Vincent Bolloré

Businessman

Birthday April 1, 1952

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Boulogne-Billancourt, France

Age 71 years old

Nationality France

#21860 Most Popular

1952

Vincent Bolloré (born 1 April 1952) is a French billionaire businessman.

He is the chairman and CEO of the investment group Bolloré.

In September 2023, his net worth was estimated at US$8.6 billion.

Some commentators have considered his wealth to have been accumulated through predatory means.

Bolloré was born in Boulogne-Billancourt.

He attended the Lycée Janson-de-Sailly, before graduating with a business degree from Université Paris X Nanterre.

Bolloré started his career as an investment bank trainee at Edmond de Rothschild.

Bolloré's personal investment career began when he took over at his family-controlled conglomerate Bolloré, which deals in maritime freight and African trade, and paper manufacturing (cigarette and bible paper).

Bolloré employs 33,000 people worldwide.

He is a well-known corporate raider in France who has succeeded in making money by taking large stakes in French listed companies, in particular the building and construction group Bouygues, where he left with a sizeable capital gain after a power struggle.

2004

In late 2004, his investment group started building a stake in advertising group Havas, becoming its largest single shareholder.

2005

He mounted a coup and replaced Alain de Pouzilhac as CEO in July 2005.

In 2005, through his family company, he expanded his media interests by launching the Direct 8 television station.

Towards the end of 2005, he began building a stake in independent British media planning and buying group, Aegis.

2006

As of July 2006, his stake in Aegis stood at 29%.

Direct Soir, a free newspaper, was launched in June 2006.

The newspaper, along with Matin Plus, the free morning edition also run by the Bolloré Group, was criticized for presenting an overly rosy picture of African leaders who partnered with Bolloré's conglomerate.

2008

In January 2008, he showed interest in becoming a shareholder of famed, but troubled, Italian car manufacturer Pininfarina.

2010

In November 2010, the administrative court of Paris ordered an immediate end to the contract between the RATP and the Bolloré Group allowing the latter to distribute Direct Matin and Direct Soir using newsracks in the Paris subway.

The following month Direct Soir ceased publication, due to the evening return from work being spread out over several hours, in contrast to the morning rush hour when papers could be handed out more efficiently.

2014

In 2014, as Vivendi president he decided to invest in the Italian telecom company Telecom Italia and in the Italian broadcaster Mediaset, controlled by Berlusconi family's holding company Fininvest.

The Bolloré Group also has important positions in the economies of several former French colonies in Africa (in particular Ivory Coast, Gabon, Cameroon, and Congo).

2016

He pulled a similar move with French video game company Ubisoft, owning an approximate 27% stake in the company in 2016, before Ubisoft president Yves Guillemot maneuvered a deal to have a coalition of Tencent Games, among other companies, to buy out Bolloré's shares for about $2.45 billion.

In April 2016, Bolloré launched a defamation law suit against the newspaper Bastamag, which had described "catastrophic" human rights conditions on plantations in Liberia where "children under 14" were working.

In January 2021, Bolloré and two other Bolloré executives pleaded guilty at a Paris court for supplying €370,000 worth of communication services to president of Togo Faure Gnassingbé during their presidential campaigns.

2018

On 24 April 2018, Bolloré was brought into custody for questioning concerning perceived links between discount rates for political consulting (through Havas) and port concessions in Lomé, Togo; and Conakry, Guinea.

He was subsequently indicted for "corruption of foreign agents", "falsification of documents", and "complicity in breach of trust".

If found guilty, he could face a maximum fine of €1 million and up to 10 years' imprisonment.

As a result of the Universal Music Group IPO at Euronext Amsterdam, Bolloré came to hold 18 percent of UMG shares.

He has four children from his first union: Sébastien, Yannick, Cyrille, and Marie, and adopted one child during his current union.

He was the companion of Anaïs Jeanneret, a French writer.

According to Bloomberg, he was among the 250 wealthiest people on the planet with an estimated fortune of US$8.6 billion in 2023.

He is a close personal friend of former French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

It has been said that their friendship goes back over 20 years.

Sarkozy has been criticized for accepting vacations from Bolloré, as was president Georges Pompidou with his father, Michel Bolloré.

They have both stated that no conflict of interest exists.

Bolloré has been investing massively in media for several years.

He is the main shareholder of the Vivendi media group, which holds a 10-percent stake in Universal Music Group (Bolloré himself owns directly another 18%) in addition to numerous TV stations and newspapers.

In 2022 he has also bought the largest private radio station in France, Europe 1 in time for the 2022 French presidential election.

A 2022 essay in The New York Times highlighted Bolloré's media influence, noting the prominence given to far-right, "proto-fascist" politician Éric Zemmour by television news channel CNews.