Jeremy Hosking
Jeremy John Hosking (born 20 July 1958), is an English businessman, who made his fortune through investment and private equity, including as a co-founder and investment portfolio manager for private investment fund Marathon Asset Management. Hosking is also well known for his extensive collection of steam locomotives, and share holding in Crystal Palace F.C. Hosking was ranked number 309 in the Sunday Times Rich List in 2015, with a value of £330M.[1]
Career
After graduation from Cambridge University in 1979, Hosking worked for G.T. Management PLC in Hong Kong and the United States. In 1986, he co-founded Marathon in London. Hosking lead investment in South East Asia, the Americas and South Africa. In late 2012, Hosking founded Hosking and Co.[2]
Hosking has written various papers on investment and corporate governance, including "South East Asia: Eighteen Reasons to be Bearish" in August 1995.
Private investments
In December 2009, Hosking donated £30,000 for funding research support, to Conservative MP David Davis.[3]
In March 2010, Hosking bought the West Sussex country house hotel, the Gravetye Manor, out of administration.[4]
In August 2010, Hosking was part of a four-man consortium which bought Selhurst Park, and then residents Crystal Palace football club out of administration, via the limited company CPFC 2010.[5] On 18 December 2015, it was announced that American investors Josh Harris and David Blitzer had bought a major share holding in the club.[6] Whilst Steve Parish continued as chairman alongside Harris and Blitzer, fellow CPFC 2010 investors Browett, Long and Hosking each retained a reduced 8% investment.[7]
Railways
Hosking owns a number of steam locomotives and one diesel locomotive, a number of which are operated by Locomotive Services Ltd. He also founded the Royal Scot Locomotive and General Trust, to originally purchase 6100 Royal Scot, which now itself both owns a number of steam locomotives and operates workshops at Crewe. In 2016, Hosking purchased a one-third stake in the Dartmouth Steam Railway plc which operates the Paignton to Dartmouth heritage line in Devon.[8]
Engines currently owned by Hosking include:
Key: | Operational | Undergoing testing/Mainline Certification | Under Repair | Expired Mainline Certificate/Withdrawn from Service/Stored | Under overhaul/restoration |
---|
Class | Number (&Name) | Image | Current location | Current status |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nunney Castle |
Undergoing overhaul, return to traffic hoped for in mid 2016. | |||
Raveningham Hall |
Operational, non mainline. | |||
Operational, non mainline. Returned to operations in 2014, hauling its first train in 54 years. | ||||
Braunton |
Operational, Mainline Certified (2016 - 2023). Returned to traffic in 2016 following the completion of an overhaul, currently disguised as scrapped sister 34052 Lord Dowding. | |||
The Sherwood Forester |
Operational, Mainline Certified (2013 - 2020). Purchased in November 2015 following the death of Bert Hitchen, the locos previous owner.[10] | |||
Bittern |
Having worked the final year of its current boiler certificate at the Mid-Hants Railway, now in store at Crewe Heritage Centre awaiting overhaul. | |||
Operational, non mainline. Due to a lack of a flange on the centre driving wheel, cannot be mainline certified. | ||||
Operational | ||||
References
- ↑ The Sunday Times Rich List 2015
- ↑ Hosking and Co
- ↑ "David Davis". TheyWorkForYou.com. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
- ↑ "Hosking stokes up luxury hotel purchase". The Times. 2 March 2010. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
- ↑ "Long live Crystal Palace", Daniel Jones, This is Croydon Today
- ↑ "Crystal Palace: Deal agreed with US investors Harris and Blitzer". BBC Sport. 18 December 2015. Retrieved 19 December 2015.
- ↑ "Investment Deal Is Signed". cpfc.co.uk. 18 December 2015. Retrieved 19 December 2015.
- ↑ Steam Raiwlay, page 10, September 2016
- ↑ "Projects". The Flour Mill. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
- ↑ "The Sherwood Forester". Icons of Steam. Retrieved 6 November 2015.