Jump to content

Brent Walker

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by DucNguyen0131 (talk | contribs) at 01:04, 15 March 2022. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Brent Walker was a British company involved in property, gambling, distilled beverages and pubs. It was founded by George Walker,[1] the brother of the boxer Billy Walker.

In 1991, following the accumulation of debts which had been used to finance acquisitions, George Walker was ousted from the company and its board sold its remaining investments under the supervision of its bankers.[2]

George Walker

Born in London, George Walker career began as a porter at Billingsgate Fish Market. Like his brother, Walker became a boxer of the 1950s. Following his retirement from the ring he undertook a number of business ventures including Dolly's nightclub in London.

Foundations of the company

In 1974, Walker arranged a reverse takeover of Hackney and Hendon Greyhound Company, a stock market listed company, sold his own business interests to it and changed its name to Brent Walker.[3] Using land from the Hendon Greyhound Stadium, Brent Walker entered into a joint venture with Hammerson Estates to develop the Brent Cross Shopping Centre, taking a 25% stake.[4] Brent Walker sold its interest in Brent Cross to Hammerson in 1976.[5]

Operations, acquisitions and disposals

The films The Stud (1978), The Bitch and Quadrophenia (both 1979) were financed by Brent Walker in the 1970s, through Brent Walker Film Distributors Limited. Video productions of Gilbert & Sullivan operas were produced in the 1980s. In 1987, the company acquired Goldcrest Films, through the Masterman joint venture with the Ensign Trust.[6][7][8] That year, in 1987, it bought out troubled television production company Trillion for £12 million, and bought out shares from Charterhall, the European investor company.[9] In 1979, Brent Walker acquired the Camera Effects post-production and visual effects company which was sold to Rank Organisation in 1981.[10]

Brent Walker operated Southend Pier between 1986 and 1988.[11] It also acquired the Kursaal amusement park in Southend in 1988. The local authority stepped in to take over this dilapidated property in the 1990s.[12]

The London Trocadero, a property in London's West End originally built as a restaurant, was acquired in 1987 as a joint venture with Robin Power, an Irish developer. Brent Walker sold its interest to Power in 1991 at a substantial loss.

Elstree Studios, Borehamwood were acquired in 1988.[13] Brent Walker obtained planning permission for the construction of a Tesco supermarket on the backlot and the studios fell out of use. Faced with a potential compulsory purchase, Brent Walker sold the remaining property to Hertsmere Council in 1996.[14]

The Cameron and Tolly Cobbold Breweries were acquired from Ellerman Investments, a company owned by the Barclay brothers, in 1988 for £240m.[15] The company closed Tolly Cobbold's Cliff Brewery in Ipswich in 1989 and transferred production to Cameron's Hartlepool brewery.[16] The Hartlepool brewery was sold to Wolverhampton and Dudley Breweries in 1992.[17]

Pubmaster was formed by Brent Walker as an estate of mainly tenanted pub properties including 386 Grand Metropolitan pubs acquired in 1988 and 800 pubs acquired with the Cameron and Tolly Cobbold breweries. Pubmaster was sold in November 1996 to Silverfleet Capital Limited, a private equity group. At the time it comprised 1600 pubs.[18]

In 1988, Brent Walker purchased the distilled beverage company Whyte & Mackay. The company was sold to American Brands (later called Fortune Brands) in 1990.[19]

The William Hill chain of betting shops and Mecca Bookmakers, were acquired from Grand Metropolitan in 1989 for £685 million.[20] In 1997 William Hill was sold to Nomura for £700m.[21]

Collapse

Brent Walker accumulated debts of £1.2bn by 1991 with debt-financed acquisitions. A collapse in property prices and high interest rates placed the company in financial difficulties. George Walker was ousted from the Board in 1991 and the group's bankers took control, enforcing a process of sale of the company's assets. Following the sale of William Hill in 1997, the company was removed from the stock exchange and wound up.[22]

Serious fraud trial

In 1994, the Serious Fraud Office brought a case against George Walker and Brent Walker's former finance director Wilfred Aquilina, accusing them of inflating profits at the film division by £19.3m in an effort to lure investors. After a four and a half month trial costing an estimated £40m, Walker was cleared of all charges, while Aquilina was convicted of false accounting, sentenced to 18 months imprisonment suspended for two years, and fined £25,000.[23]

References

  1. ^ Obituary: George Walker, The Daily Telegraph, 25 March 2011
  2. ^ Obituary George Walker, The Scotsman, 27 March 2011
  3. ^ Obituary: George Walker, The Daily Telegraph, 25 March 2011
  4. ^ Daniel Miller, Shopping, place, and identity
  5. ^ Obituary: George Walker, The Daily Telegraph, 25 March 2011
  6. ^ Adams, Mark (1987-07-22). "Masterman Seen As Likely New Goldcrest Buyer". Variety. pp. 3, 23.
  7. ^ The Bitch, the Stud and the Prawn
  8. ^ Brent Walker videos
  9. ^ "Brent Walker Group Takes Hefty Stake In Trillion TV Firm". Variety. 1987-09-09. pp. 33–34.
  10. ^ Camera Effects website
  11. ^ Southend Pier timeline
  12. ^ Theatres and Halls in Southend-on-Sea
  13. ^ Hansard 29 June 1995
  14. ^ "History of Elstree Studios". Archived from the original on 2013-11-06. Retrieved 2013-11-19.
  15. ^ Obituary: George Walker, The Daily Telegraph, 25 March 2011
  16. ^ Suffolk CAMRA history of Tolly Cobbold
  17. ^ Camerons Brewery timeline Archived 2012-08-01 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Silverfleet Capital Limited, our investments
  19. ^ Whyte and Mackay our history[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ "Harris Feltham, Derek Cliff. "Brent Walker buys £685m betting chain." Times, 6 Sept. 1989, p. 25". Times Digital Archives.
  21. ^ Disposal of William Hill and delisting
  22. ^ Disposal of William Hill and delisting
  23. ^ "Litany of expensive fraud trials". BBC News. 21 June 2005.