In this video we go over the crazy story of how Ireland's riches man Sean Quinn lost everything. He made his fortune by building a gravel and cement company. He then leveraged his assets to buy a large investment in Anglo Irish bank. In 2008 the bank went tits up and his entire fortune was wiped out.
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#WallStreetMillenial

What's up guys and welcome back to wall street millennial on this channel, we cover all things stocks and investing in today's video we're going to take a look at one of the most extreme richest to rag stories in irish history. This is the story of sean quinn, a self-made billionaire, who made some poor choices and saw his industrial empire turn to dust. Before we get into the video we'd like to thank our channel members, sean quinn was born in ireland in 1947. He had a brother, peter quinn and both of them were avid european football players.

He came from a humble background. Without money or much access to high quality education to start his first business, he had to borrow a hundred british pounds from a friend but over the course of several decades, of hard work and savvy business. Since he was able to eventually build up a formidable industrial empire, quinn's first business was started in the early 1970s. He was able to borrow 100 british pounds from a friend and used a startup capital to start a business extracting gravel from the ground.

He started small, taking gravel out of his own family's personal property and selling it to local businesses himself. At the time, the irish economy was still in a post-world war ii slump, especially in the 1980s business was tough, but during the first decade of his time in business, quinn was able to establish himself as a respectable small business owner and became familiar with the intricacies Of his gravel and other quarry related businesses, starting in the later half of the 1980s, the economy in ireland began to heat up throughout the 1990s. Ireland's gdp made up for lost growth in previous decades and experienced gdp growth of as much as 10 percent per year. In the later half of the 90s, by this point, quinn had expanded his business from just extracting materials from the ground to producing cement with the quinn cement company.

He was in the exact right place at the right time to benefit from ireland's economic boom quinn. Cement ended up becoming the backbone of quinn's fortunes from which he would achieve the status of billionaire after a prosperous decade in business. During the 1990s quinn found himself outgrowing the domestic cement industry in ireland, he diversified away from the company's core business and entered into the hospitality industry with the company quinn hotels, he owned several high-end hotels all around europe, including the prestigious prague hilton. He also diversified into other industrial businesses, taking advantage of the same booming economy that had given him his fortune in cement.

He went on to produce plastics, glass and other more specialized products from within ireland, but his most faithful decision was to steer the company into the financial services industry. He started with an insurance business in 1996, which he called quinn direct insurance for more than a decade. Quinn direct was a profitable business and made tens of millions of euros in profit. Each year it reported in 2006 that it had 420 000 customers making it the third biggest insurer in ireland.
Quinn's foray into the insurance industry expanded further in 2007 when he acquired pupa. Ireland bupa ireland was at the time ireland's second biggest health insurer. At the time they were in a row with the irish government over risk equalization with the company saying that the government regulations would cost the company hundreds of millions of euros in just the first three years by acquiring bupa quinn's business empire would not have to comply With those same regulations immediately allowing the company to remain profitable in ireland, at least in the short term, however, after 2008, they would have to start complying with the same risk equalization regulations around the same time, as quinn was turning his company into an insurance powerhouse. He also was developing a taste for the banking industry.

He started buying up shares of anglo-irish bank, which he owned. Five percent of by the first part of 2007., anglo irish bank, was a mainly commercial bank with little retail exposure and operated throughout europe in the united states. It experienced booming growth from its founding in the 1960s through the early 2000s, mainly from its business and property. Lending quinn had ambitions to be a substantial shareholder in anglo-irish bank, partly because of his own businesses in the hospitality and real estate industries by 2008.

Quentin was undisputedly the richest man in ireland. He had an estimated net worth of 6 billion us dollars, placing him among the top 200 richest people in the world according to forbes, but the 2008 financial crisis would prove to be the beginning of the end for quinn's business empire. Queen's obsession with a stake in the anglo-irish bank extrapolated his previous business success too far, and he over leveraged himself in this risky investment. Although expanding the business into new industries usually has the purpose and effect of diversifying the businesses interests, protecting it from a catastrophe in any one, isolated industry, quinn's approach to the anglo-irish bank did the opposite by the middle of 2008.

Quinn had increased his business's stake in the bank to 15, which cost more than one and a half billion dollars. Quinn's business could not afford to purchase that large of a stake without financing and did so by taking on significant debt liabilities. This exposed quinn's company to a large amount of risk, because if the bank did poorly, then quinn's company would be at risk of not being able to service the high debt load. Furthermore, the bank was heavily dependent on the property and real estate industries.

