Pehr Gustaf Gyllenhammar (28 April 1935 – 21 November 2024) was a Swedish businessman. He is mainly known for his 24 years as CEO and chairman of Volvo between 1970 and 1994. In the early 1980s he took the initiative for the European Round Table of Industrialists (ERT).
Gyllenhammar listed his position at the time of his death as Vice Chairman of Rothschild Europe.[2] Gyllenhammar was made Commander of the "Ordre National du Mérite" in France in 1980 and he was made Commander of the Legion of Honour in France in 1987. Gyllenhammar became an Honorary Master of the Bench of the Inner Temple, London in 2001.
Early life and education
Gyllenhammar was born on 28 April 1935 in Gothenburg, Sweden, the son of Pehr Gyllenhammar Sr., a Swedish business man of the Swedish noble family Gyllenhammar, and his Jewish mother, Aina (née Kaplan).[3] He did his military service at Bohuslän Regiment (I 17) in Uddevalla from 1954 to 1955 and became a sergeant.[4] Gyllenhammar graduated from Lund University with a degree in law in 1959 and was an assistant lawyer at the law firm Mannheimer & Zetterlöf in Gothenburg in 1959 and at Haight, Gardner, Poor & Havens in New York City in 1960.[5]
Gyllenhammar studied maritime law in the United States and then aspects of Industrialism at the Centre d'Etudes Industrielles in Geneva, Switzerland in 1968.[3][6]
Career
Gyllenhammar joined Försäkrings AB Amphion [sv] in Gothenburg in 1960 and became a director there in 1962. In 1963, he was appointed director at Återförsäkring AB Amphion-/Equitas. He went on to serve as assistant administrative manager within the Skandia Group in 1965 and became head of corporate planning for the group in 1966.[5] Gyllenhammar became Deputy CEO in 1968, in 1970 he replaced his father, Pehr Gyllenhammar Sr., as CEO.[3] After only a few months he moved to Volvo where he became the CEO in 1971. He replaced his father-in-law Gunnar Engellau [sv], who became chairman, in that position.
At Volvo
Gyllenhammar became one of the most famous businessmen in Sweden at Volvo. He mixed success with failure. He oversaw a wide-reaching diversification of Volvo's business, buying, among other things pharmaceutical companyPharmacia. What finally forced him to leave Volvo was a failed merger with French company Renault.
After Volvo
After Volvo, Gyllenhammar withdrew from Swedish public life and moved to London where he eventually became chairman of insurance companyAviva. He returned to Swedish business in 2004 as Chairman of Investment AB Kinnevik.
He was also a board member of Philips Electronics NV in Eindhoven from 1990 to 1995, Régie Nationale des Usines Renault SA in Paris from 1990 to 1993 and well as chairman of Procordia from 1990 to 1992. Gyllenhammar was board member of Polygram NV from 1996 and became chairman of the board of Commercial Union PLC in 1998 and senior advisor of Lazard Frères & Co LLC in New York City in 1996.[7] Gyllenhammar was the chairman of Aviva and deputy chairman of Rothschild Europe, chairman of Reuters Founders Share Company Limited and of the European Financial Services Roundtable.[8] He was also a member of the International Advisory Committee of Chase Manhattan Bank 1972–1995.[9]
Majid Al Futtaim Group, a major business chain in the United Arab Emirates, listed Mr Gyllenhammar as its chairman from June 2007 until March 2009.[10]
Political views
Gyllenhammar was an outspoken supporter of the Liberal People's Party. In his 1973 book I Believe in Sweden (Jag tror på Sverige) he was steadfast in his support for the Scandinavian model and argued for the kind social liberalism the Liberal People's Party used to support. Gyllenhammar served on the Party board and was widely considered as a future leader of the party. At times, he revealed an ambition to become Prime Minister of Sweden.
