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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Kalyeena Makortoff Banking correspondent

George Osborne collects share of £30m after record profits at City advisory firm

George Osborne
George Osborne joined the firm in April 2021. Photograph: Hannah McKay/Reuters

The former Tory chancellor George Osborne has collected a share of a £30m pay pot after the City advisory firm Robey Warshaw reported record profits.

Osborne was one of three partners to share in the sum at the Mayfair-based boutique investment bank, which advises FTSE 100 and US clients on major corporate deals.

The former minister joined the firm in April 2021, eight years after it was co-founded by Simon Robey – the banker known as the City’s “trillion-dollar man” for working on mega-deals.

Robey is believed to have taken the biggest slice of the firm’s £70m pre-tax profit for the year to March, with filings at Companies House showing that the highest-paid director received £40.5m for the financial year.

While the firm did not detail pay for the remaining trio of bankers, Osborne is believed to be among those sharing the remaining £30m.

It is a notable hike on last year’s pay, when the former chancellor shared a £28m pay pot with three fellow investment bankers including Simon Warshaw, an heir of the Molton Brown beauty empire, and Philip Apostolides.

The £70m pre-tax profit was a record high for the firm, more than double the £31.8m recorded a year earlier. That will have included income from clients such as the Abu Dhabi-backed RedBird IMI, which launched a unsuccessful bid to take control of the Telegraph newspaper. That account was led by Osborne, who previously served as editor of the Evening Standard after leaving government.

Robey Warshaw also counts the insurer Direct Line among its clients, having advised the business as it rebuffed multiple takeover attempts this year. That includes a £3.3bn offer from Aviva that was rejected by Direct Line bosses on Wednesday evening. The account has been led by the firm’s newest partner, Chetan Singh, who joined after the investment bank’s last financial year.

The firm also worked for Microsoft during its takeover of Activision Blizzard, and has counted Vodafone, HSBC and National Grid among its clients.

Robey Warshaw declined to comment on its latest set of financial results.

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