They mainly dealt with business lending related to property, development and hospitality. In the second half of 2008, this industry had its infamous decline, leading to huge losses for the bank by the time 2009 came along. The stock price of the bank had lost 98 of its value. This was a shocking loss to quinn.
He had just started building up a leveraged stake in the bank in the months and years prior to the financial collapse. At the peak he owned a 28 interest in the company, including through using leveraged financial products. He had squeezed his other businesses dry, trying to come up with the money for the investment, leaving them with little capital to weather a bad year or rainy day scenario. When the real estate market collapsed in 2008, there was no way for his companies to withstand the losses.

Quinn had taken out a total of more than 3 billion dollars worth of loans in relation to the stake in anglo-irish bank. At the same time, quinn's insurance business also took a huge hit in 2008 due to risky bets they had independently made that were leveraged to the real estate markets. As a result, quinn's massive conglomerate found its diversified companies disproportionately sensitive to the 2008 real estate crisis by 2011. The entity in charge of winding down the anglo-irish bank, which quinn, had a massive stake in attempted to collect more than 3 billion dollars of debt, which quinn personally owed around the same time, quinn also lost control of his insurance operation.

Us-Based liberty, mutual was brought in in a joint venture to take control of the insurance operation, after quinn was unable to save the company himself. One of the key concerns that anglo irish bank had about quinn was because he had built up such a large stake in the bank using debt financing that he would use his ownership stake to push out outsized dividends. He would need the bank to pay dividends that were too large for its own good, because the dividends would help him pay the interest on his financing for his stake. When quinn was finally unable to pay his debts, the courts stripped him of his entire ownership.

In all of his companies in 2011, his property started being liquidated to pay down his debt, but he did not want to lose the possessions that he had built up over the decades. So he tried a number of different strategies to preserve his wealth. The first thing he tried was declaring personal bankruptcy in late 2011. He applied for bankruptcy in belfast the capital of northern ireland.

However, this quickly led to accusations of bankruptcy, fraud against quinn, in particular the entity responsible for liquidating quinn's assets, alleged that quinn's main personal and business interests lay not in northern ireland, but in the republic of ireland by filing for bankruptcy in northern ireland quinn would be Subject to significantly less harsh consequences than in the republic of ireland, the irish bank resolution corporation claimed that coin had frequently indicated his residence to be at an irish address and in fact had significant business interests in 95 different companies in the republic of ireland. Moreover, the electoral register for an irish county showed quinn as officially being a resident of ireland. This blatantly contradicted quinn's claims of his bankruptcy application in northern ireland by the next year. His bankruptcy in northern ireland was annulled and he was newly declared bankrupt in the republic of ireland with that defeat.
Quinn faced the prospect of losing everything that he had left in the process of having his business and assets liquidated to pay down his billions of dollars. Of debt he engaged in another form of bankruptcy, fraud called asset stripping. This is an activity where a debtor who is about to lose an asset towards their unpaid debt, tries to salvage any assets that they can from the business before it is seized by liquidators. In the case of quinn, that meant sending hundreds of thousands of dollars to himself and his family members from his company's accounts in a court case to determine whether or not the quinn family had engaged in asset stripping.

It was found that two of quinn's daughters, colette and brenda were paid 881 000 euros over the course of a year through some of their father's subsidiary companies. They claimed that the payments were for work contracts with the companies, but could not provide any documents showing the nature of the work. Additionally, when the court asked where the money was, they claimed that they had spent all of it, except for 12 and a half thousand euros, with no receipts to prove what the money was spent on. Naturally, the courts concluded that there was indeed asset stripping going on.

They sentenced quinn to nine weeks in jail after he was released. He had nothing to show for his once mighty business empire. He currently lives with his wife and family on the same street that he grew up on alright guys that wraps it up for this video. If you like, the content, make sure to hit that like button and subscribe for future videos leave a comment saying whether you think sean quinn took on too much real estate risk in the years leading up to his bankruptcy or if he was just a victim of Bad timing and a historic global recession, also, if you're interested in learning about interesting economic topics, make sure to check out our second channel the economic outlook in the meantime.

Thank you so much for watching and we'll see you in the next video wall street millennial, signing out.

By Stock Chat

where the coffee is hot and so is the chat

27 thoughts on “How ireland’s richest man lost everything”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars ian rush says:

    This scumbag should be in prison right now and not free enjoying his ill gotten fortune.

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars jonny5777 says:

    The pictures of India that are meant to be Ireland are a little harsh! It’s not that bad

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars domitry jobby says:

    whao sad to see something like that happen, hope he us well and lives well

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Francis Larvey says:

    Maybe his old buddy Barack will invite him to Marsh's Vineyard to weekend occasionally at their mansion and reminisce over old times.

