Jochen Wermuth
Jochen Wermuth | |
---|---|
Born | December 13, 1969 |
Nationality | German |
Alma mater | Brown University |
Occupation | Founder and CIO Wermuth Asset Management |
Website | www |
Jochen Wermuth (born 13 December 1969) is a German investor, who serves on the steering committees of the "100% Impact" family office network and the "Europeans for DivestInvest" investor association.[1] He is the founder and Chief Investment Officer of Wermuth Asset Management, a German family office and investment advisory firm committed to sustainable investments.[2] As of June 2017, he is also a member of the investment committee for the EUR 24 billion Energy Transition Fund (Atommüllentsorgungsfonds).[3]
Biography[]
Jochen Wermuth was born in Boston, Massachusetts, where his parents Dr. Dieter Wermuth and Professor Dr. Nanny Ellen Wermuth were studying on Fulbright scholarships at Tufts and Harvard University, respectively.[4]
He is the eldest of their four sons, Martin (1974), Peter (1976) and Ulli (1981). Jochen graduated magna cum laude and with honours from Brown University, and holds a BA in Mathematics and Economics and MA in Economics. He also passed his qualifying exams for a Doctorate in Economics at Balliol College, Oxford.[5] He is married with three children, Niklas (2005), Alina (2008), Kristina (2012) to Russian ecologist Alexandra Kornilova.
In 1993, Jochen Wermuth became an EU-TACIS adviser to Russia's Ministry of Finance in the area of "fiscal policy framework development" based on his studies of the transformations following German unification. He co-founded the World Bank sponsored Economic Expert Group[6] under the Ministry of Finance of Russia and headed it between 1995 and 1997.[7] In 1997, he joined Deutsche Bank's Global Markets Division in London as Director of Russian debt capital markets origination, working from Moscow as a member of the management committee responsible for setting up Deutsche's fully licensed subsidiary there.[8] While working for Deutsche Bank, from 1997 to 1998, Jochen Wermuth and his team raised around $8 billion in financing for Russia. He left Deutsche Bank with an outstanding bonus claim for $37m an issue which was eventually settled amicably out of court.[9][10][11] [12]
In 1999, Jochen Wermuth became the Founding Partner and Chief Investment Officer of Wermuth Asset Management GmbH, a family office and investment advisor.[13]
He is a member of the board of the Liberal Mission Foundation and a supporter of Greenpeace.[14]
In March 2016 Jochen Wermuth made a Euro 300,000 donation to the German green political party Alliance ´90/The Greens (German: Bündnis 90/Die Grünen) to support their election campaign in Baden-Wuerttemberg, where state elections were held on 13 March 2016. He argued that he made this donation because the Greens in Baden-Wuerttemberg were both supportive of the refugee policy of Chancellor Merkel, but also because the party had proven that a sustainable economic policy could generate both high growth and many jobs.[15] He further said that out of all the German parties only the Greens seemed to have a clear policy focus on the completion of the energy transition to 100 percent renewable power and the transport transition to 100 percent renewable transport as required for Germany to continue to be a leading industrial nation in the future.[16] Indeed, at the elections the Greens became the largest party in a German state for the first time.
The Greens, which had called for caps at Euro 100,000 on individual donations, were criticized for accepting the donation. But Winfried Kretschmann, the Minister-President of Baden-Wuerttemberg, said: The law is not in place yet and it would be silly to not accept this donation.[17] The German newspaper Die Tageszeitung (taz) argued that while it may happen to be a sympathetic cause for someone to make a donation to support green causes, what if someone had provided a 30 percent boost to the election campaign budget for some party promoting coal production? To the taz, the Greens had lost their most important asset, their credibility, by accepting the donation.[18]
Wermuth was suspected by German news magazine Der Spiegel for having donated because one of his portfolio companies, Aquarion had many employees in the region and another portfolio company, The Mobility House could potentially benefit from a further development of electric mobility in Baden-Wuerttemberg. Wermuth replied that he would never seek for contracts for his portfolio companies, but that indeed his portfolio companies could profit from the energy and transport transition.[19]
He advised the Russian government on the transition to a market economy during the immediate post-Soviet period, and has been a frequent commentator in the media on Russian economic matters.[20][21][22]
Public Profile[]
Jochen Wermuth played a major role in the Dutch TV documentary "The breakthrough in renewable energies" a VPRO backlight documentary aired on national TV in various countries and published on VPRO's YouTube Channel on 6 May 2016: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmyrbKBZ6SU. It argues that: "It’s not in the papers but a silent revolution is moving across the world. Renewable energy is becoming cheaper than from fossil fuels. It means that progressively the choice for wind and solar energy is no longer an ethical one but an economic one. And this will speed up the transfer to renewable energy."[23]
