The entrance to Ode Asset Management’s headquarters was quiet on Thursday morning. The blinds of a Mayfair townhouse were drawn to shield it from the blazing June sun and prying eyes, but nothing could hide the turmoil inside one of London’s oldest hedge funds.
The firm just hinted that it could be out of business, with talks to divest some of its funds and staff in snap deals with rival investment houses.
Its break-up was confirmed by the Financial Times a week after detailed allegations were made by 13 women who said they were sexually harassed or assaulted over 23 years by the firm’s founder, Crispin O’Day. He vigorously disputes the allegations.
The fallout has spread across the City of London, potentially marking a landmark moment for the #MeToo movement. While no formal findings have been made against Crispin O’Day, the allegations have not only seriously damaged the reputation of one of the UK’s wealthiest men and a major donor to the ruling Conservative Party, but have had an impact on his hedge fund, Whose management was $4.4 billion. There was also swiftness: Banks cut ties and investors demanded their money back as lawmakers and regulators ran amok.
The saga raises questions about how a man with a long record of alleged misconduct was allowed to go unpunished, and whether companies and regulators act quickly enough when workplace sexual misconduct reports are received.
“Often like in the Ode case it is necessary for many women to speak up, and even then the risk of being ignored is high, with major implications for the woman’s career,” said Grace Lordan, Founding Director of Inclusive Initiatives at The London School Off Economics.
Haneke Smuts, global chairman of the 30% Club, which campaigns for gender equality on boards, was more forthright. “The stubborn persistence of harassment and the lack of action to stop or prevent it is shocking,” she said.
,
On 8 June, hours after the FT revelations, alumni of Barings International, the bank where Crispin O’Day, now 64, worked in the 1980s, gathered in London for a reunion. He was expected to attend. But the Brexit-backer was nowhere to be seen and was instead a talking point between old allies, attendees said.
Hours earlier, Odd Asset Management was dealt a blow: Morgan Stanley informed the firm that it was severing ties.
Wall Street giant ODE Asset Management was one of the banks to offer Prime Broking; An important service to hedge funds while providing stock lending, leverage and trade execution.
Axen, the equity brokerage owned by BNP Paribas, followed suit.

By Friday, Goldman Sachs, one of O’Day’s prime brokers, had begun terminating its relationship. Goldman had earlier reviewed its association with Crispin O’Day during his trial for misconduct with a junior female banker in 2021, but continued to do little business with the fund manager’s firm following the acquittal.
O’Day Asset Management’s top bosses – including Crispin O’Day himself, Chief Executive Officer Peter Martin and Chief Financial and Operating Officer Michael Aide – held a crisis call on the morning of June 9 with the boards of the firm’s Cayman and Irish-domiciled funds .
The conversation focused on how to stabilize the firm and there was no sense in the call that Crispin was going to leave O’Day, said a person familiar with the discussions.
“The priority was prime brokers, (…) the firm could not survive without prime brokers,” the person said, adding that talks were also about possibly limiting withdrawals if demand to withdraw money spiked in investor numbers. Was doing.
While, at first, the firm’s partners felt that Banks’ response was too harsh, by Saturday they concluded that their boss needed to go.
Contacted by the FT at lunch, Crispin O’Day confirmed he had been told of plans to push him out, but indicated he would fight it. “How are they going to do that?” They said. “You have to have a willing buyer, (and a) willing seller.”
Less than an hour later, the firm issued a statement saying that its founder was leaving. “From today, he will have no economic or personal involvement in the partnership,” it said.
Crispin O’Day, who founded his firm in 1991 and has $600 million of his own money in its funds, was not bought out by the other partners. According to people with knowledge of the situation, he was removed under another mechanism by which he recovered the capital he had put into the business.
The firm declined to comment. Crispin O’Day did not respond to requests seeking comment.
With the ouster of its founder, some of the firm’s remaining partners expressed confidence earlier this week that the relationship with the prime broker could be saved. Within days, they were considering the firm’s endgame.
