Clive Hollick

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The Right Honourable Clive Richard Hollick, Baron Hollick (born 19 May 1945) is a British businessman with media interests, and a noted supporter of the Labour Party

He joined the House of Lords on the 20 June 1991.

Education and early career

Hollick was educated at Taunton's Grammar School, Southampton, and then read Politics, Psychology and Sociology at the University of Nottingham. He joined Hambros Bank as a graduate trainee in 1967 and rapidly gained a reputation as a financier and a dealmaker, becoming the bank's youngest ever director in 1973.

Vavasseur and MAI

The next year Hollick was parachuted as chief executive into JH Vavasseur Group, a failing moneybroker caught up in the 1973-4 secondary banking crisis. By 1978 the Vavasseur mechant bank was back in the black, and Hollick was building it into a successful media company, renaming the group Mills & Allen International (MAI) after taking over advertising billboard company Mills and Allen. The group continued to grow with fingers in a number of pies through the 1980s, expanding into market research and business information services, and buying the National Opinion Polls (NOP) group in 1989 from the Daily Mail and General Trust.

MAI moved into television in 1993 when its subsidiary Meridian Broadcasting won the ITV franchise for South and South-East England. The following year it bought Anglia Television for £292m, and in 1995 a 14.8% share in Yorkshire-Tyne Tees, and was a major shareholder in the consortium that was granted the franchise for Channel 5.

United News and Media

In March 1996 the group merged with United Newspapers, publishers of the Daily Express, Daily Star, and a string of local newspapers, to form United News and Media, an international media group with revenues of £2.3 billion and 16,000 employees. Many thought Hollick would meet his match in Lord Stevens of Ludgate, proprietor of United; but it was Stevens who was sidelined as Hollick became chief executive, and within 18 months the Express had undergone a radical shift of political affiliation, putting behind it generations long dyed-in-the-wool support of the Conservative party to become an enthusiastic cheerleader for Tony Blair's New Labour.

UNM was required to sell its stake in Yorkshire-Tyne Tees as part of the merger, giving Granada control, but the next year it was permitted to add a third ITV franchise to its holdings, HTV, the broadcaster for Wales and the West Country. As ITV continued to consolidate, Hollick proposed to take over Carlton in 2000, which would have made him the dominant player on the network. But his plans were blocked by the then Secretary of State at the DTI, Stephen Byers, who ruled that the merger would only be acceptable if Hollick gave up the prized Meridian franchise – making the deal pointless. Unable to proceed, Hollick sold the three ITV franchises to Granada in July 2000 for £1.75 billion. The UNM share price dived 13% on the news, but history has since revealed that Hollick sold out right at the top of the market. Ironically, the last restrictions on ITV company joint ownership were lifted by the Communications Act 2003, and in February 2004 Granada and Carlton merged to form a single entity ITV plc controlling all of the ITV franchises in England and Wales.

Other parts of UNM were also disposed of advantageously, including the demerging of MAI's original securities business in 1998 as Garban, which subsequently became ICAP PLC; the sale in 1998 of United's Provincial Newspapers including the Yorkshire Post to Johnston Press; the controversial sale of Express Newspapers in 2000 to Richard Desmond, owner of a stable of pornographic magazines; the sale of the NOP World market research business to GfK in 2005; and the sale of United's 35% stake in Channel 5 to RTL in 2005.

UNM, renamed United Business Media PLC in 2000, is now strongly focussed on business-to-business publications, information services and exhibitions. Principal subsidiaries are PR Newswire, acquired by United in 1982, and CMP Media, acquired in 1999.

Current activities and other interests

Hollick retired as CEO of United Business Media in April 2005 at the age of 60, and promptly became a managing partner at private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, focussing on the media and financial services sectors. This led to speculation that KKR might launch a bid for ITV. In 2006 he was appointed to the supervisory board of media conglomerate VNU, after KKR and Blackstone Group won a difficult takeover battle. He is also the chairman of SBS Broadcasting Group, taken over by KKR and Permira in August 2005. He is also a director of Diageo PLC, Honeywell International, and Chairman of the South Bank Centre arts complex in London.

Other directorships Hollick has held include Hambros Bank Limited, 1973-96; Shepperton Studios (chairman), 1976-79; National Bus Company Ltd, 1984-91; Department of Applied Economics, Cambridge University, 1988-95; Logica plc, 1987-92; British Aerospace plc, 1992-97.

Hollick has been a longtime supporter and donor to the Labour party, and was one of the founding backers of the New Labour think tank the Institute for Public Policy Research. For a time after the 1997 Election he served as a special advisor to Margaret Beckett and Peter Mandelson at the Department for Trade and Industry.

He was created a life peer on 20 June 1991, as Baron Hollick, of Notting Hill in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. He is married to Susan Mary Woodford-Hollick and has three daughters.

Interests

Donations

Hollick has donated £10,000 to Liz Kendall's campaign to succeed Ed Miliband as the next leader of the Labour Party.[2]

External links

Notes

  1. Lord Hollick Parliament.UK, accessed 19 December 2014
  2. David Singleton Burnham laps up donations as Cooper bankrolled by author and Kendall takes lobbyist cash Total Politics, 16 July 2015, accessed 17 July 2015.