Richard Farleigh (born November 9, 1960) is an Australian private investor. He is currently a member of the Business Review Weekly Rich 200 list, a list of the 200 wealthiest Australian individuals.
 
Born in Kyabram, Victoria, Farleigh was one of eleven siblings. His father, a labourer and sheep shearer who moved around Australia with his wife and eleven children, was a violent alcoholic. Aged two, Farleigh and his siblings were taken into care and sent to foster homes. By the age of five, he was considered "backward" but despite this went on to excel at mathematics and chess, winning a scholarship to read economics at the University of New South Wales.
 
After graduating with honours, he joined Bankers Trust Australia in Sydney when 23 as a trader and stayed there for ten years. He was hired to run a hedge fund in the tax haven of Bermuda and moved there with his first wife and baby son. There, he became friends with David Norwood, a chess grand master, and three years later, he had earned enough to retire, aged 34, and moved to Monte Carlo. It was at this point that he spent much time with Norwood investigating research from Oxford University in the UK that had potential commercial applications. IndexIT was the company formed to fund some of these ventures; it was later sold to Beeson Gregory for £20m. He made millions of dollars after investing his own capital in British technology companies. The Rich 200 list estimated his personal wealth at around AU$160,000,000. He is ranked as the 876th on the Sunday Times Rich List 2006 with an estimated net worth of £66million.
 
1999 saw Farleigh invest £2m in the renovation of the old French Embassy mansion in London’s Portman Square, turning it into the private members club Home House. The business was a success and was sold for a decent profit.
 
In 2005, he published a guide to personal investing entitled Taming the Lion: 100 Secret Strategies for Investing.
 
Farleigh plays chess as a hobby, and is an internationally-ranked player who has represented Bermuda and Monaco at the Chess Olympics.
 
He was selected in 2006 to appear as an investor on the British version of the business-related game show Dragons' Den for the show's third series and said he would be seeking further investments through the show, saying he was looking to "hopefully uncover the next big thing".
Richard Farleigh
 
 

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