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars GERMAN_OFFENDER says:

    bahaha to tragic that they even sent him to jail after what he had done for the countrys economy, true bastards

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars janet sanders says:

    Great context. Everyone needs more than there salary to be financially stable. The best thing to do with your money is to invest it rightly, because money left for saving always end up used with no returns. I started investing in bitcoin mid November 2020 with the help of a well-known -professional Mr Burton Schilichter and the profit entirely funded my recent duplex.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sean Reilly says:

    Gambling is a addiction whether you have a modest flutter on a regular basis or you gamble with billions on stock

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Anan Mai says:

    For Me, PAY My Self First, & Invest My very own Funds AWAY from My Corporations, So, WHEN My Corporations needs Funds, I Personally Loans My own Corporations",,,,,,

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Som Som says:

    My mother use to have car insurance with them in the Noughties. Unscrupulous biz practices

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars John Kooy says:

    I feel sorry for him but maybe he should have retired while he was ahead,after all when you countless millions to live on why try to get even more?

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Oisin Linnane says:

    "Avid european football players" 😂😂 think you need to go back to that research stack lad and I'm not talking soccer/football semantics

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Mind of World says:

    Never put all your profit from one business into another either to buy a new business or investment because the two business can be lost.the first may need urgent financing the second may be a bad investment.

    Take a look at Sean Quinn Ireland richestman.

    Secondly. Never invest all your money in 1 business always have savings just incase. Savings is very important is for emergency it can be lost gradually by inflation but still that's a price you pay for your personal insurance

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars WHATSAPP+①④⓪④③④①②⑤⑥⑨ says:

    Trading with Mr John david was never a regret to me, All thanks to him, he is the best I have ever seen

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars clancywiggam says:

    Why are the shots of some Caribbean slum instead of Ireland? Did he grow up in County Trinidad & Tobago?

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Peter Hanssen says:

    Poor fellow, could he not just stopped when he was so well off. This happed when you let investment people advise you.

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Pastol Samuel says:

    You are all accusing this poor guy like he took the decisions on his own. These rich people are surrounded by predators called financial advisors , wealth managers , international lawyers, and the so called called friends. They all contributed to his downfall. Unless they were all getting their fat salary for just being part of the decor.

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars p s y c h o r a p t o r says:

    do not overleverage
    especially on coinbase
    but especially in amc shorts

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars tankspeed says:

    Glad to see it , another couple of words for over-leverage , greedy ba****d ,
    pity he didn’t lose everything 🥳

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars 50shadesofblack says:

    The main reason is most likely that like the narrator is talking about " the status of billionaire" and not " the skill". Gambling with debt is not the same as building a sound business with compund interest and organic growt. Also over specialising and not divercifying is often a problem. In my native Norway, alot of the super wealthy came from the shipping sector. A problem with the sector was over levrage in debt, and over specialising. That is they only invested in shipping and in nothing else!. And if they had other investmenst it was in penthouse apartments and luxury houses abroad that they could not rent out on a stabel basis ( no cash flows). It`s more important to love the game of making money. And of liking to influence the world, than to spend it. If you have a instagram account where you brag about your investments ( status whoring) you are most likely never going to make it long term. If you have alot of levrage that is not invested in income generating ( like property), or in a diversifyed investment portfolio like the S&P500 indeks ( that gives a solid 11,5% a year). You are most likely over time never going to survive with " fuck you money".

    To be hungry is smart. But greed is NOT good

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gary Smyth says:

    Quinn is still rich don't be fooled.. And doesn't live in a street he lives in the same family home he and his wife buit

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jo blo says:

    Found the problem, he tried to buy out a communist who hates irish people.

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars John Baugh says:

    I guess I never understand why people feel they need to grow and grow and grow. He was very wealthy selling cement. He knew that well and probably had low debt and a ton of cash on hand, before venturing out in to other things. During the downturn he’d have been fine if he just stuck with that. Plus, he never had a box of gold and cash in a hole somewhere no one knows about? Who doesn’t do that?

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Eric SY says:

    debt is debt. you can rename it or do fancy things with it. but it seems to be a common theme with people that go bust.

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Chris Pittman Jr says:

    I imagine if he had just gone bankrupt without the fraud scandals, he could have leveraged his connections and reputation as an entrepreneur to rebuild.

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars M Chambers says:

    It's a lesson in don't put all your eggs in one basket and to save some personal money somewhere in hidden accounts. It he'd stashed $10,000,000 or even $1,000,000 somewhere he could be living a new comfortable life somewhere under a new identity. Since he wasn't running an actual scam he probably thought this would never happen to him and wasn't prepared for 2007/2008 international crisis which was much worse than most predicted.

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars trailer films says:

    he did not lose anything he just gave it to someone else welcome to reality it's just an accumulation and we borrow from nature which in the end you pay atom by atom without interest rates at least … enjoy and there is nothing wrong of being rich again in all sense and dimensions nature doesn't need us we need nature first, humans are …

  27. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars karehaqt says:

    You didn't even talk about the kidnapping nor the beatings which is what this story is known for.

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