Philip Zepter

Philip Zepter
Born (1950-11-23) 23 November 1950
Bosanska Dubica, Bosnia (then Yugoslavia)
Residence Monte Carlo
Alma mater University of Belgrade
Occupation Founder of Zepter International
Spouse(s) Madlena Zepter
Children 1 daughter

Milan Janković (Serbian Cyrillic: Милан Јанковић, born 23 November 1950 in Veliko Gradište, SFR Yugoslavia now Serbia), most known as Philip Zepter (Serbian: Филип Цептер / Filip Zepter) is an international businessman and entrepreneur of Serbian origin. He is also one of the richest Serbs in the world with an estimated net worth of $5 billion.[1] He completed primary school in Kozarska Dubica before graduating from University of Belgrade Faculty of Economics. At the age of 29, he went to Salzburg following his wife Madlena Zepter (then Madlena Janković) who got a temporary job there and in order to study German, and liked it so much there that he decided to stay.

After he moved to Linz, in 1986 he founded Zepter Handels-GmbH,[2] a multi-level marketing firm for pots and pans, which has over time grown into the conglomerate Zepter International which provides “a wide range of products and services, including banking, insurance, telecommunications, and retail sales of consumer products.”[3]

In 2004 Zepter sued the International Crisis Group, a think tank cofounded by financier George Soros, media mogul Rupert Murdoch, lawyer David Boies, money manager Paul Tudor Jones, former Chase Manhattan Bank chief executive David Rockefeller, Goldman Sachs, and J.P. Morgan Chase, for defamation following a 2003 report which described him as "an arms dealer, money launderer and crony of brutal Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic."[4]

According to Serbian press, in 2008 he was interested in buying Serbia's famous football club Red Star Belgrade. However, he postponed the purchase because he was no longer interested. In 2011 Philip Zepter joined the ranks of only five non-U.S. citizens who have been awarded the prestigious Ellis Island Medal of Honor.

Zepter lives in the Villa Trianon in Cap Martin.[5]

References

External links

Civic offices
Preceded by
Dragan Kićanović
President of the
Olympic Committee of Serbia and Montenegro

2005
Succeeded by
Ivan Ćurković


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