him in 1988 saw
their pots grow to more than £25,
over 25 years. He was a favourite of the
personal finance pages, eventually mar-
shalling £33bn of life savings for hun-
dreds of thousands of British investors.
“Having the strength of character to
maintain this conviction during times
when it was seriously questioned by
others is what built Neil’s reputation
over a long period of time,” said Andy
Bell, founder of fund distributor AJ Bell,
in which Mr Woodford was an early
investor.
His influence was on show in 2012
when, as the largest shareholder in
FTSE 100 defence group BAE Systems,
he spoke out against its planned merger

with EADS, the owner of Airbus. His
intervention helped scupper the €35bn
mega-deal. A year later, he received a
CBE in the Queen’s birthday honours list
for services to the economy.
The fund manager’s success belied
problems brewing within his company.
In 2000, the Perpetual business had
been bought by Invesco, one of the
world’s largest money managers. A
clash of cultures developed. US execu-
tivesin Invesco’s Atlanta headquarters
viewed the UK office as a regional out-
post within the global empire, whereas
Mr Woodford and his fellow Henley
fund managers saw themselves as the
superstars who had built up the busi-
ness through their exceptional talents.
Invesco’smanagers feared the UK
division was too reliant on Mr Wood-
ford’s personal brand and wanted to
grow other products. Yet Mr Woodford’s
bonuses were heavily skewed towards
attracting more money into his fund.
While Mr Woodford had tight-knit
relationships with his UK equity fund
managers, often socialising and even
holidaying with them, hostilities with
the Atlanta executives were rising.He
became embittered with Invesco’s lead-
ership, whom he blamed for restricting
the growth of his fund and crimping his
bonus. “It was always ‘the fucking
Americans’,” said one former friend.
Mr Woodford’s resentment eventu-
ally spread to his teammates. He
appeared to believe he was solely
responsible for the billions that poured
into Invesco’s British funds and that his
colleagues were riding on his coattails.
He began to distance himself from
them. Rather than sitting on the same
desk with his team,Mr Woodford
ordered a glass office be built where he
could shut himself off, according to two
former Invesco colleagues.
His angerbubbled over and affected
the mood in the Henley office. A former
colleague remembers how the heavy-set
former rugby player would refuse to use
his security pass when entering meeting
rooms with magnetic locks on the door.
“If he was angry he would just rip it
open. You would hear this shuddering,”

says the former colleague. “You can
imagine the facilities team at Henley,
how many magnetic locks they must
have replaced.”
Around 2010, Mr Woodford began
taking an interest insmall, private com-
panies that offered opportunities for
exponential growth. This was a big
departure from the larger, unfavoured
companies on which he had built his
reputation. But having more than
£30bn at his disposal, writing some big
cheques to back a handful of moonshot
bets seemed a gamble worth taking.
One company that caught his eye was
a US biomass conversion group, Xyleco,
whose board included former US secre-
tary of state George Shultz and former
US energy secretary Steven Chu. In
March 2012, Woodford agreed to invest
$252m in the company for a stake of less
than 7 per cent, which valued the busi-
ness at more than $3.5bn, according to
documents seen by the FT. This was a
large amount for a company that was lit-
tle more than a collection of scientific
patents.
When the managers in Atlanta found
out about the investment they were
alarmed and decided they needed to
prevent Mr Woodford from taking any
more risky punts. They created an inter-
nal committee to assess investments in
private companies — which excluded
the fund manager.
The UK watchdog, the Financial Con-
duct Authority, had also caught wind of
Mr Woodford’s more adventurous
instincts. Between May 2008 and
November 2012, the FCA noticed three
Invesco funds had taken on excessive
risk and too much debt, resulting in
losses of £5m for clients. Two of the
funds were managed by Mr Woodford.
The regulator began an investigation
into the breaches.
Mr Woodford was not the only
Invesco employee who felt betrayed by
the company’s decision to promote
other funds. Mr Newman, who as head
of retail sales was responsible for selling
Woodford funds, was also in line for a
smaller bonus. Sensing Mr Woodford’s
frustration with Invesco, Mr Newman

persuaded the stockpicker to leave and
set up on their own. “Craig smelled
blood in the water,” recalls one of the
former Invesco workers.
Mr Newman was challenged after lists
of client and sales information were
allegedly taken from Invesco, and he
resigned. The contentious documents,
seen by the FT, contained details of how
much institutions had invested with Mr
Woodford at Invesco and estimates of
fees the new company could extract
from them.
A Woodford spokesman said Mr New-
man had denied any wrongdoing and
resigned, adding the terms of his depar-
ture were subject to a confidentiality
agreement. Invesco says Mr Newman
resigned on May 31, 2013 and it could
not comment onstaff departures.
Mr Newman threw his energy into the
launch of the new investment company.
But he needed Mr Woodford to convince
former clients to move their money.
“Craig is 100 per cent money-driven.
Neil was very well paid at Invesco, but
Craig managed to convince him that
Invesco weren’t looking after him,” says
a person who has worked with both
men. The plans for Woodford Invest-
ment Management were in motion.

