Martin A. Dunphy is an Irish entrepreneur, investor, and founder of London-based Marlin Financial Group, Ascot Capital Partners, and The Poleberry Foundation.
Dunphy was born in Waterford, Ireland, and educated at De La Salle College Waterford. He studied and graduated as a chef from the highly regarded Rockwell Hotel and Catering college in Tipperary. Dunphy played goalkeeper on the Irish International schoolboy football team, winning the European championship in 1982. He also played at Croke Park for De La Salle College Waterford, losing an All-Ireland Final in Gaelic football in 1982. In 1986, he was awarded a four-year soccer scholarship at George Mason University, Virginia, where he went on to Captain the University Division 1 soccer team.
He was named to the university soccer Hall of Fame in 2006 and holds the university record for most career saves. Dunphy earned a BSc in marketing and an MBA at George Mason University. He is also a graduate of Harvard Business School and a Chartered Director and fellow of the Institute of Directors in London.
Dunphy's father, Vincent Dunphy, was a leading soccer goalkeeper in the 1950s playing for Waterford and Cork Hibs in Ireland. Dunphy's son Eli was an Irish International in Clay target shooting for several years, and at European competitions and in the World Championships in Australia where he shot a perfect score. He was named to the All-American shooting team in 2020. Dunphy's daughter, Ava, walked on to the women's rugby team at the University of Notre Dame her freshman year. She subsequently was selected to the University of Notre Dame's Division 1, Women's rowing team her sophomore year as a Coxswain. Ava also holds a glider and a pilot's license.
Dunphy set up an Asian telecommunications company in 1996, with branches in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and mainland China. During his time in Beijing, Dunphy learned Mandarin. He was Chairman of the Irish Network China and hosted Ireland Prime Minister Bertie Ahearn in Beijing in 1998. He subsequently spent 3 years with International SOS in Beijing before moving to London. In 2002, Dunphy founded the Marlin Financial Group in the living room of his home in London. Headquartered in West Sussex, UK, the financial services group specialized in investing in non-performing consumer debt and had revenues in excess of ã100,000,000 in 2014.
Marlin was consistently ranked amongst the UK's 100 fastest growing companies by The Sunday Times, generating sales growth of 55% per annum between 2009 and 2013. In 2010, Dunphy partnered with private equity firm Duke Street Capital, which invested in Marlin Financial Group, purchasing 58% of the business. Dunphy remained as group CEO and a major shareholder. Analysts at the time believed Duke Street agreed to put ã50 million into the business to fund expansion. In February 2014, Dunphy sold his stake in Marlin Financial Group to Cabot Credit Management, a debt buying business controlled by US-based Encore Capital Group, Inc., a US publicly listed company (NASDAQ: ECPG), and New-York buyout house JC Flowers. Duke Street joined Dunphy in selling to Cabot in a deal worth US$485 million.
Dunphy founded Ascot Capital Partners in London in 2015 to invest in up-and-coming innovative and entrepreneurial companies. Over the next 5 years, investments were made in the UK, US, and Ireland in tech-enabled and AI-driven companies, including Immuta, Caresyntax, and Engenious. Huma, Sayari, Apukudo, and Equitrace. Several have become unicorns.
In 2001, Dunphy, then living in Beijing, completed a 900 km bike ride over the Tibetan Plateau, raising funds for charity KhamAid. This was followed up by a 2004 fundraising climb of Kilimanjaro.
Dunphy set up an endowed athletic soccer scholarship at George Mason University in 2012. Following this, the Poleberry Foundation was established in 2014 to support and motivate young students to fulfil their potential using workshops, competitions, and individual scholarships. Additional awards are given on an ad-hoc basis to individuals and organizations that demonstrate initiative and leadership in the arts, humanities, and entrepreneurship. The foundation has supported numerous projects and institutions, including George Mason University, University of Oxford, De La Salle College, Villanova University, University College Cork, University of Notre Dame, and IMMA.
The Foundation has, in recent years, taken possession of several pieces of ancient Irish heritage that had left Ireland. An important piece is a pre-Reformation Irish chalice found in Dorset, England. The piece has been the center of over 30 news articles, research publications, and TV reports. The chalice is currently on loan to Villanova University. The foundation may have taken possession of two very rare Richard Joyce Galway chalices, now on loan to Stonyhurst College in the UK, from a forced administrators' sale relating to Mount St Mary's in Derbyshire, UK.