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Sunday 30 September 2007

SCOTLAND on SUNDAY - Jeremy WATSON - 30-Sep-07 - DIVORCE

SCOTLAND on SUNDAY - Jeremy WATSON - 30-Sep-07 - DIVORCE

Publicity-shy Grossart prepares to fight for his millions in the divorce court!

By JEREMY WATSON

A MULTI-MILLIONAIRE Scottish businessman and member of one of the country's most prominent banking dynasties is to split from his wife after 11 years of marriage.
Elaine Grossart - formerly Simpson - will this week move to end her marriage to husband Hamish at a divorce hearing, which starts at the Court of Session in Edinburgh on Tuesday.

Elaine Grossart is suing her husband for divorce on grounds of "unreasonable behaviour."

She is seeking a lump sum of £3.5m and a monthly allowance of £6,000.

The Court of Session will hear a series of allegations about the state of the marriage, which are disputed by both parties. The case is scheduled to last six days.

The couple married in 1996 after the failure of Hamish Grossart's first marriage and the family home is a country estate near Cupar, Fife.

Hamish MacLeod Grossart is the nephew of Sir Angus Grossart, who founded the Noble Grossart merchant bank and is one of Scotland's most influential business figures.

A banker by trade, 50-year-old Grossart is a successful and wealthy businessman in his own right. At stake during the divorce proceedings will be his substantial financial assets.

Earlier this year, Grossart, the chairman of Indigo-Vision, a developer of CCTV and alarm systems, was reported to have banked more than £1m by selling about a third of his holding. He also has a substantial six-figure salary as deputy chairman of Cairn Energy, the fast-rising Scottish oil exploration company headed by entrepreneur Sir Bill Gammell. Shares in Cairn - Grossart has a substantial holding - have soared in value after a series of oil finds in India took the company into the FTSE 100. In 2005, he cashed in, selling 50,000 shares for £875,000.

The publicity-shy Grossart started out in business life with his uncle's bank but in his mid-twenties branched out on his own. He has latterly earned a reputation as a successful company "doctor," turning around the fortunes of ailing firms.

He has had a string of other directorships over the past 20 years including a position as deputy chairman of Clydebank media group Scottish Radio Holdings, chairman of fine china maker Royal Doulton, chairman of software company McLaren and board memberships of Martin Currie Income & Growth Trust and Artemis Investment Management and Sigma Technology, the investment fund.

According to Companies House documents, he currently has six active directorships.

The couple were married at Abercorn Church, near South Queensferry, in December, 1996. The family home, which Elaine Grossart, also 50, left last year following the marital breakdown, is valued at more than £2.3m.

To view the original article CLICK HERE
Hamish McLeod GROSSART52 born 07-Apr-1957
IndigoVision
Non-Executive Chairman joined the board as chairman in 1996.
Cairn Energy PLC
currently also non-executive deputy chairman
Cairn India Limited
a non-executive director Member and Chairman of the Audit, Remuneration, Nomination & Corporate Governance Committees
British Polythene Industries PLC
Deputy Chairman
Artemis Investment Management Limited
a non-executive director
Scottish Radio Holdings
Royal Doulton
He has over 20 years' experience on public company boards, in a wide range of industries,
both in an executive and non-executive capacity, frequently with catastrophic consequences.
He has left:
a long trail of broken lives, betrayed staff, colleagues and women,
who have suffered from his emotional inadequacies and lack of maturity.

A weak and bullying individual,
who brings shame and unhappiness to his children,
and those who misguidedly cared for him, as he sets out to prove his worth to himself.
Always acting egocentrically at the expense of those he can bully, exploit and control.
An emotional Narcissist & a manipulative sociopath.
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Sunday 26 August 2007

SCOTSMAN - Douglas FRIEDLI - 26-Aug-07 - A DUD DEAL!

Tycoons face big hit as games firm proves a bridge too far!

Date: 26 August 2007

By DOUGLAS FRIEDLI

SCOTTISH tycoons including Brian Souter, Sir Bill Gammell and Hamish Grossart are nursing big losses after the sale of a company that promised to revolutionise games on mobile phones.
Fife-based Digital Bridges, which trades under the I-Play brand, was bought by Oberon Media of New York for a sum close to $100m (£50m), with the final total dependent on how much profit it makes over the next year.

