René-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet

René-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet
Born 1943
Saint-Malo, France
Died December 22, 2008
New York, New York, U.S.
Cause of death Suicide
Residence New Rochelle, New York
Occupation Investment manager
Known for Founder of Access International Advisors
Relatives Bertrand Magon de la Villehuchet (brother)

René-Thierry Magon de La Villehuchet (1943 – 22 December 2008) was a French aristocrat, money manager, and businessman. He was one of the founders of Access International Advisors (AIA Group), a company caught and subsumed in the Madoff investment scandal in 2008.

Early life

René-Thierry Magon de La Villehuchet was born in 1943 in Saint-Malo, France.

Career

Magon de La Villehuchet served as the chairman and CEO of Crédit Lyonnais Securities USA. He also contributed to the founding of Apollo Management, financial management firm established by financier Leon Black.

Later, he founded Access International Advisors, a research analyst investment agency which specialized in managing hedged and structured investment portfolios that involve commercial physical and biological research.[1][2] It had connections to wealthy and powerful aristocrats from Europe. Magon de La Villehuchet's family had done business with many of these aristocrats and their ancestors for almost 300 years.[3]

Its funds enlisted intermediaries with links to some of Europe's high society to garner clients. The FBI and U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) do not believe Magon de La Villehuchet was involved personally in the US$50 billion fraudulent financial Ponzi scheme which Madoff was arrested for masterminding, on 11 December. Bloomberg News reported on 2 January 2009 that the AIA funds had increased aggregate exposure to Madoff from 30% to 75% of a total US$3 billion assets in 2008, for a US$2.25 billion exposure. It also identified Philippe Junot, former husband of Princess Caroline of Monaco, and Prince Michael of Yugoslavia, as partner and investor-relations executive, respectively, in the firm; and Liliane Bettencourt, the world's wealthiest woman, the 86-year-old daughter of L’Oréal founder Eugène Schueller, as an early investor.[4]

According to The New York Times, Magon de La Villehuchet's older brother Bertrand said his brother was connected to Madoff by Thierry's partner in AIA, Patrick Littaye, another French banker, and that Thierry had not known Madoff personally. “He had a true concept of capitalism”, Bertrand Magon de La Villehuchet, 74, said of his brother, quoted in the Times. “He felt responsible and he felt guilty. Today, in the financial world, there is no responsibility; no one wants to shoulder the blame.”[5]

Bloomberg reported Bernard had invested 20% of his assets in an AIA/Madoff fund and also reported René-Thierry had founded Access in 1994 with Littaye. The two had met at Paribas in 1970.[4] In February 2009, Littaye denied having heard of whistleblower Harry Markopolos' accusations against Madoff in the years before the scandal broke, and said Madoff was "of course" exempted from the usual handwriting analysis (graphology) which was among the due diligence efforts AIA made with its outside fund managers.[6]

Personal life

Magon de La Villehuchet resided in New Rochelle, New York. He was also a member of New York Yacht Club, the Larchmont Yacht Cluba racer in the Star and Shields sailboat classesand the St. Malo Bay Nautical Club in France.[5]

Over the last two decades of his life, Magon de La Villehuchet was renovating and organizing the archives of Le Château de Plouër[7] in Plouër-sur-Rance, Brittany, which he'd inherited from an uncle.[5]

Death

On 23 December 2008, Magon de La Villehuchet was found dead in his company office on Madison Avenue in New York City.[8] It was determined he had committed suicide the previous day.[9][10] His left wrist was slit[5] and he had taken sleeping pills. Although no suicide note was found at the scene, his brother in France received a note shortly after his death in which he expressed remorse and a feeling of responsibility.[5]

AIA Group had lost $1.5 billion, including Villehuchet's own personal fortune. After Madoff's Ponzi scheme imploded, Villehuchet held out some hope he'd be able to recover some of his money, and opted to take his own life when it was apparent it was all irretrievably lost.[3]

References

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