Jaroslav Haščák

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Jaroslav Haščák (born 30 August 1969) is a Slovak entrepreneur. He is the co-founder of Penta Investments, a large private equity group active in Central Europe. He is considered one of the wealthiest people in Slovakia: Forbes estimates his family's net worth at around $2.1 billion at the end of 2025.[1] In addition to his significant entrepreneurial successes, Haščák's career has also been marked by controversy, particularly surrounding the so-called Gorilla scandal, which triggered a legal battle that lasted for years.

Haščák was born on 30 August 1969 in Ďurková in socialist Czechoslovakia. After graduating from high school, he studied international relations in Moscow and China. He completed his studies at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO), graduating in 1993.[2] He also studied at Peking University in China. In the early 1990s, he and fellow student Marek Dospiva were already involved in import and export business: during their stay in Beijing, they began importing Chinese textiles to Czechoslovakia. After their return, Haščák, Dospiva, and other fellow students founded the financial company “Penta Brokers” in 1993/94, which later became the Penta Investments Group. The name “Penta” (Greek for five) stands for the five founding partners, who had all studied together in Moscow and what was then Czechoslovakia.[3]

Career

Haščák had been one of the three managing partners and key decision-makers at Penta Investments since its founding in the 1990s. The company succeeded in growing through the acquisition of former state-owned companies and relocated the headquarters of the holding company to Cyprus in 1999.[3] Until the end of 2020, he served as managing partner of the group, responsible for strategy and key business areas. Under his leadership, Penta expanded significantly, particularly in the healthcare and finance sectors. He led the company into the healthcare sector (including hospital and pharmacy chains) and initiated a strategic realignment from private equity to long-term equity investments between 2010 and 2012, including the provision of venture capital for innovative technology company.[4] Penta's portfolio includes well-known companies such as the drugstore chain Dr. Max, the insurance company Dôvera, and the betting company Fortuna.

At the end of 2020, Haščák stepped down from his operational roles due to the investigations into the "Gorilla" case, but remained a co-owner.[5] After the allegations were cleared up, he returned to Penta's management in the fall of 2024 and once again took up a seat on the group's investment committee and board of directors.[4]

Politics

Through his business activities, Haščák was in frequent contact with top politicians in Slovakia and was considered an extremely influential figure.[2] In 2011, he came to public attention when secret wiretap transcripts from the Slovak intelligence service SIS ("Gorilla" files) were leaked to the public, documenting meetings between Haščák and government officials in the 2000s. According to the wiretapped conversations, Haščák met with, among others, the then Minister of Economy Jirko Malchárek and the Chairwoman of the National Property Fund Anna Bubeníková to discuss corrupt privatization deals.[6] In a conversation with Malchárek in 2006, Haščák said: "Democracy is a shitty system. Voters know nothing, voters are shit." A conversation with the opposition leader Robert Fico also appeared in the records.[2] However, Haščák denied any corrupt dealings and claimed that the recordings had been taken out of context.

These revelations gave the impression that Penta had close ties to high-ranking politicians, or that they were effectively acting as its “puppets.[6] The media therefore often refer to Haščák as a Slovak oligarch. In addition, his group of business partners has been criticized for holding extensive interests in the healthcare sector (hospitals, Dôvera insurance, Dr. Max pharmacies), which has been criticized as monopolization.[7]

Controversy

Private life

References

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