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Fall of Britain's Flamboyant Financiers Fuels a Debate About Greed

The London house of financial baron Robert Bonnier has been repossessed and put on the market for $18 million.
The London house of financial baron Robert Bonnier has been repossessed and put on the market for $18 million. (By Mary Jordan -- The Washington Post)
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The archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, writing in the Spectator magazine, said that while making a profit is a legitimate goal, abuses of the financial system can cause "real and crippling damage" to people and institutions. He wrote that "almost unimaginable wealth has been generated by equally unimaginable levels of fiction, paper transactions with no concrete outcome beyond profit for traders."

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Williams invoked Karl Marx, saying that when Marx noted that "unbridled capitalism" ascribed a "reality, power and agency to things that had no life in themselves; he was right about that, if about little else."

Not everyone is ready to take a hard line against getting rich. John Barrass, a spokesman for the Association of Private Client Investment Managers and Stockbrokers, disagreed with calls for extensive new regulation of the markets. Barrass said that members of his organization want those who break the law to be punished but that they "dread the wrong kind of regulatory reaction."

"If it bites the wrong firms, if regulation doesn't deal with the issues, if regulation isn't targeted, it could hurt rather than help," he said.

On the streets near Bonnier's mansion, several of those interviewed said they didn't mind people making millions building houses, playing sports, making movies or selling cars -- as long as they paid taxes.

"People should be encouraged to make money. It helps everyone. To stifle capitalism is a mistake," said Jason Ashley, 41, a lawyer walking past the Ilchester Place house. "It's natural to turn on bankers and everyone else who made money in the prosperous years. But it's unfair."

Muhammad Raza, 28, works in a neighborhood dry cleaner where he said Bonnier used to arrive in a Porsche. He said the only people who can afford to live in the neighborhood are bankers and financiers, and the stories of their $12,000 bottles of champagne and $200,000 parties are legendary.

"This is just not reality. Of course there's something wrong with it," Raza said.

London's fabulously rich have rarely been among those with their houses repossessed, and there was no shortage of glee over Bonnier losing his mansion.

"It's wrong. I'm angry. They took advantage of people," said Steven Bilay, 23, an artist walking near Bonnier's home. "I think it's fair to go inside their house and take every single thing out, even their jewelry. I feel a revolution coming, and I want to be part of it."

According to accounts in British media, Bonnier is a Dutch-born businessman who moved to London in 1992 and made and lost massive sums of money in various ventures.

In December 2004, Britain's Financial Services Authority fined Bonnier 290,000 pounds for issuing misleading and inaccurate public statements over a corporate takeover attempt. Bonnier's actions "created a false or misleading impression amounting to market abuse," the FSA said.

Media reports here said Bonnier has run up more than $60 million in new debt, related to business deals since the FSA fine. He bought the Ilchester Place house last year for about $23 million. It's now on the market for $18 million.

Giovanni Andia, 23, a student who lives on the street, said: "It's hard to feel sorry for the guy. That's what a gambler gets."


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