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Friday 11 May 2018 12:14 pm

Ranked: Britain’s richest hedge fund managers – Michael Platt prospers, but it’s hard times for Harding

The founder of BlueCrest Capital Michael Platt has retained his crown as the richest hedgie in the UK.

His wealth grew quicker than any other hedge fund manager’s in the top 20, increasing by £600m to take his fortune to around £3bn.

Chris Hohn, the activist hedgie who last year went to war with London Stock Exchange chairman Donald Brydon, climbed up one place from last year’s list, increasing his wealth by £180m up to £1bn.

Read more: Activist shareholder Hohn requests meeting to remove LSE chairman

But David Harding of Winton Capital took the biggest hit to his wealth, as it declined by £300m to £1bn, causing him to lose his third place on 2017’s list to finish joint fifth.

Brevan Howard manager Alan Howard’s wealth slipped slightly by £30m from 2017 figures, but his combined fortune of £1.01bn was still enough for him to jump one space to claim fourth spot.

The findings, revealed in the 2018 Sunday Times Rich List due to be published this Sunday, also showed that CQS manager Michael Hintze did well this year, growing his wealth by £100m to £1.38bn.

After losing 49.5 per cent of its value in 2016, Odey Asset Management boss and prominent Leave campaigner Crispin Odey’s wealth continued to decline in 2018, as his wealth dropped by £25m to £750m, leaving him one place down in eighth.

City rottweiler Martin Hughes, who heads up Toscafund Asset Management, had his fortune increase by £30m to £420m.

Robert Watts, the Compiler of The Sunday Times Rich List, said:

Hedgies barely featured in our first Sunday Times Rich List back in 1989. Now, in our 30th edition six of our billionaires made their fortunes in this world.

The recent volatility of global stock markets have provided opportunities for the City’s richest hedgies to gild their wealth.

But life as a billionaire hedge fund manager is not a one-way bet. Four big names of the hedge fund world have seen big falls in their wealth over the past year.

Managers tend to invest heavily in their funds, so if their fund bombs so does their own wealth.

You can find the full results below:

Name

Hedge fund

2018 wealth

Wealth increase/decrease

1

Michael Platt

BlueCrest Capital

£3bn

Up £600m

2

Robert Miller and Princess Marie-Chantal and family

Search Investment Group

£2bn

Up £420m

3

Sir Michael Hintze

CQS

£1.38bn

Up £100m

4

Alan Howard

Brevan Howard

£1.01bn

Down £30m

5

David Harding

Winton Capital

£1bn

Down £300m

5

Sir Chris Hohn

TCI Fund Holding

£1bn

Up £180m

7

Chris Rokos

Brevan Howard/ Rokos Capital Management

£775m

Up £75m

8

Crispin Odey and Nichola Pease

Odey Asset Management

£750m

Up £75m

9

John Armitage

Egerton Capital

£540m

No change

10

Sir Paul Marshall

Marshall Wace

£520m

Up £15m

12

Yan Huo

Capula Investment Management

£475m

Up £75m

12

Andrew Law

Caxton Associates

£475m

No change

14

William Bollinger

Egerton Capital

£450m

No change

15

Martin Hughes

Toscafund Asset Management

£420m

Up £30m

16

Jeremy Hosking

Marathon Asset Management

£355m

Up £25m

17

Jonathan Hiscock

GSA Capital

£325m

Up £5m

18

Sir John Beckwith

Pacific Asset Management

£310m

Up £8m

19

Sir Paul Ruddock

Lansdowne Partners

£300m

No change

19

Nicola Tangen

AKO Capital

£300m

Up £12m

19

Ross Turner

Pelham Capital

£300m

Up £77m

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