Crispin O’Day’s exit was not enough to prevent JPMorgan Chase, O’Day Asset Management’s largest prime broker and its sole custodian, from leaving it. US Bank — which continued its relationship with Jeffrey Epstein after he was convicted of soliciting a minor for prostitution, and recently agreed to a $290 million settlement with his victims — on Monday evening Termination notice issued.

Hedge funds operating in the UK are a regulatory requirement to have a custodian, who protects client assets.
The firm told investors it was in “advanced discussions” about breaking up its business by “rehabilitating” certain fund management activities and individuals working for the business.
,
Beyond the impact on Crispin O’Day and his hedge fund, the decades-long allegations of harassment and misconduct — which span from 1998 to 2021 — have raised broader questions about how businesses respond to complaints of gender discrimination and misconduct in finance.
The firm’s female employees had been warned by colleagues for years not to enter elevators alone with him, or agree to shopping trips with him. He managed to stick to the firm even after the authorities tried to rein in his behaviour.
On hearing that Oday Asset Management was in talks to offload some of its money to other investment houses, one of the women who spoke to the FT to investigate said she hoped it would lead to sweeping changes in the finance industry. “Will there be any self-reflection on the part of those who worked with him for so long?” He asked.
Tara Camlin Jones, chief executive of 25X25, a campaign to increase the number of female heads at FTSE 100 companies, told the FT she believed sexual harassment in the workplace was less of a problem than in earlier years, but other forms of gender discrimination ” were still”. Prachanda”.
“I think there are some areas of financial services where there are still very aggressive male cultures,” she said.
In the 30% Club, Smuts said that for changes to be meaningful, companies need to back up the policies with concrete action.
“Most workplaces today have policies and procedures in place to deal with misconduct,” said Smuts in the 30% club. “However, if inappropriate behavior is tolerated, and people are not held accountable for the way they act, ultimately these steps will be ineffective.”
Additional reporting by Emma Dunkley and Akila Quinio in London
the fall of crispin ode
It took only seven days for Crispin O’Day and his firm, one of the oldest hedge funds in the City of London, to be exposed after the FT published an investigation into allegations of sexual assault and harassment by them. The prominent Brexit supporter and Conservative Party donor, known for making large contrarian bets, founded ODE Asset Management in 1991. But its future, barely a week after the publication of the allegations, hangs by a thread.
Thursday 8 June
The FT published an investigation detailing Crispin O’Day’s alleged sexual assaults over the decades. City financier accused of harassment and misconduct by 13 women; Eight alleged that he sexually assaulted them. A law firm representing O’Day said the allegations against him were “highly disputed”.
Friday June 9th
The fallout gathers momentum with prime brokers cutting ties with funds affiliated with ODE Asset Management. Goldman, Axen, Morgan Stanley are all reviewing their relationships with the firm, meanwhile Schroders said it sold the rest of its investment in one of the firm’s funds.
Saturday 10 June
ODE Asset Management partner Crispin ODE and his ODE Asset Management Group Ltd take steps to remove them as members of the overall firm. They say the funds will now be run and controlled by the remaining partners. Crispin O’Day suggested to the FT that he could contest their decision.
Monday 12 June
Oday Asset Management says it is liquidating its Swann fund, which manages €117mn, and will return the money to shareholders. It tells clients that it has also closed its Brooks Developed Markets Fund due to the volume of redemption requests.
Tuesday 13 June
JPMorgan moves to terminate its custodian relationship with O’Day Asset Management, putting the firm in a potentially dangerous position as it is a regulatory requirement for hedge funds to have a custodian, which protects client assets. Is.
Wednesday 14 June
MPs write to the financial regulator demanding to know what action it has taken after receiving a report detailing improper behavior by Crispin O’Day from O’Day Asset Management in early 2021. Meanwhile, UBS has become the latest bank to end its prime broking relationship.
Thursday 15 June
Oday Asset Management says it is in advanced discussions about repositioning funds and transferring certain fund management activities and individuals to other asset managers.
Friday 16 June
The FT reports that the firm has ceased trading in the fourth fund since the scandal first came to light.