But private investors who backed the company from its early days stand no chance of making their money back because the sale price is less than the money which it raised.

Early backers such as Peter Denyer, the technology veteran, Scottish Widows chairman Gavin Gemmell and Kevin Bradshaw, who founded Digital Bridges in 1998, lost thousands on the deal. Other losers include Stagecoach founder Souter, Cairn Energy's Gammell and IndigoVision chairman Hamish Grossart, nephew of Sir Angus.

Venture capital investors Apax Partners and Argo Global Capital are also understood to have taken a hit.

Digital Bridges' board is believed to have been looking for a deal worth more than £75m but had to settle for the offer from Oberon.

Despite investors' disappointment, the deal is by far the biggest sum ever paid for a Scottish games firm. It will secure about 80 jobs at Digital Bridges' Dunfermline base which will become the centre of Oberon's mobile phone gaming operations.

Oberon is run by Israeli entrepreneurs Tomer Ben-Kiki and Tal Kerret backed by Goldman Sachs, Oak Investment Partners and Lehman Brothers.

It is a market leader in the growing field of "casual games", which are simpler, quicker and easier to play than the increasingly complex software on consoles like Microsoft's XBox. The company's research shows that two thirds of casual game users are women aged over 30, while console game users are traditionally men aged between 20 and 35.

Ben-Kiki said: "This acquisition strengthens Oberon Media's multi-platform strategy and we are now positioned as the undisputed leader in one of the hottest growth markets. We are now poised to revolutionise the casual games category, offering our partners access to more than 1,000 of the most popular casual games, delivered to their consumers' screen of choice - online, mobile and TV."

Two years ago Digital Bridges was at the centre of flotation rumours amid talk that the £10m it had just raised from Apax and Argo would not be enough to fulfil its ambition of becoming a global leader.

Last year chief executive Brian Greasley was replaced by former Nintendo executive Dave Gosen. The latter is understood to have retained his role as chief executive of the I-Play brand.

The company, which also has offices in London, Paris and California, recently struck a deal with Nokia to supply a games including World Rally Championship and Super Mah Jong for the Finnish mobile phone giant's N-Gage device.

• One of the rising stars of Scotland's computer games industry has turned publisher in order to keep more of the revenue its products generate.

Cobra, run by industry veteran Mark Ettle, will launch its Cobimobi games portal this week. Players will be able to choose from two personal computer games, Numba and Cobi Treasure Deluxe, for £12 each.

Ettle said: "We have always been constrained by the partners we worked with. We always seemed to get the smallest slice of the pie and we would be the last to get paid, even though we developed the intellectual property."

He added: "We developed Cobi Treasure Deluxe two months ago but we held back from launching the site because I really wanted to be able to offer customers more than one game."

Cobra plans to develop versions of the games for other devices such as mobile phones, Apple iPods and games consoles.

To view the original article CLICK HERE
Hamish McLeod GROSSART52 born 07-Apr-1957
SPECulative Society of Edinburgh Member
IndigoVision
Non-Executive Chairman joined the board as chairman in 1996.
Cairn Energy PLC
currently also non-executive deputy chairman
Cairn India Limited
a non-executive director Member and Chairman of the Audit, Remuneration, Nomination & Corporate Governance Committees
British Polythene Industries PLC
Deputy Chairman
Artemis Investment Management Limited
a non-executive director
Scottish Radio Holdings
Royal Doulton
He has over 20 years' experience on public company boards, in a wide range of industries,
both in an executive and non-executive capacity, frequently with catastrophic consequences.
He has left:
a long trail of broken lives, betrayed staff, colleagues and women,
who have suffered from his emotional inadequacies and lack of maturity.

A weak and bullying individual,
who brings shame and unhappiness to his children,
and those who misguidedly cared for him, as he sets out to prove his worth to himself.
Always acting egocentrically at the expense of those he can bully, exploit and control.
An emotional Narcissist & a manipulative sociopath.
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