On the 19th of June 2017, Jochen Wermuth was appointed as an investment committee member of the newly established Fund for the Financing of Nuclear Waste Management (Fonds zur Finanzierung der kerntechnischen Entsorgung). The Fund’s first and foremost task is to raise funds of approximately EUR 24 bn from the operators of nuclear power plants in Germany in early July 2017. [3]
In December 2016, Jochen Wermuth’s Wermuth Asset Management presented Pope Francis with a new Nissan Leaf electric car as a gift for his 80th birthday. The firm has also made a commitment to prepare four studies that will enable the nation-state of the Vatican to become emissions-free running entirely on renewables.[24]
In 2017 he has made comment in the publication Christian Today with an article titled: “Why Christians cannot afford to bury their talents in the fight against climate change”. The commentary discusses climate change and the impact monetary investments can have in reducing its adverse effects while also reflecting positively on one’s wealth.[25]
Jochen’s stance favoring the advancement of the Green Industrial Revolution has led him to voice his opinions (Die Zeit, November 2016) regarding the positive role that Germany can play in the green energy transition, and the economic benefit that can be realized as a result of the country’s participation.[26]
In 2020 he appeared in the movie “Schmutzige Geschäfte mit unserer Rente”, where he presented Nexwafe, a German solar wafer manufacturer. The film shows how big pension funds and insurers are greenwahsing with private pension money.[27]
History[]
He first got known to the general public when German TV station Suedwestfunk did a documentary about his work in the Russian Ministry of Finance "Der Taschenrechner des Kreml, 1997".[28] He has since become a regular commentator on the global macroeconomic situation and on Russia in the international media.
First to warn of potential Russian default[]
Yevgeny Yasin, ex-Minister of Economics wrote in his article in a book about Russian economic reforms that Jochen Wermuth, head of the Economic Expert Group under the Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation, was the first to warn of a potential default of the Russian Government in a memo in the fall of 1996 which he forwarded to Chernomyrdin.[7]
Questions to the Russian authorities on corruption and investment climate[]
In summer 2010, Jochen Wermuth, together with Nikita Suslov published an article "How to improve Russia's Investment Climate".[33] In the fall of 2011, ahead of the Russian Duma elections and the general public uproar, Jochen Wermuth challenged President Vladimir Putin on the progress made in terms of fighting corruption and in terms of improving the Russian business climate at the VTB conference.[34]
Commitment to sustainable growth[]
Jochen Wermuth is a sponsor of Greenpeace since 1992,[35] a member of "Eurosolar"[35] since 2000 and did his first investments into clean tech in 2000, starting with an integrated production chain from quartz sands to mono-silicon with the late Nobel Prize Laureate Alexander Prokhorov. He found that he required a stronger balance sheet to see through such important break-through technologies, turned his family office into an investment advisory business and gradually built the team and assets dedicated to investments in sustainable growth, culminating in the "Green Gateway Fund"[36][37][38][39][40][41] dedicated to investing in leading EU clean tech companies [42] with technologies relevant to the Russian-Kazakhstan-Belorussian Free Trade zone to which entry to such a market via Russia's region of Tatarstan might be attractive.[43][44]
Wermuth Asset Management[]
After leaving Deutsche Bank, Wermuth founded his own family office focusing on sustainable investments, Russia and the CIS.[45] Wermuth Asset Management (WAM) is an international investment advisory firm headquartered in Germany and with branches in Russia and the Netherlands. The firm's main clients are investments funds it sponsors, which in turn have high-net-worth individuals, family offices, fund of funds, pension fund and sovereign wealth funds as investors. WAM advises funds in several alternative asset classes, including long/short equities activist value investing, real estate development and private equity, with a focus on sustainable growth and clean-technology funds spanning the EU and Russia, which make up 60% of AUM. Among others, WAM invests in the solar manufacturer Nexwafe via the Green Growth Fund 2. [46] Nexwafe produces energy- and material-saving wafers that also bring a significant cost advantage.[47] Since its foundation in 1999, WAM has advised on more than $1 billion of investments. WAM has been a member of the World Economic Forum's "Champions of Tomorrow" and the G20 Green Growth Action Alliance (G2A2) initiatives and a sponsor of Transparency International[48] and of the "Deutsch-Russische Jugendaustausch" (German Russian Youth Exchange).