The entrance to Ode Asset Management’s headquarters was quiet on Thursday morning. The blinds of a Mayfair townhouse were drawn to shield it from the blazing June sun and prying eyes, but nothing could hide the turmoil inside one of London’s oldest hedge funds.
The firm just hinted that it could be out of business, with talks to divest some of its funds and staff in snap deals with rival investment houses.
Its break-up was confirmed by the Financial Times a week after detailed allegations were made by 13 women who said they were sexually harassed or assaulted over 23 years by the firm’s founder, Crispin O’Day. He vigorously disputes the allegations.
The fallout has spread across the City of London, potentially marking a landmark moment for the #MeToo movement. While no formal findings have been made against Crispin O’Day, the allegations have not only seriously damaged the reputation of one of the UK’s wealthiest men and a major donor to the ruling Conservative Party, but have had an impact on his hedge fund, Whose management was $4.4 billion. There was also swiftness: Banks cut ties and investors demanded their money back as lawmakers and regulators ran amok.
The saga raises questions about how a man with a long record of alleged misconduct was allowed to go unpunished, and whether companies and regulators act quickly enough when workplace sexual misconduct reports are received.
“Often like in the Ode case it is necessary for many women to speak up, and even then the risk of being ignored is high, with major implications for the woman’s career,” said Grace Lordan, Founding Director of Inclusive Initiatives at The London School Off Economics.
Haneke Smuts, global chairman of the 30% Club, which campaigns for gender equality on boards, was more forthright. “The stubborn persistence of harassment and the lack of action to stop or prevent it is shocking,” she said.
,
On 8 June, hours after the FT revelations, alumni of Barings International, the bank where Crispin O’Day, now 64, worked in the 1980s, gathered in London for a reunion. He was expected to attend. But the Brexit-backer was nowhere to be seen and was instead a talking point between old allies, attendees said.
Hours earlier, Odd Asset Management was dealt a blow: Morgan Stanley informed the firm that it was severing ties.
Wall Street giant ODE Asset Management was one of the banks to offer Prime Broking; An important service to hedge funds while providing stock lending, leverage and trade execution.
Axen, the equity brokerage owned by BNP Paribas, followed suit.

By Friday, Goldman Sachs, one of O’Day’s prime brokers, had begun terminating its relationship. Goldman had earlier reviewed its association with Crispin O’Day during his trial for misconduct with a junior female banker in 2021, but continued to do little business with the fund manager’s firm following the acquittal.
O’Day Asset Management’s top bosses – including Crispin O’Day himself, Chief Executive Officer Peter Martin and Chief Financial and Operating Officer Michael Aide – held a crisis call on the morning of June 9 with the boards of the firm’s Cayman and Irish-domiciled funds .
The conversation focused on how to stabilize the firm and there was no sense in the call that Crispin was going to leave O’Day, said a person familiar with the discussions.
“The priority was prime brokers, (…) the firm could not survive without prime brokers,” the person said, adding that talks were also about possibly limiting withdrawals if demand to withdraw money spiked in investor numbers. Was doing.
While, at first, the firm’s partners felt that Banks’ response was too harsh, by Saturday they concluded that their boss needed to go.
Contacted by the FT at lunch, Crispin O’Day confirmed he had been told of plans to push him out, but indicated he would fight it. “How are they going to do that?” They said. “You have to have a willing buyer, (and a) willing seller.”
Less than an hour later, the firm issued a statement saying that its founder was leaving. “From today, he will have no economic or personal involvement in the partnership,” it said.
Crispin O’Day, who founded his firm in 1991 and has $600 million of his own money in its funds, was not bought out by the other partners. According to people with knowledge of the situation, he was removed under another mechanism by which he recovered the capital he had put into the business.
The firm declined to comment. Crispin O’Day did not respond to requests seeking comment.
With the ouster of its founder, some of the firm’s remaining partners expressed confidence earlier this week that the relationship with the prime broker could be saved. Within days, they were considering the firm’s endgame.
