Albert Frère
Albert Frère | |
---|---|
Born |
Fontaine-l'Évêque, near Charleroi, Belgium | 4 February 1926
Residence | Charleroi, Belgium |
Nationality | Belgian |
Occupation | Investor |
Net worth | $4.1 billion (January 2015)[1] |
Children | 3 |
Albert, Baron Frère (born 4 February 1926) is a Belgian businessman and the richest man in Belgium.
Early life
Frère grew up as a son of a nail merchant and helped in the business since an early age. His father died when Frère was 17; Frère had to leave school and run the family business by himself.
Career
At the age of 30, he started investing in Belgian steel factories and by the end of the 1970s he practically controlled the whole steel industry in the region of Charleroi. He foresaw the coming steel crisis of the late 1970s and sold his enterprises to the Belgian state after merging them with the competing steel firm Cockerill to create Cockerill-Sambre.
Frère used the proceeds from this sale to build an investment empire around the Swiss holding company Pargesa which he founded with the Canadian investor Paul Desmarais. Pargesa took over the Belgian holding company Groupe Bruxelles Lambert in 1982 and over the year added significant stakes in such wide ranging Belgian companies as Petrofina, Royale Belge Insurance, Compagnie Luxembourgoise de Télédiffusion (CLT), and Tractebel. He actively promoted international consolidation of the sectors in which he was involved, selling Banque Bruxelles Lambert to ING Group, Royale Belge to Axa, Tractebel to Suez, Petrofina to Total S.A., and RTL to Bertelsmann.
Personal life
Frère is married and has three children.[1] In 2002, he received the title of baron from the Belgian king Albert II. He is a co-owner, together with Bernard Arnault of LVMH, of the Château Cheval Blanc winery near Bordeaux. He is a member of the Cercle Gaulois.
Overview over Albert Frère's shareholdings as of May 2009
Honours
2014 : Knight Grand Cross in the Legion of Honour. [2]
External links
- Albert Frère in the 2009 Forbes billionaires' list
- A discreet dynamo. The Economist, 20 April 2006.
References
- 1 2 "Albert Frere". Forbes. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
- ↑ http://www.standaard.be/cnt/dmf20140512_01101887