Chapter 67: Chapter 67

Angus MacPherson was an old fashioned banker. He had started out as a

trainee at the Bank of Scotland on the Mound in Edinburgh. Fresh from

grammar school and without the benefit of a higher education, he slogged

his way through night school to obtain his banking qualifications, necessary at that

time for any young banker who wanted to advance in the profession. Even with his

excellent school results, university had not been an option; his family’s modest

means had closed that door.

He was accepted at the prestigious institution thanks to the recommendation of an

uncle, chief accountant at a shipping firm, an important client of the bank. Each

morning, as MacPherson made his way up Princes Street towards the bank’s

impressive Victorian headquarters, he thanked his good fortune. Many of his

background found themselves unemployed as traditional industries in Scotland

closed down, few lads of his background had a secure job, which made Angus

more determined than ever to succeed in his career at one of the two most

important banks in Scotland.

At that time banking was an unglamorous staid business and the days of the

financial and investment banking boom with its of traders and golden boys were

far off. In the early seventies, after a decade of Harold Wilson’s Labour

government and the decline of the industries that had made Britain great, the future

looked sombre as the nation entered a period of turbulence.

Then came Margret Thatcher, who undertook the reforms believed necessary for

transformation of Britain, side-lining industry in favour of the service and the

quaternary sectors. The Iron Lady’s Big Bang implemented major banking reforms

and promised Britons a better future. Angus MacPherson pursued his career,

climbing the ladder, as the Bank of Scotland underwent the same transformation as

many other British banks, abandoning its role as a traditional high street institution,

and what were perceived to be old fashioned banking methods.

A

In 2001, the bank merged with the Halifax to become HBOS, so as take

advantage of the new opportunities offered by innovative retail banking, where

traditional services were relegated in favour of high volume business. In addition

to the bank’s established services, it proposed a whole panoply of new products to

its customers: debit cards, credit cards, competitive mortgages; amongst which

were special interest-only deals, consumer loans, insurances and a whole range of

new and attractive facilities that encouraged many people to borrow without the

means to honour their obligations, a system that led to the credit binge, at the heart

of which was a sales culture motivated by the bonus system.

Prior to the merger, MacPherson had been promoted and transferred to Hong

Kong, where he took over property development services at the bank’s subsidiary,

then, in 2003 he became head of the Asia Pacific investment banking division of

HBOS. Business boomed as China became the world’s number one manufacturing

nation. When the crisis broke, HBOS was caught up in the meltdown of the UK

banking system, which ended up in the bank’s collapse and its effective

nationalization, McPherson was practically wiped-out with the value of the shares

he possessed becoming almost worthless overnight.

Given the disastrous situation of HBOS, MacPherson found himself suspended in

limbo as the bank went about disposing of its overseas operations. His job hung by

a thread and all that remained of the fortune he had accumulated was a painfully

thin share portfolio plus his property investments; a luxurious apartment in Stanley,

a pied-à-terre in Knightsbridge and a holiday home in Biarritz.

It was at that moment in time MacPherson met Tom Barton on his fact-finding

tour of China. Barton was impressed by his experience and understood the Scot’s

dilemma as HBOS started its retreat from Asia. Barton aware of the long and

difficult learning curve facing those entering China’s market, suggested the Scot

would be a valuable addition to the bank’s team.

A meeting was fixed up with Pat Kennedy on the Scot’s next visit to London and

the two men hit it off. It was not difficult to sense MacPherson’s disillusionment

with HBOS, and after a discussion with Fitzwilliams, he was offered the job of

setting up an INI base in Hong Kong.

The Scot’s knowledge of East Asia would open the door for business with North

East Asia and more specifically to China, where INI sorely lacked experience, and

more essentially, MacPherson’s guanxi network. INI’s traditional business base in

Asia had been built around the Nederlandsche Nassau Bank in Indonesia and

mostly limited to South East Asia.

MacPherson had developed HBOS operations along the same lines as the men

who had created the prosperity of the former colony in past generations. With ten

years in Hong Kong to his credit, he had gained the confidence of local Chinese

businessmen. By mastering more than passable Cantonese and Mandarin language

skills, he won admiration and appreciation in business circles for the daunting

efforts he had made to bridge the communication gap. It was a talent sadly lacking

in the local expatriate business community, which left many at the mercy of their

Chinese partners.

Fitzwilliams artfully presented the addition of MacPherson to the team as a

triumph, providing the Scot with a face saving alibi vis-à-vis his Chinese friends,

an astucious move, the Scot abandoning HBOS in favour of INI, a powerful new

player in banking, spanning the Eurasian continent.

After a shaky start in 2009, the INI Europa Property Fund was now posed to take

advantage of the market up-swing. Taking MacPherson on board for Hong Kong

was a masterful stroke, part of Fitzwilliams’ strategy, and thanks to Tom Barton’s

intuition, to attract wealthy individuals from the dynamic Pacific Rim region to

invest in prime property in London, Paris and New York.

At the London end, Alexis Sosnowksi was appointed Chief Investment Officer of

the Europa Fund, directly responsible to Fitzwilliams, under Pat Kennedy’s

watchful eye. A turn of fortune for Alexis, who had been one of the bank’s star

traders before the crisis hit.

Alexis had survived the worst of 2009, owing his remarkable comeback to an

introduction by Natasha Babkinova to Sergei Tarasov. Natasha had been packed￾off to London to study the workings of the financial system by her father,

Vyacheslav Nikolayevich, another oligarch. The Russian hoped she would build a

network of insider friends, an insurance policy to protect the family from the kind

of pitfall that had almost bankrupted him eighteen months earlier.

Perhaps it had been because Alexis was a friend of Natasha, or because Tarasov

had registered Alexis’ Slavic name, in any case he mentioned his brief encounter to

Fitzwilliams, who remarked Alexis, with his track record, was being wasted in a

depressed stock market.

Sosnowksi’s grandparents had fled Poland in 1939, shortly before Hitler launched

his blitzkrieg. They had been amongst the lucky ones, as bankers they had had the

means to escape the genocide that was to hit their people. The family, apart from

the principal Jewish holidays and the occasional visit to the synagogue for one of

the rites de passage, had never really practised their religion and Alexis was

brought up broad minded and independent, free of conventional religious hang-ups.

His father had run a small brokerage firm in the City, which because of ill health

he was forced to sell to a banking group towards the end of 1986, soon after

Thatcher’s Big Bang. On graduating from the LSE, Alexis joined Lloyds He

moved on to the Irish Netherlands soon after Fitzwilliams took over in 2000,

following the disappearance of the banker’s uncle in the Caribbean.

Tarasov, like many Russian’s had a healthy respect for the talent of men of

Alexis’ background ― they had survived in adversity, and approved of

Fitzwilliams move to have him head-up the team they were putting together for

their Europa Property Fund.

At the end of the first year the fund returned a modest gain; the second year, even

as the global economy continued to suffer, it produced a spectacular return of over

twenty percent. Soon, after raising more than three billion dollars, the fund was

refusing new investors, as Kennedy along with and Clancy in tow, trawled for

potential properties to add to the fund’s growing investment portfolio.