Other engagements[]
Furthermore, Jochen Wermuth is an investment advisory committee member of KENFO,[49] Germany’s €24bn sovereign wealth fund and a member of Toniic’s "100% impact" Family Office Network[50] that is committed to invest across all asset classes with market returns and a positive impact. In 2019 he co-founded the Climate Endowment Group.[51]
In the period leading up to the German parliamentary elections in 2021, he supports GermanZero,[52] a German climate protection organization that advocates a 1.5-degree legislative package and climate neutrality in Germany by 2035.[citation needed]
Other interests[]
Wermuth is a member of the Young President's Organization and is its inaugural spokesperson for the YPO Global Pulse,[53] a member of Eurosolar founded by Hermann Scheer, a member of The Liberal Mission of Russia, the German Association for Foreign Policy (DGAP), and a supporter of Greenpeace. His philanthropic activity includes support of renewable energy research at Brown University, support of the New Economics School in Moscow, to Russian orphanages and efforts to protect the grave of artist Kazimir Malevich.[54] He is a runner, swimmer and cyclist and used to ballroom dance, play tennis and soccer.
References[]
- ^ "Divest Invest Website". www.divestinvest.org. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
- ^ "Go east, young man – it's the land of opportunities!" - Voice of Russia, Retrieved January 2012 http://english.ruvr.ru/radio_broadcast/34857244/64950863.html
- ^ Jump up to: a b Energie, Bundesministerium für Wirtschaft und. "Nuklear-Entsorgungsfonds errichtet". www.bmwi.de (in German). Retrieved 18 July 2021.
- ^ "Interview with Jochen Wermuth" – Finparty, Retrieved January 2012 http://finparty.ru/section/interview/record/1019/
- ^ "Jochen R Wermuth Senior Fund Partner, Wermuth Asset Management GmbH". www.bloomberg.com. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
- ^ "MAIN PAGE". www.eeg.ru. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Сложный переход к рынку – Интервью с Е. Г. Ясиным - http://ru-90.ru/node/10
- ^ "Go east, young man – it's the land of opportunities!" - Voice of Russia, Retrieved January 2012http://english.ruvr.ru/radio_broadcast/34857244/64950863.html
- ^ Специалист по российским бумагам требует от Deutsche Bank компенсацию в размере $37 млн – Коммерсантъ, Retrieved February 1999 http://kommersant.ru/doc/213914/print
- ^ People and Business - Bank raid. - The Independent, Retrieved February 1999 www.factiva.com
- ^ Deutsche Bank Sued by Former Employee for `Wrongful' Firing – Bloomberg, Retrieved February 1999 www.bloomberg.com
- ^ Sacked chief sues Deutsche for Pounds 23m – The Evening Standard, Retrieved February 1999 www.factiva.com
- ^ “Moskau ist ein hartes Pflaster” – Die Welt, Retrieved November 2012 https://www.welt.de/finanzen/article110894984/Moskau-ist-ein-hartes-Pflaster-fuer-Investoren.html “Reformdruck gestiegen” – Boerse Online Retrieved November 2012 http://www.wermutham.com/cmskwd/Files/Borse%20Online%20interview%20with%20Jochen%20W.pdf
- ^ - Jochen Wermuth on the homepage of the „Liberal Mission“ (Russian, retrieved on Dec. 22, 2012)
- ^ bparkx, Brian Parkin. "Wermuth Bets on Greens as Merkel Cools to Solar, Wind Subsidies". Bloomberg.com. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
- ^ Preuß, Susanne (2016-03-03). "300.000 Euro für Wahlkampf Jetzt spricht Kretschmanns größter Spender". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). ISSN 0174-4909. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
- ^ "Stuttgart : Ministerpräsident verteidigt 300 000-Euro-Spende an Südwest-Grüne". sueddeutsche.de (in German). ISSN 0174-4917. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
- ^ Reinecke, Stefan (March 3, 2016). "Was unbezahlbar ist". Taz. Die Tageszeitung.
- ^ "300.000-Spende an die Grünen: "Ich kannte Kretschmann nur von YouTube"". SPIEGEL ONLINE. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Wermuth Interview" – Bloomberg TV, Retrieved December 2010 https://www.bloomberg.com/video/64874952-wermuth-interview.html
- ^ "Russia Corruption "World Champion" – CNBC Squawk Box, Retrieved June 2011 http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=1962874854
- ^ "Europe – left turn?" – RBC TV Dialog, Retrieved May 2012 http://rbctv.rbc.ru/archive/dialogue/562949983878311.shtml Archived 2012-06-23 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ – YouTube, Retrieved, November 2016 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmyrbKBZ6SU
- ^ "Pope receives electric car, as studies for an all-renewables Vatican underway". National Catholic Reporter. 10 March 2017. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
- ^ "Why Christians cannot afford to bury their talents in the fight against climate change". www.christiantoday.com. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
- ^ "ZEIT ONLINE | Lesen Sie zeit.de mit Werbung oder im PUR-Abo. Sie haben die Wahl". www.zeit.de. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
- ^ "Schmutzige Geschäfte - Reportage & Dokumentation - ARD | Das Erste". www.daserste.de (in German). Retrieved 18 July 2021.
