62 — village July - August 2012
T
HERE have been scores of high profile
personal dramas and falls from grace
during the sad and sorry Irish business
sagas of the last five years, but by far
the most unreported has been the fall and fall of
Independent News and Media (INM) and crum-
bling reputation of Tony O’Reilly, or Sir Anthony
as he liked to be known in recent times. Once
the unquestioned ‘Golden Boy’ of Irish business,
O’Reilly, now in his mid-seventies, has been
allowed to slink into relative obscurity while the
greater part of his fortune, which was so much
part of the business discourse for three decades,
has gone sailing off into the wide blue yonder, a
phenomenon only too familiar to holders of bank
shares.
But he has not just lost a rep-
utation; he has also lost a media
empire stretching from Dublin’s
Talbot Street to the southern tip of
the Cape of Good Hope and along
to more remote reaches of tropical
Queensland. Denis O’Brien’s heft is
now blocking the frame of the INM
doorway with just under 30 per cent
of the stock and he looks to be geared
to protect his control of the company
in precisely the way O’Reilly did from
the time he first arrived on the scene
in 1973.
Curiously, or perhaps not so curi-
ously, the slump in the O’Reilly fame
and prestige has been largely ignored
by the Irish media. O’Reilly, during
the 35 years in which he controlled a sizeable part
of the Irish newspaper sector, never really got a
hard time from the non-O’Reilly press and now,
rather than break the habit of a lifetime, the same
non-INM media has tended to rally around him
in his time of woe. All the Irish papers trumpeted
the growth in his wealth and influence, his inter-
national standing, and the glamour that he tried
to carry into his business life. But in the last
four years when the value of his personal stake
in Independent News and Media alone fell from
just under €900m to a current €16m, and when
his investment in Waterford Glass crashed into
smithereens, the papers have been oddly mute
about the spectacular fall.
The spates of sensational ‘where-did-it-all-
go-wrong’ stories that have plagued most other
failed billionaires have mostly been missing in
the case of O’Reilly.
It is hard to avoid the word hubris in dealing
with the life and times of Tony O’Reilly. His success
came early in every aspect of his life.
On the rugby football field at eight-
een he was appearing for the British
Lions at Ellis Park in South Africa in
front of 105,000 screaming fans;
good fortune came early in business
too; at twenty-five he was launching
Kerrygold the ‘game-changer’ for
the Irish dairy sector. Even while he
was holding down the post of chief
executive in one of America’s great
global food corporations, HJ Heinz,
he was simultaneously taking con-
trol of what was then Independent
Newspapers - and he wasn’t yet thir-
ty-seven. He never ever shied away
from telling the public what a singu-
larly amazing fellow he was.
O’Reilly’s career as a newspaper
proprietor can be broken down into a couple of
phases. The early phase was the slow build-up
to what, in the old ‘hot metal’ days, was called
‘the new technology’. The arrival of the computer
would change everything in the print industry and
O’Reilly was extremely patient in his planning to
ensure that this change would be achieved with
minimum pain. However, he knew that, once
achieved, the great bulwark against revolution-
ary change in the industry, the print unions, would
lose power and the removal of that barrier would
make the sector easy pickings from then on. That
calculation was inspired, precise and profitably
accurate.
O’Reilly had irons in other fires too. In the early
1970s he was a major part of what was called the
‘shell company boom’ through his acquisition-ve-
hicle, Crowe Wilson and eventually Fitzwilton.
This second business front, or perhaps a third
business front, foundered on the rocks of the
‘First Oil Shock’ in 1974. Undeterred, O’Reilly
was also prepared to take up the challenge of the
next speculative boom when he helped master-
mind the money-spinning Atlantic Resources in
the early 1980s.
This was the key company which raised, but
mostly dashed, hopes that offshore Ireland would
become an oil province. He showed rare energy
and skill in holding down his Heinz job and being
part of these other ventures even if not all were
successful.
î
When he took
control in 1973,
paying £1m,
it had seven
titles - but by
the height of
the Celtic Tiger
boom, INM
had some 170
titles
¨
O’Brien can’t
be worse than
O’Reilly
Somehow failed billionaire O’Reilly – who lost INM
and Waterford Glass - escaped media derision
ÃÙã®Ä¥®ãþÖãÙ®»