For his son's bar mitzvah in 2005, he spent £4 million on a three-day event for over 200 friends and family in the French Riviera. He also hired Andrea Bocelli and Destiny's Child to perform. For his nephew, Matt, he threw a Bar Mitzvah at Madame Tussauds, where Simon Cowell and Louis Walsh were guests and One Direction performed. Matt and Chloe shared a birthday party in December 2011, at One Mayfair, where Rihanna sang, and many personal friends of the family attended. The star-studded bash was featured in The Sun newspaper and cost over £1 million.[21] For his 50th birthday, he flew 200 guests in a chartered Airbus A300 to a hotel in Cyprus for a three-day toga party, where they were serenaded by Tom Jones and Rod Stewart, who was reportedly paid £750,000 for a 45-minute set. For his 55th birthday, he flew 100 guests 8,500 miles in two private jets from London Stansted Airport. They arrived at the exclusive Maldives resort of Four Seasons: Landaagiraavaru, an eco-spa on a private Indian Ocean island.[22]
Among Green's more extravagant possessions are a 208 ft/£32 million Benetti yacht Lionheart[23] and a £20 million Gulfstream G550 private jet.[20] For his birthday, his wife bought him a solid gold Monopoly set, featuring his own acquisitions.
How do people like Sir Philip Green get made a SIR?
Sounds like he got rich and famous for being bent.
though what I don't like about him is that he put the company in his wife's name and she lives in Monaco as a tax exile... very dodgy...
From a purely factual point of view his wife is South African and not really a "tax exile" like he would be if he was non-dom (I vaguely recall he gave up that status then transferred everything to his wife's name). Not that it changes the morality of it.
I will say this about the pension black hole and the dividends he paid to his wife - depending on the type of pension it's entirely possible the black hole is little more than an actuarial deficit rather than an actual underpayment by the company. Essentially prior to the financial crash the pension may have been fully funded and dividends could be justified. However, after the financial crash the pension investments that previously yielded a certain value of assets would no longer be worth as much. Because of this the dividends may have been paid over when there was no black hole, or when there was no foreseeable prediction that there would be one. Although I haven't checked the actual history and this may all be nonsense.
No one rushing out like they did at Port Talbot yet the effect is just as damaging.
I'm quite surprised that M&S haven't gone in the past so the fall of BHS will only strengthen them. Our local BHS had a lame last ditch effort to enter the food market. That may have saved M&S but too late for BHS
pics of daughters?
No one rushing out like they did at Port Talbot yet the effect is just as damaging.![]()
I will say this about the pension black hole and the dividends he paid to his wife - depending on the type of pension it's entirely possible the black hole is little more than an actuarial deficit rather than an actual underpayment by the company. Essentially prior to the financial crash the pension may have been fully funded and dividends could be justified. However, after the financial crash the pension investments that previously yielded a certain value of assets would no longer be worth as much. Because of this the dividends may have been paid over when there was no black hole, or when there was no foreseeable prediction that there would be one. Although I haven't checked the actual history and this may all be nonsense.
The pension fund was marginally in surplus when Green bought BHS. It then went into deficit but was back into a small surplus in 2008 when the financial crisis hit.