The Trusty Servant Nov 2019 No.128 | Page 8

No.128 The Trusty Servant Peter Stormonth Darling (C, 40-45) died on 16 th September, 2019 David Rosier (I, 64-69) remembers: I was lucky enough to know Peter Stormonth Darling, or Peter Darling as he always introduced himself, or PSD as he was known to his many friends and colleagues, since 1978 when I joined SG Warburg & Co Ltd, of which he was then Vice-Chairman. When I became a director in 1984, there were no less than six other OWs on the board (PSD, George Jellicoe (E, 31-36), Andrew Smithers (D, 51-55), Roger Harrison- Topham (K, 53-58), John Sanders (F, 56-61) and Jock Birney (C, 57-62)). Peter was quite clear about the influence his time at Win Coll had on his later life and hugely successful career in the City. Like his father and two brothers, he was a Cookite: his cousins were also Wykehamists. In return, Peter was hugely generous to Win Coll and, with his friend the Wall Street entrepreneur Al Gordon, he set up a significant sports fund. He also served on many Win Coll committees. At Win Coll, Peter developed his passion for cricket, playing for Lords for two years. This passion was to last throughout his life. He also developed a love of writing – he was an inveterate letter writer – and an attention to detail, all of which were to stand him in good stead in his subsequent career. After leaving school, National Service in his family regiment, the Black Watch, beckoned and he volunteered to extend his required service period to go to Korea. In his own words, ‘I knew instantly that if I said no I would regret it for the rest of my life and would chastise myself for being a coward.’ Peter fought in the intensely gruelling second Battle of the Hook: the experience, he wrote, ‘stretched to the limit whatever qualities of leadership I may have possessed.’ After Law at New College, and, more importantly, captaining the New College cricket team, where he often recalled that he had seen Roger Bannister run the first sub-four-minute mile at Iffley Road, Peter moved to Canada. In 1957, he was introduced to Siegmund Warburg, who hired him to work for Warburg’s Canadian joint venture. Thus began a relationship with Warburg that lasted for over 40 years and culminated in Peter becoming the Chairman of the investment- management arm, which floated as Mercury Asset Management in 1987. As Chairman of MAM, Peter presided over what became the largest and most influential fund-management firm in the UK, with £100 billion under management. His leadership qualities were stretched again as he also presided over a group of opinionated, occasionally difficult, yet talented fund managers. But, with his open and charming manner and infectious sense of humour, he managed to ‘herd this group of cats’ into becoming the most successful fund-management business in the UK. Peter was self-deprecating to a fault and, in his memoir City Cinderella, the Life and Times of Mercury Asset Management, declared that the success of the firm was the work of others and that he became Chairman only because he happened to be around at the right time and was older than most of the other potential candidates. In the early 90s I persuaded Peter to join me on a trip to the Gulf. Our first stop was Oman and, on the first morning, we made a courtesy call on the British Ambassador: we had received the usual Foreign Office briefing about His Excellency, who had previously been Head of the Africa desk. All was going well until Peter asked him what he 8 thought about the situation in South Africa, where Nelson Mandela had just been released from jail, to which the Ambassador replied that he had no particular knowledge of the country. The next question about his wife, prompted by our briefing notes, seemed to be equally wide of the mark – the Ambassador was apparently a bachelor – and we hastily changed tack and talked about our ambitions in Oman. On leaving, we discovered that my PA had sent us details on our Ambassador to Amman (Jordan), rather than Oman! My sheepish admission of this was met by roars of laughter from Peter. Peter was admired and respected for his wisdom, adroit and pragmatic leadership and loved for his wonderful sense of humour, his eye for quirkiness and the absurdity of life. He was a great raconteur and particularly enjoyed telling stories against himself. One such tale, told with brilliant mimicry, was about Henry Grunfeld, one of the Warburg ‘Uncles’, who announced at a meeting with other senior directors that he had asked for an updated graphology report (for which Warburg was notorious) on Peter’s handwriting which apparently showed that ‘Stormonth Darling is deteriorating’. Peter was then at the height of his powers! Above all, I will always remember Peter’s deep interest in people and what made them tick. The joy of working for, and becoming a friend of, Peter was that he seemed genuinely interested in what one was doing, and it was this interest in people that engendered so much loyalty from his friends and colleagues and kept him young to the end.