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The machers who built UK plc

For decades ‘Gussies’, Great Universal Stores shares, along with those of M&S, formed the core of private share portfolios.

November 5, 2009 10:02

ByAlex Brummer, Alex Brummer

3 min read

For decades ‘Gussies’, Great Universal Stores shares, along with those of M&S, formed the core of private share portfolios. Those who hung onto their GUS shares are now the proud owners of three top FTSE companies: fashion group Burberry, the catalogue shopping and DIY concern Home Retail Group and credit checking giant Experian.

The late Sir Isaac Wolfson was the business genius who built GUS. He joined the group in 1932 as a merchandise controller and rose to chairman. He remained in the job until 1987, completing more than 80 acquisitions along the way and earning a reputation as one of the great post-Second World War entrepreneurs.

Control of the firm was exercised through two classes of shares, an arrangement generally frowned upon by big battalion investors. But it did not matter, as long as the group produced ever rising dividends whatever the economic circumstances.

In 1996 Lord (David) Wolfson succeeded his cousin Lord (Leonard) Wolfson as chairman and ushered in a period of rapid change which saw the old GUS dismantled and remade. The two-tier share structure, which guaranteed Wolfson family domination, was removed.