Solomon Lew

About Solomon Lew

Birth Day: March 22, 1945
Birth Place: Melbourne, Australia, Australia
Residence: Toorak, Melbourne, Australia
Education: Mount Scopus Memorial College
Occupation: chairman of Premier Investments
Spouse(s): Rose Lew (separated)
Children: Peter Lew Steven Lew Jacqueline Lew

Solomon Lew

Solomon Lew was born on March 22, 1945 in Melbourne, Australia, Australia. Solomon Lew's Melbourne-based Premier Investments took the spotlight in 2017 with the purchase of a 10.8% stake in struggling Australian department store icon Myer, sparking takeover speculation. Lew family companies are major suppliers to the group. Elsewhere, Premier's Smiggle stationery stores, aimed at children and teenagers, are expanding rapidly in the U.K., and growth is planned in Europe. Lew says he always had an entrepreneurial mindset, working in retail after school and during holidays before opening his first apparel business on his 18th birthday. He was the first Australian to enter the World Retail Hall of Fame, in 2016, when he was inducted along with Jo Malone and Tommy Hilfiger.
Solomon Lew is a member of Fashion and Retail

Does Solomon Lew Dead or Alive?

As per our current Database, Solomon Lew is still alive (as per Wikipedia, Last update: May 10, 2020).

πŸŽ‚ Solomon Lew - Age, Bio, Faces and Birthday

Currently, Solomon Lew is 79 years, 7 months and 30 days old. Solomon Lew will celebrate 80rd birthday on a Saturday 22nd of March 2025. Below we countdown to Solomon Lew upcoming birthday.

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Popular As Solomon Lew
Occupation Fashion and Retail
Age 79 years old
Zodiac Sign Aries
Born March 22, 1945 (Melbourne, Australia, Australia)
Birthday March 22
Town/City Melbourne, Australia, Australia
Nationality Australia

πŸŒ™ Zodiac

Solomon Lew’s zodiac sign is Aries. According to astrologers, the presence of Aries always marks the beginning of something energetic and turbulent. They are continuously looking for dynamic, speed and competition, always being the first in everything - from work to social gatherings. Thanks to its ruling planet Mars and the fact it belongs to the element of Fire (just like Leo and Sagittarius), Aries is one of the most active zodiac signs. It is in their nature to take action, sometimes before they think about it well.

πŸŒ™ Chinese Zodiac Signs

Solomon Lew was born in the Year of the Rooster. Those born under the Chinese Zodiac sign of the Rooster are practical, resourceful, observant, analytical, straightforward, trusting, honest, perfectionists, neat and conservative. Compatible with Ox or Snake.

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Famous Quotes:

"The Yannon deal was an undisclosed indemnity given by Coles-Myer to a shelf company called Yannon set up by CS First Boston. It bought shares in a company called Premier, a major shareholder in Coles-Myer controlled by then Executive Chair of Coles, Solomon Lew. It guaranteed Yannon against any losses in the share deal, eventually costing Coles $18 million. Coles retrieved $12 million in a later agreement between itself, Mr Lew and with other parties. The funding of the buying of its own shares, the apparent involvement of the chairman and the lack of disclosure raised serious governance issues for Coles-Myer, and ended with the replacement of almost the entire board of directors and the withdrawal of significant shareholder support."

Biography/Timeline

1989

Another controversial Business transaction involving Lew related to a single purpose trust called Etiket. The beneficiaries were Lew's family. The trust was used to acquire 2% of Coles Myer in 1989, at a time of high interest rates. Lew offered competing explanations for what happened next. But the end result was that the Coles Myer shares were assigned to Premier Investments for an $8 million profit. A Queen's Counsel who investigated the transaction said:

1996

Alan Cameron, ASIC chairman at the time, acknowledged during the press conference to announce the outcome of the investigation that: "It is worth saying that the original loss suffered by Coles Myer was about $18 million, and the recovery made by Coles Myer was in excess of $12 million." Mr Lew contributed to this 1996 settlement with Coles-Myer.

1999

In 1999, each of his children was gifted $170 million from the "Lew Custodian Trust" established to minimise taxes. The trust has become the main subject of the acrimonious divorces of two of his children.

2001

He was formerly a Director then Chairman of the board for Coles Myer (now known as the Coles Group) until voted out by shareholders after a series of controversies related to his private dealings with the company. He was also involved in an unsuccessful attempt to resurrect Ansett airlines with Lindsay Fox following its collapse in September 2001. In 2008 he returned to the board of his public company vehicle Premier Investments and became its chairman.

2002

In September 2002, a resolution to remove Lew from the Board of Coles Myer was successful after Stan Wallis, the Chairman of the company and a former banker, campaigned for Lew's removal. Wallis successfully lobbied major institutional shareholders, including insurance companies, banks and large investment firms to take the rare action of voting against an incumbent Director. Prior to the vote, Lew campaigned heavily spending an estimated $10 million campaigning for his re-election focusing mainly on smaller shareholders. He was successful in obtaining millions of proxies but they were ultimately insufficient.

2008

In March 2008, Lew returned to the public company stage, rejoining the board of the listed company Premier Investments, as its chairman. At the same time, Premier announced a takeover offer for Just Group, one of Australia's largest Retailers which owns Just Jeans, Portmans, Dotti, Peter Alexander, Jay Jays, Smiggle and Jacqui E. Analysts criticised the offer for being too low and comprising less than half in cash. In publicly explaining his offer, Lew said Just Group was trading worse than had been disclosed to the investment community. Just Group's Dr Pollard disputed this claim and threatened to report Lew for breaching the Corporations Law and rules relating to takeovers for making claims of this kind outside the formal documentation associated with his bid. Media commentators were strongly critical of Lew's tactics, with one describing him as "stunningly gauche".

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