The break away
When Mr Woodford informed Invesco
he was leaving to set up his own business
in late 2013, he managed to negotiate an
incredible deal. Not only did he avoid
signing a non-compete agreement,
which is common when high-profile
employees go solo, but he also arranged
to retain management of large sums of
money for the groupup until his new
venture launched.
Mr Woodford and Mr Newman — who
despite a lack of senior management
experience would become chief execu-
tive of the new business — drafted in
Nick Hamilton, who had worked with
the pair as head of global equity product
at Invesco; and Gray Smith, a lawyer
from London firm Mishcon de Reya who
worked for Woodford during the FCA
investigation. he four of them wouldT
lead the new business, each becoming a
partner. Woodford also convinced a
handful of junior analysts to join him.
The application process “shot
through with very little challenge”, says
one person involved at the time. That
was despite the investigation by the reg-
ulator into Invesco rule breaches, which
resulted in a £18.6m fine for the com-
pany days before Mr Woodford
launched his new business. The FCA
says it did not find any evidence to sus-
pect or take action against individuals.
“Given there was no sanction against an
individual the FCA authorised Wood-
ford in line with its standard processes.”
Meanwhile, in Mr Newman’s applica-
tion for regulatory authorisation, seen
by the FT, he provided no details of his
abrupt departure from Invesco. When
asked whether he had ever been “the
subject of an investigation into allega-
tions of misconduct or malpractice in
connection with any business activity”,
he responded “no”.Woodford Invest-

ment Management says Mr Newman’s
form was completed properly with the
benefit of legal advice, and in accord-
ance with his obligations.
By May 2014, Woodford Investment
Management was up and running and
money began to gush in.
Mr Newman’s “violent transparency”
policy — a rare approach, later disman-
tled, that gave clients detailed access to
investment information, including the
funds’list of holdings — would be well
received by investors and advisers, as
would the business’s clear fee structure.
Several large clients from Invesco fol-
lowed Mr Woodford to his new home in
the Oxford business park, including
more than £200m from the Kent county
council pension fund.His sales team
expected to make more than £3m a year
in fee income from the latter alone, out
of total revenue of £15m from institu-
tional clients. This did not include the
money expected from the armies of
retail investors that intermediaries such
as St James’s Place and Hargreaves
Lansdown, the fund supermarket,
brought with them.
Woodford was soon managing more
than £5bn — an incredible start for a
business just a few weeks old.
Up to that point, the hard work had
mostly been carried out by the legal and
operations team. Almost all the money
that had flowed in was from Invesco cli-
ents. But despite there being hardly any
new business, Mr Newman soon lav-
ished his handful of sales staff with
bonuses totalling more than £1m. The
two team managers each received
£350,000, while more junior sales staff
were given £184,000 each.
Mr Newman and Mr Woodford also
treated themselves. Mr Woodford
bought himself a Ferrari and, as an
added perk, the carmaker let him visit
its private test track near Maranello,
northern Italy, to try out the model. Mr
Newman joined him.
The trip prompted some resentment
from others on the team — particularly
those who had missed out on the
bonuses. “It was a two or three-day
boys’ trip at what was a pretty busy
time,” recalls one former colleague.
Tensions were also brewing between
the founders. Despite assurances that
the company would be run by four part-
ners, Mr Hamilton and Mr Smith were
pushed out. The new business was going
to be a two-man show: Mr Woodford
and Mr Newman.
In an echo of the problems at Invesco,
Mr Smith and Mr Hamilton began chal-
lenging the way Mr Woodford and his
team of junior analysts were valuing
small private companies, which relied
heavily on data the businesses provided
themselves. They tried to put a limit on
the fund’s assets in private companies,
well below the 10 per cent cap defined
by regulations. Woodford’s unsuccessful
battle to keep below that cap was a cen-
tral factor behind his subsequent down-
fall. “This is not a fucking control envi-
ronment, this is about giving Neil the
freedom he did not have at Invesco,” Mr
continuedonpage 13

Neil Woodford —


the rise and fall


of a rock star


fund manager


After years
battling
colleagues and
bosses at
Invesco, Neil
Woodford set
out to build a
business with
Craig Newman,
below

Stockpicker’s undoing is a tale of hubris,


obstinate conviction and misplaced loyalty


By Peter Smith and Owen Walker


‘If he was
angry he

would rip
[the door]

open’


Woodford
bought

himself a
Ferrari and

visited the
carmaker’s

test track


FT INVESTIGATION


‘This is
about

giving Neil
the freedom

he didn’t
have at

Invesco’


OCTOBER 19 2019 Section:Companies Time: 18/10/2019- 19:03 User:alistair.fraser Page Name:CONEWS3, Part,Page,Edition:USA, 12, 1

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