Philippe Oddo

Philippe Oddo, born on 26 September 1959 in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, is a French financier, and a managing partner of the ODDO BHF group.

Philippe Oddo
BornSeptember 26, 1959
Paris, 8th arrondissement
EducationParis Dauphine University
University of Cologne
New York University
HEC Paris
OccupationBanker

Biography

Philippe Oddo is the son of Bernard Oddo, a foreign exchange broker, and Colette Rathery. General Paul Oddo was his uncle.

Philippe Oddo graduated from the HEC Paris in 1984. He also studied at the Paris Dauphine University, the New York University and the University of Cologne in Germany.[1]

He joined Oddo & Cie in 1984 and became a managing partner in 1987.[2]

At the head of the Group, Philippe Oddo diversified the bank’s activities, particularly in the private banking and corporate banking sectors. Several acquisitions were carried out, such as the purchase of Delahaye Finance (1997),[3] Pinatton, Crédit Lyonnais Securities Europe, Banque d’Orsay and Banque Robeco.[4]

ODDO BHF is one of the banks that allocates the most resources to research and financial analysis relative to its income.

In 2017, Philippe Oddo and his family were ranked 101st in the French Fortune list by the magazine Challenges, with €800 million.[5]

Other activities

Corporate boards

  • Euronext, Member of Supervisory Board (2007-2015)

Non-profit organizations

  • European School of Management and Technology (ESMT), Member of the International Advisory Council[6]
  • Bettencourt-Schueller Foundation, Member of the Board of Directors (since December 2011).[7]
  • Fondation pour la Recherche sur Alzheimer (IFRAD), Member of the Board of Directors[8]
  • Mouvement des entreprises de taille intermédiaire (METI), Vice-Chairman[9]
  • Le Siècle, Member
gollark: No, the moon is only about 1.5 seconds away by light speed lag.
gollark: I think the ISS has one.
gollark: Never visit osmarks.tk or I will hunt you down and kill you.
gollark: One of the very few good things about Intel is that their graphics drivers are fully open source.
gollark: I found a stackexchange question answering my problem... WHY ARE THE ANSWERS SO BAD

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.