Leon Recanati

Leon Recanati
Born (1948-05-10) May 10, 1948
Nationality Israel
Occupation businessman and philanthropist
Known for co-chairman of IDB Holding
Children 3
Parent(s) Mathilda Carasso
Daniel Recanati
Relatives Leon Yehuda Recanati (paternal grandfather)
Raphael Recanati (paternal uncle)
Michael Recanati (first cousin)
Thomas Kaplan (Son in law) Avraham Rakanti (great uncle)

Leon Recanati (Hebrew: ליאון רקנאטי; born May 10, 1948) is an Israeli businessman and philanthropist.

Biography

Lean Recanati is the son of Mathilda and Daniel Recanati.[1] His father served as CEO of the Israel Discount Bank and along with his brothers, established the IDB Holding Corporation.[2] After completing his military service, Recanati earned a B.A. in economics and an M.B.A. at Hebrew University in Jerusalem.[1]Recanati is married to Shula Recanati. They have a daughter together.[3] He has two children with his first wife Mira. Their daughter Dafna is married to American philanthropist and investor Thomas Kaplan.[4][5]

Business career

In 1971, he worked for the Israel Discount Bank – which was founded by his grandfather, Leon Yehuda Recanati. In 1979, he was appointed deputy CEO with responsibility for all branches and marketing. He largely escaped the scandal of the 1983 Israel bank stock crisis.[6] In 1986, he transferred to IDB Holding, the investment side of the family business where he rotated through various chairmanships at Supersol, Delek and Clal, and later served as co-CEO and co-chairman of IDB Holding.[1]

In May 2003, the family sold IDB Holding to Nochi Dankner[7] and divided its assets. With his share, Recanati established Glenrock, an investment company, which he ran with his wife Shula Recanati and Ziv Kop.[7] It has three divisions: GlenRock America assists Israeli businesses in entering the American market and also serves as a conduit for American investors to invest in Israel (headed by Larry Graev); GlenRock Israel invests in local technology companies; and GlenRock Italy advises Israeli businesses in penetrating the Italian market and serves as a bridge for Italian investors interested in investing in Israel (headed by Rony Benatof).[1]

In 2007, he purchased a 50.4% stake (73% total with two minority partners) in the Gmul Investment Company for NIS 600 million more than twice its market capitalization. Gmul had stakes in real estate, hotels, investments, and automotive. It was founded in 1950 by Bank Hapoalim, the Histadrut labor federation and several pension funds then sold to the brothers Jules and Eddy Trump, who listed it on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, and then sold in October 2003 to Eyal Yona and Amnon Barzilay.[7] Performance at Gmul deteriorated. Recanati stated: "At this point I can say that buying control of Gmul was the worst deal I have ever made... I cannot invest any more in Gmul, but I hope that we can all work together to find a solution and reach a fair, mutually agreed-upon arrangement."[8] In October 2011, he sold half of his 50.4% investment in Gmul to Itzhak Gvilli for NIS 20 million.[9] He resigned as chairman of Gmul in July 2012.[10]

Philanthropy

Recanati serves as vice chairman of the Israel Cancer Association.[1] He has served as chairman of Tel Aviv University's Development Committee and he also is involved with the Israel Museum and the Tel Aviv Museum.[1] Recanati established the Tapuah program in Israel which established 48 centers in disadvantaged areas and Bedouin, Druze and Arab villages where basic computer and internet training is provided.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Jewish Virtual Library: "Leon Recanati" retrieved May 12, 2013
  2. "Leon Yehuda Recanati". Tel Aviv University/Recanati Business School. Retrieved 2013-02-18.
  3. Glen Rock Israel website: Management - Dr. Shula Recanati retrieved May 12, 2013
  4. Robin Finn (10 January 2010). "Coffee for Me, Worms for Her". The New York Times.
  5. "Thomas Kaplan". forbes.com.
  6. Lipson, Nathan (October 12, 2008). "The Losses of Leon Recanati". Haaretz. Retrieved 24 December 2017.
  7. 1 2 3 Haaretz: "The losses of Leon Recanati - He had it all: money, prestige - but the scion of the banking family wanted more" By Nathan Lipson December 10, 2008
  8. Haaretz: "Recanati: 'Buying Gmul was the worst deal in my life' -Leumi is demanding immediate repayment of NIS 5 million in loans" By Michael Rochvarger and Yuval Maoz December 10, 2008
  9. Haaretz: "Recanati Cutting his losses / Recanati sells half his stake in Gmul - Leon Recanati, through his privately owned company Legov, sells 25.2% of the company's stock, representing half his 50.4% stake, along with a share in control to CPA Itzhak Gvilli for up to NIS 20 million" By Michael Rochvarger October 6, 2011
  10. Reuters: GMUL Investment Company Ltd Announces Resignation of Chairman, Mr. Leon Recanati July 30, 2012
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.