- ^ "Jochen Wermuth - Enzyklopädie Marjorie-Wiki" (in German). Marjorie-wiki.de. 2012-09-02. Retrieved 2012-09-21.
- ^ Return of Russia's Putin – CNBC Squawk Box, Retrieved October 2010 http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000051858
- ^ Russia Corruption "World Champion" – CNBC Squawk Box, Retrieved June 2011 http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=1962874854
- ^ Investors Positive About Putin Election Win – CNBC Squawk Box, Retrieved March 2012 http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000076197
- ^ “Economist Wermuth Keeps Shepherding Progress” – Moscow Times, Retrieved November 2012 https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2012/11/28/qa-economist-wermuth-keeps-shepherding-progress-a19787
- ^ Инвестиции в Россию: Как улучшить климат – Ведомости, Retrieved June 2011 http://www.vedomosti.ru/newspaper/article/261256/kak_uluchshit_klimat
- ^ Jochen Wermuth speaks to V. Putin at VTB Calling – YouTube, Retrieved October 2011 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CD8OxQNkbtY
- ^ Jump up to: a b CleanTech Forum – Retrieved, April 2012 http://events.cleantech.com/munich/wermuth-jochen
- ^ “Russian cleantech fund close to German investment” – Reuters, Retrieved November 2012 https://www.reuters.com/article/wermuthassetmanagement-idUSL5E8CU2W220120130
- ^ Towards a Circular Economy with Europe-Tatarstan CleanTech Fund https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MHHy8cNgozE
- ^ Wermuth launched Russian clean tech energy fund – Reuters, Retrieved January 2012 https://www.reuters.com/article/wermuthassetmanagement-idUSL5E8CU2W220120130
- ^ "What's Hot in Cleantech, Including a Possible Agilyx IPO and a New Russian Fund" – PE HUB, Retrieved March 2012 http://www.pehub.com/142971/what%E2%80%99s-hot-in-cleantech-including-a-possible-agilyx-ipo-and-a-new-russian-fund/
- ^ Jochen Wermuth, Wermuth Asset Management: "Cleantech-Fonds für die EU und Russland" – Venture Capital Magazine, Retrieved April 2012 http://www.vc-magazin.de/themen/interviews/artikel/jochen-wermuth-wermuth-asset-management-cleantech-fonds-fuer-die-eu-und-russland.html
- ^ Bringing clean tech to oil-rich Tatarstan – Financial Times, Retrieved February 2012 http://blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/2012/02/01/a-clean-tech-fund-for-tatarstan/#axzz25yhm0qfm
- ^ “Impact investing a growing trend with family offices” – Investment Europe, Retrieved November 2012 https://www.internationalinvestment.net/internationalinvestment/news/3702600/impact-investing-growing-trend-family-offices-wermuth
- ^ “Russia Could Lead 3rd Industrial Revolution” – Moscow Times, Retrieved October 2012 https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2012/10/22/russia-could-lead-3rd-industrial-revolution-a18753
- ^ “Россия сможет обогнать страны ОЭСР, если перейдет к безотходной экономике” – Ведомости, Retrieved November 2012 http://www.vedomosti.ru/finance/analytics/2012/11/22/31491
- ^ Interview with Jochen Wermuth, Chief Investment Officer at Wermuth Asset Management - COOConnect Editorial – Retrieved October 2011 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SZDhPatpK_A
- ^ https://www.nexwafe.com/site/assets/files/1021/pr_nexwafe_ggf2_verdopptelt_investition_19-02-2019_gr.pdf
- ^ https://www.ise.fraunhofer.de/content/dam/ise/de/documents/infomaterial/jahresberichte/fraunhofer-ise-jahresbericht-2015-2016.pdf
- ^ Mike Baab. "Transparency International - Private Sector Support". Transparency.org. Retrieved 2012-09-21.
- ^ https://www.kenfo.de/en/start
- ^ "More Than Divesting". Toniic. 17 September 2019. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
- ^ "Climate Endowment Fund". AQAL. 5 June 2019. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
- ^ "Wer wir sind - GermanZero - Deutschland bis 2035 klimaneutral machen". GermanZero e.V. (in German). Retrieved 18 July 2021.
- ^ YPO Releases Quarterly Global Pulse CEO Survey April Results http://www.ypo.org/docs/European%20Union%201Q2010%20Release,%20Final.pdf
- ^ "Campaign to build Malevich centre by artist's grave" – The Art newspaper, Retrieved December 2011 https://www.theartnewspaper.com/archive/campaign-to-build-malevich-centre-by-artist-s-grave
External links[]
This article needs additional or more specific categories. (January 2021) |
- German businesspeople
- 1969 births
- Living people
- Chief investment officers
- Brown University alumni