AA-backer Warburg Pincus poaches Sibbald for European role

Business

One of the private equity backers of the AA breakdown recovery service has poached a veteran City banker to take a leadership role at its operations in Europe.

Sky News has learnt that Warburg Pincus is lining up Andrew Sibbald, the chairman of Evercore Partners’ London-based business, to become the firm’s co-head of Europe.

Mr Sibbald is expected to work alongside Rene Obermann, the Airbus chairman, who is based in Berlin as Warburg Pincus’s other European boss.

LONDON, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 15:  A woman walks past a Reiss store on February 15, 2016 in London, England. Investment firm Warburg Pincus, which owns 15 per cent of discount chain Poundland, has expressed an interest following an announcement by company owner David Reiss that he intends to sell a stake in his company.  (Photo by Carl Court/Getty Images)
Image:
Warburg Pincus has also invested in Reiss, the fashion retailer

Adarsh Sarma, Warburg Pincus’s current London-based co-head of Europe, is said to be leaving the firm and seeking a new opportunity elsewhere, according to one City source.

Warburg Pincus is one of the world’s biggest private equity investors, with a portfolio in the UK which includes stakes in the AA and Reiss, the fashion retailer.

It manages assets of roughly $80bn (£62bn) and has just raised a $16bn (£12.5bn) global buyout fund.

The firm’s other investments include Inmarsat, the satellite operator, and Ola, the Indian ride-hailing app.

More from Business

Mr Sibbald’s 35-year career in banking includes having advised on deals which reshaped parts of Britain’s corporate landscape, such as the fund manager M&G’s demerger from Prudential and the initial public offering of funds platform Hargreaves Lansdown.

He also advised the AA on its sale to Warburg Pincus and Towerbrook Capital Partners.

Read more:
Nigel Farage launches website to tackle ‘major scandal’ of de-banking
Activist fund Sparta builds stake in Dr Martens after share price slump

Both Warburg Pincus and New York-listed Evercore were contacted for comment on Sunday.

Articles You May Like

Two killed as private plane crashes in Argentina
Putin ‘ready’ to meet Trump
Mother of child at Wisconsin school talks about shooting
Russian strike hits Kyiv
DJ uses photos of Luigi Mangione during concert