George Robinson | |
Birth Date: | November 1956 |
Birth Place: | Hampstead, London, England |
Other Names: | George Edward Silvanus Robinson |
Known For: | Sloane Robinson |
Education: | Eton College |
Alma Mater: | Keble College, Oxford |
Occupation: | Hedge fund manager, media proprietor, philanthropist |
Children: | 3 children |
George Edward Silvanus Robinson (born November 1956) is a British hedge fund manager, media proprietor, and philanthropist. He is the co-founder of Sloane Robinson, a hedge fund headquartered in the City of London.
George Robinson was born in November 1956,[1] in Hampstead, London. He was a King's Scholar at Eton College (1970–1974).[2] He matriculated at Keble College, a constituent college of the University of Oxford, in 1975,[3] gaining a BA degree in Engineering Science in 1979.
Robinson started his career at the Swire Group in Hong Kong.[4] He then worked at Cathay Pacific, an airline partially owned by the Swire Group.[4] In 1985, he joined W. I. Carr as their researcher on Korean Stock Exchange companies, working in Seoul,[4] then moved on to Bangkok, Thailand, still working for Carr, to report on companies listed on the Stock Exchange of Thailand.[4] In 1991, he became Carr's Director of Research in Hong Kong and China.[4]
In 1993, with Hugh Sloane, Robinson co-founded Sloane Robinson, a hedge fund with its headquarters in the City of London.[5] He was still a Director in 2012. He also serves on the advisory board of Cerno Capital.[4]
In 2008, Robinson and fellow financier Peter Hall, each acquired 26% of Prospect, a British political affairs magazine, from Derek Coombs.[6] As a result, Hall and Robinson jointly had a controlling stake in the magazine. They later sold it, and Prospect is now owned by the Resolution Foundation.[6]
Robinson was worth an estimated £220 million in 2008.[6] As of 2015, the figure was £185 million.[5]
He has made charitable contributions to his alma mater, Keble College, where he chairs a fundraising campaign known as the "2020 Campaign." and he is as an Honorary Fellow.[3] [7] He also serves on the Investment Committees of Eton College.[4]
He serves on the board of trustees of the Policy Exchange, a think tank based in Westminster.
The 2002 Sloane Robinson Building at Keble College, Oxford bears his name, along with Hugh Sloane.[8]
He is a major donor to the Conservative Party. From 2004 to 2015, he donated in excess of £400,000 to the party.[9]