Personal life and death
Gyllenhammar was married 1959–2008 to Christina Engellau (1936–2008),[1] the daughter of Volvo CEO Gunnar Engellau and Margit (née Höckert).[3] They had three daughters and one son: Cecilia, Charlotte, Sophie, and Oscar. He married the horse sports journalist Christel Behrmann in 2010. They divorced in 2012. In April 2013 he married the British-Canadian doctor of psychology, Lee Welton Croll. They had a child in 2016.[1]
Gyllenhammar resided in Toronto in the later part of his life, where he died after a short illness on 21 November 2024, at the age of 89.[11][12]
Awards and decorations
Swedish
H. M. The King's Medal, 12th size gold (silver-gilt) medal worn around the neck on the Order of the Seraphim ribbon (1981)[13]
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G. (2020). Character Is Destiny. Morgan James Publishing. ISBN978-1642799736.
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G.; Palmgren, Anders (2015). Oberoende är stark [Independence is strong] (in Swedish) (Extended ed.). Stockholm: Bonnier. ISBN9789100154837. SELIBR17882071.
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G.; Palmgren, Anders (2014). Oberoende är stark [Independence is strong] (in Swedish). Stockholm: Bonnier. ISBN9789100140229. SELIBR14978729.
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G. (2000). Fortsättning följer [To be continued] (in Swedish). Stockholm: Bonnier. ISBN9100573299. SELIBR7150424.
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G.; Palmgren, Anders; Petersson, Christer (1992). Även med känsla [Even with feeling]. MånPocket, 99-0184541-6 (in Swedish) (New ed.). Stockholm: MånPocket. ISBN9176427668. SELIBR7654624.
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G.; Palmgren, Anders; Petersson, Christer (1991). Även med känsla [Even with feeling] (in Swedish). Stockholm: Bonnier fakta. ISBN9134512063. SELIBR7247301.
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G. (1991). Pengarna eller livet [The money or life] (in Swedish). Gothenburg: Informationsavd., Univ. ISBN91-7360-188-8. SELIBR7637634.
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G. (1981). Bilindustrin - inför ett débâcle? [The car industry - facing a débâcle?]. Handelsbankens småskriftsseries, 0348-0739 ; 20 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Sv. handelsbanken. SELIBR287706.
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G. (1979). En industripolitik för människan [An industrial policy for man]. Företag och samhälle, 0348-7830 ; 1979:4 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Studieförb. Näringsliv och samhälle (SN&S. ISBN9171502017. SELIBR7609392.
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G. (1977). People at work. Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley. ISBN0201024993. SELIBR4701601.
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G. (1974). Jag tror på Sverige [I believe in Sweden]. Företagsledare berättar, 99-0106030-3 (in Swedish) (New ed.). Stockholm: Askild & Kärnekull. ISBN9170084475. SELIBR7589517.
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G. (1973). Jag tror på Sverige [I believe in Sweden]. Företagsledare berättar, 99-0106030-3 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Askild & Kärnkull. ISBN9170083371. SELIBR7589444.
Gyllenhammar, Pehr G. (1970). Mot sekelskiftet på måfå [Towards the turn of the century at random]. Sond, 99-3537592-7 (in Swedish). Stockholm: [Bonnier (distr.)]. SELIBR99351.
^ abGafvelin, Elisabeth, ed. (1998). Vem är det: svensk biografisk handbok. 1999 [Who is it: Swedish biographical handbook. 1999] (in Swedish). Stockholm: Norstedt. pp. 401–402. ISBN91-1-300536-7. SELIBR3681522.
Borgström, Henric; Haag, Martin (1988). Gyllenhammar (in Swedish). Stockholm: Bonnier. ISBN9134510176. SELIBR7247171.
Ekman, Bo; Gyllenhammar, Pehr G.; Browaldh, Tore, eds. (1985). Arbete och värdighet: en bok tillägnad Pehr G Gyllenhammar [Dignity at work: a book dedicated to Pehr G Gyllenhammar] (in Swedish). Stockholm: Streiffert. ISBN9178860008. SELIBR7672395.
Ekman, Bo; Browaldh, Tore; Gyllenhammar, Pehr G., eds. (1985). Dignity at work: a book dedicated to Pehr G Gyllenhammar. Stockholm: Streiffert. ISBN91-7886-001-6. SELIBR7672396.