Crispin O’Day’s exit was not enough to prevent JPMorgan Chase, O’Day Asset Management’s largest prime broker and its sole custodian, from leaving it. US Bank — which continued its relationship with Jeffrey Epstein after he was convicted of soliciting a minor for prostitution, and recently agreed to a $290 million settlement with his victims — on Monday evening Termination notice issued.

Hedge funds operating in the UK are a regulatory requirement to have a custodian, who protects client assets.
The firm told investors it was in “advanced discussions” about breaking up its business by “rehabilitating” certain fund management activities and individuals working for the business.
,
Beyond the impact on Crispin O’Day and his hedge fund, the decades-long allegations of harassment and misconduct — which span from 1998 to 2021 — have raised broader questions about how businesses respond to complaints of gender discrimination and misconduct in finance.
The firm’s female employees had been warned by colleagues for years not to enter elevators alone with him, or agree to shopping trips with him. He managed to stick to the firm even after the authorities tried to rein in his behaviour.
On hearing that Oday Asset Management was in talks to offload some of its money to other investment houses, one of the women who spoke to the FT to investigate said she hoped it would lead to sweeping changes in the finance industry. “Will there be any self-reflection on the part of those who worked with him for so long?” He asked.
Tara Camlin Jones, chief executive of 25X25, a campaign to increase the number of female heads at FTSE 100 companies, told the FT she believed sexual harassment in the workplace was less of a problem than in earlier years, but other forms of gender discrimination ” were still”. Prachanda”.
“I think there are some areas of financial services where there are still very aggressive male cultures,” she said.
In the 30% Club, Smuts said that for changes to be meaningful, companies need to back up the policies with concrete action.
“Most workplaces today have policies and procedures in place to deal with misconduct,” said Smuts in the 30% club. “However, if inappropriate behavior is tolerated, and people are not held accountable for the way they act, ultimately these steps will be ineffective.”
Additional reporting by Emma Dunkley and Akila Quinio in London
the fall of crispin ode
It took only seven days for Crispin O’Day and his firm, one of the oldest hedge funds in the City of London, to be exposed after the FT published an investigation into allegations of sexual assault and harassment by them. The prominent Brexit supporter and Conservative Party donor, known for making large contrarian bets, founded ODE Asset Management in 1991. But its future, barely a week after the publication of the allegations, hangs by a thread.
Thursday 8 June
The FT published an investigation detailing Crispin O’Day’s alleged sexual assaults over the decades. City financier accused of harassment and misconduct by 13 women; Eight alleged that he sexually assaulted them. A law firm representing O’Day said the allegations against him were “highly disputed”.
Friday June 9th
The fallout gathers momentum with prime brokers cutting ties with funds affiliated with ODE Asset Management. Goldman, Axen, Morgan Stanley are all reviewing their relationships with the firm, meanwhile Schroders said it sold the rest of its investment in one of the firm’s funds.
Saturday 10 June
ODE Asset Management partner Crispin ODE and his ODE Asset Management Group Ltd take steps to remove them as members of the overall firm. They say the funds will now be run and controlled by the remaining partners. Crispin O’Day suggested to the FT that he could contest their decision.
Monday 12 June
Oday Asset Management says it is liquidating its Swann fund, which manages €117mn, and will return the money to shareholders. It tells clients that it has also closed its Brooks Developed Markets Fund due to the volume of redemption requests.
Tuesday 13 June
JPMorgan moves to terminate its custodian relationship with O’Day Asset Management, putting the firm in a potentially dangerous position as it is a regulatory requirement for hedge funds to have a custodian, which protects client assets. Is.
Wednesday 14 June
MPs write to the financial regulator demanding to know what action it has taken after receiving a report detailing improper behavior by Crispin O’Day from O’Day Asset Management in early 2021. Meanwhile, UBS has become the latest bank to end its prime broking relationship.
Thursday 15 June
Oday Asset Management says it is in advanced discussions about repositioning funds and transferring certain fund management activities and individuals to other asset managers.
Friday 16 June
The FT reports that the firm has ceased trading in the fourth fund since the scandal first came to light.










