Sergio Mantegazza

Sergio Mantegazza (born 1927) is a Swiss-Italian billionaire businessman, chairman and owner of Globus, a multinational travel company. According to Forbes, Mantegazza is the 16th richest person in Switzerland, with an estimated net worth of US $2.5 billion as of April 2019.[2]

Sergio Mantegazza
Born1926/1927 (age 93–94)[1]
Switzerland
NationalitySwiss
EducationGademann Business School and Istituto Elvetico
OccupationChairman and owner, Globus
Net worth$2.5 billion (April 2019)[2]
Children3
Parent(s)Antonio Mantegazza
Angelina Mantegazza

Early life

Sergio Mantegazza was born in Lugano, Switzerland, to Antonio and Angelina Mantegazza in 1927. He has a brother, Geo Mantegazza. He was educated at Istituto Elvetico.[2] and Gademann Business School.

Career

As a young man, Mantegazza developed further business and entrepreneurial skills by working in the family business after leaving education. Founded by his father Antonio in 1928, Globus Viaggi initially started with a single gondola ferrying tourists and goods across and around Lake Lugano, Switzerland. Antonio Mantegazza went on to acquire a fleet of 12 coaches to transport tourists around the area. By 1950, the company operated 33 coaches with the addition of overnight excursions to Rome, Venice and the French Riviera.

Globus operated circular tours to provide a more complete travel experience for its customers as well as providing the option of budget motor-coach European holidays. They later introduced the concept of Grand European Touring by offering first-class European tours to tourists.

In 1961, the Globus group launched Cosmos Holidays in the United Kingdom and air holiday packages to southern Europe. This also led to other destinations like Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

In the late 1960s, Monarch Airlines was financed by the Globus Partners. This airline, established by two British businessmen, Bill Hodgson and Don Peacock, operated independently of Globus Getaway Holidays. Monarch Airlines, working with Cosmos, were pioneers of packaged holidays and chartered flights in the UK.

Mantegazza took over as president of Globus in 1975 and expanded the travel and tour business, introducing travel packages to Africa, Australia and South America. Globus also launched its North American company Group Voyagers, overseeing US tour operations and the American market for the Globus and Cosmos brands.[3] In 2003, Avalon Waterways and Monograms were also created, focusing on independent travel and river cruises.

In October 2014, after facing competition from budget airlines such as EasyJet and Ryanair, and following a personal injection of $180 million into the business[4], it was reported that the Mantegazza family sold Monarch Airlines to Greybull Capital[5]. This deal involved the company's pension scheme transferring into the statutory Pension Protection Fund (PPF), causing 70 Monarch pilot's pension benefits to be affected by the PPF compensation cap.[6] The Pension Regulator's subsequent statutory report later concluded that the majority of scheme members received 90% or more of their benefits.[7] However, the deal was nonetheless criticised by The Guardian, which stated that the pilots' retirement plans had been "wrecked",[6] and as stated by Frank Field MP, Chairman of the Work and Pensions Select Committee, in a letter to the Pension Protection Fund - "Compared to the hundreds of millions pounds of debt they were being released from, the [pension] deal was a good one for the Mantegazzas only." [8] Alan Rubenstein, chief executive of the Pension Protection Fund, gave a response to Mr Field, saying the deal reached over the pension scheme was better than no deal at all. "Given that the recover to the Monarch scheme in the event of insolvency would have been zero, we and ultimately our levy payers are £30m better off as a result of the upfront cash payments we negotiated."[8]

Awards

Mantegazza joined the British Travel Industry Hall of Fame in 2006 [9] alongside Sir Richard Branson, Sir Rocco Forte and Stephen Kaufer.

Cosmos (formerly Cosmos Holidays) was shortlisted for the Travel Industry and Consumer Awards as well as the Globe Travel Awards, the TTG Travel Awards, the British Travel Awards and also the World of Cruising's Wave Awards, and Cruise International's Cruise Awards.

Personal life

He is married with three children (two living) and lives in Lugano, Switzerland.[2]

His son, Paolo, worked for Bankers Trust and Credit Suisse, before becoming president and CEO of Globus' US business Group Voyagers in 1998, and killed himself in 2004, at the age of 34.[3][10] His son, Fabio Mantegazza (born 1955), was working with Sergio in the United Kingdom, and was CEO and chairman of Monarch Travel Group Ltd.[3][11] His daughter, Maria Dolores Mantegazza (born 1956), serves as a trustee to the Sergio Mantegazza Charitable Foundation in Canton Ticino[12] alongside Fabio Mantegazza and Geo Mantegazza. The Foundation focuses on supporting various charities within the arts and youth sports programs as well as education and medical-related areas.[13] Mantegazza also remains active in the organisation.

He has a 64m super-yacht named Lady Marina, where guests have included Tina Turner.[1][2] He owns substantial residential and commercial real estate in Lugano, Switzerland.[2]

gollark: So it just crashed horribly.
gollark: I switched over the database structure for it a few days ago, but forgot to actually test whether the migration code works (by doing nothing) if the previous databases don't exist.
gollark: Also, funnily enough, I accidentally managed to break the achievement system on my website for several days without noticing.
gollark: Or both.
gollark: Huh.

References

  1. "De crucero con Sergio Mantegazza, el espléndido "suegro" de Marina Danko". abc.es. 14 May 2017. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
  2. "Forbes profile: Sergio Mantegazza". Forbes. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  3. Allison, Ian (25 September 2014). "Monarch Restructuring: The Secretive Billionaire Mantegazza Family Behind the Airline". IB Times. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  4. Ficenec, John (19 July 2014). "Swiss billionaires inject cash into Monarch for third time in five years". The Telegraph. Retrieved 27 April 2018.
  5. Armstrong, Ashley (24 October 2014). "Monarch Airlines rescued as Mantegazzas take flight". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  6. "Monarch pilots' pensions slashed in move to PPF | Money | The Guardian". theguardian.com. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
  7. The Pensions Regulator (December 2016). Regulatory intervention report: issued under s89 of the Pensions Act 2004 in relation to Monarch Airlines Limited Retirement Benefits Plan (PDF) (Report). The Pensions Regulator. p. 6. Retrieved 29 August 2017. The Monarch deal led to a better outcome for the scheme than would otherwise have resulted from uncontrolled insolvency. A small number of highly-paid scheme members' benefits were affected by PPF's compensation cap. However, the proportion of scheme members affected by this cap was relatively low with the majority receiving 90% or more of their benefits.
  8. Spicer, Stephanie (6 November 2017). "Regulator under fire over Monarch Airlines pension deal". Financial Times Advisor.
  9. "Travel Hall of Fame". Travel Hall of Fame. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  10. "Paolo Mantegazza, 34, Globus & Cosmos CEO". travelweekly.com. 30 January 2004. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  11. "Executive Profile: Fabio Mantegazza". Bloomberg L.P. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  12. "Cadenazzo, la Fondazione Mantegazza dona un nuovo furgone al Tavolino Magico". la Regione. 16 March 2018. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  13. "Un grande gesto per Croce Verde Lugano". Tio 20 minuti. 28 December 2015. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
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