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HomeSourcestelegraph.co.ukSir Evelyn de Rothschild, financier who prudently led the family merchant bank...

Sir Evelyn de Rothschild, financier who prudently led the family merchant bank and bred champion racehorses – obituary

It was said that NM Rothschild executives simply asked each other: ‘Would Evelyn want us to do this?’ If the answer was no, it was not done

Sir Evelyn de Rothschild, who has died aged 91, was the head of his family’s banking house in London for almost three decades.

He maintained N M Rothschild’s prestigious reputation, particularly as an adviser to governments, as well as its independence; by the end of his tenure in 2003, the firm was unique in the City as the only traditional, family-controlled merchant bank to have survived intact the upheavals of Big Bang and the turbulent years that followed.

As majority shareholder of N M Rothschild as well as chairman, Sir Evelyn was an autocrat of mercurial temperament. He disliked publicity, whether personal or corporate, and discouraged strategic debate among his colleagues, though he interfered little in client relations and deals. It was said that Rothschild executives simply asked each other: “Would Evelyn want us to do this?” If the answer was no, it was not done.

Evelyn de Rothschild joined NM Rothschild as a junior partner in 1957. His early career path there was much intertwined with that of his cousin Jacob, who was five years his junior and joined in 1963. With Evelyn’s encouragement, the clever, entrepreneurial Jacob (later the 4th Lord Rothschild) rapidly developed the bank’s corporate finance and eurobond activities. But relations between the two were never close, and became increasingly strained as they evolved differing visions for the future of the firm in the 1970s.

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