Robert Louis-Dreyfus

CEO

Birthday June 14, 1946

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Paris, France

DEATH DATE 2009-7-4, Zürich, Switzerland (63 years old)

Nationality France

#19741 Most Popular

1946

Robert Louis-Dreyfus (June 14, 1946 – July 4, 2009) was a French businessman who was chief executive officer (CEO) of Adidas (then Adidas Salomon) and Saatchi & Saatchi.

He was a majority shareholder of the French football team Olympique de Marseille, and during his tenure they re-emerged as a major European club.

Robert Louis-Dreyfus was born in Paris, the son of Jean and Jeanne Madeline (née Depierre) Louis-Dreyfus.

His father was Jewish and his mother Roman Catholic.

He was a great-grandson of Léopold Louis-Dreyfus, founder of the Louis-Dreyfus Group, which had begun buying and selling wheat in the Alsace region a century earlier, and rapidly diversified into shipping, oil and other commodities.

His grandfather was Louis Louis-Dreyfus, who served in the French Parliament during the French Third Republic.

He has two sisters: Marie-Jeanne and Monique.

Robert Louis-Dreyfus was initially a bad student who failed his Baccalauréat, but he excelled at poker, winning considerable amounts of money from his friends at the Lycée Janson de Sailly in Paris.

1967

In 1967, he spent time at a kibbutz and was involved in the Six-Day War.

He later secured a place at Harvard Business School with a presentation about his experiences during the war.

He spent the early years of his working life mentored by Siegmund Warburg, in the family business of the Louis-Dreyfus Group.

1982

In 1982 Louis-Dreyfus joined IMS, the US pharmaceutical research company enjoying spectacular monetary success.

1988

His original US$400,000 grew twentyfold by the time the company was sold in 1988.

1989

He served as CEO at Saatchi & Saatchi, the United Kingdom-based advertising agency from 1989 to 1993.

Louis-Dreyfus invested his own money in Saatchi and Saatchi and during his tenure the agency grew considerably.

Before divorcing his first wife, Sarah Oberholzer, in 1989, he met his second wife Margarita Bogdanova in 1988, whom he married in 1992 and with whom he had three sons: Eric, Maurice, and Kyril Louis-Dreyfus, the latter of whom became the chairman and majority shareholder of English football club Sunderland A.F.C. in February 2021, aged only 24.

Louis-Dreyfus identified as an agnostic.

The American actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus, famed for her role in the television comedy series Seinfeld, is his second cousin.

Following his death, his enterprises were inherited and supervised by Margarita Louis-Dreyfus, she is considered to be the richest Russian woman today.

1994

He proved equally successful when in 1994 he took the top job at Adidas, the German-based sporting goods maker.

1996

In 1996 Louis-Dreyfus became the largest shareholder of Olympique de Marseille, a French football team who had recently been rocked by a major match fixing scandal and subsequently relegated to the French second division as part of their punishment.

Louis-Dreyfus, with Adidas and the telecommunications company Neuf, sponsored the team; Louis-Dreyfus invested heavily in rebuilding the Marseille squad, marketing the team to the new immigrant populations in Marseille.

The financial fortunes of the club improved, with shirt sales rocketing.

However, success, if judged purely on trophies won, still eluded the club despite reaching the final of the UEFA Cup on two occasions and twice losing in the final of the Coupe de France.

Olympique de Marseille also missed out on the Ligue 1 title during Louis-Dreyfus's tenure, though shortly before his death they finished second to FC Girondins de Bordeaux and qualified for the group stage of the UEFA Champions League.

1997

Louis-Dreyfus added to the brand by streamlining the product line and adding new companies to the group, including the Salomon ski-wear and golf company in 1997.

2000

Robert Louis-Dreyfus re-joined the family company, Louis-Dreyfus Group, in May 2000, and restructured this major commodities trading and merchandising firm.

2001

He remained CEO of Adidas until 2001, combining this position with chairmanship of Neuf Telecom with whom he served until 2004.

He also served as a director of Neuf Cegetel.

2002

Louis-Dreyfus was also a shareholder in the Belgium football club Standard Liège, and was involved in the creation of Infront Sports & Media in 2002 (transition from the former KirchSport completed in February 2003) acting as the company's chairman of the board.

The Swiss-based sports marketing agency was handling the media rights distribution of the FIFA World Cup in 2002 and 2006.

Today it is the marketing partner of 130 sports federations and clubs.

2004

According to internal FIFA documents, Louis-Dreyfus had demanded a repayment of the funds in 2004, which were transferred as €6.7 million via a FIFA account in Geneva to an account held by Louis-Dreyfus.

2005

In 2005, he decided to relaunch the Le Coq Sportif sports company through a Swiss investment company, Airesis.

2006

Allegedly these funds were used to bribe numerous FIFA officials and secure Germany's bid to host the 2006 World Cup, while a FIFA report had strongly criticised England's supposedly 'unprofessional' rival bid presentation.

2009

Louis-Dreyfus died in Zürich aged 63 on 4 July 2009, following a long period with leukemia.

Louis-Dreyfus was married twice.

2012

Margarita inherited 60% of the organization (increased to 65% in 2012).

Robert's two sisters, Monique Louis-Dreyfus Roosmale Nepveu and Marie-Jeanne Louis-Dreyfus Meyer, each own 12% and are now both billionaires.

2015

In October 2015 the German news magazine Der Spiegel reported that the bidding committee for the FIFA World Cup 2006 had set up a slush fund that Louis-Dreyfus, at the time CEO of Adidas, filled with 10.3 million Swiss francs in 2000.