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Mike Cannon-Brookes and wife Annie separate

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The family divide their time between Rosehill Farm, at Kangaloon in the Southern Highlands, and a historic house in Double Bay known as Verona, bought a few weeks before Fairwater for $17 million.

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The Cannon-Brookes portfolio is held either in Mike’s own name or the CBC Co Pty Limited corporate entity, of which he is the sole director and owner.

While the portfolio is not in Annie’s name, she is widely tipped to have spearheaded much of the property acquisitions in both Sydney and the northern beaches.

The company attributed the purchase of Queensland’s Dunk Island to Annie Cannon-Brookes soon after they bought it last year for $27.5 million.

That is held in a corporate trust, Green Seaweed 1 Pty Ltd, controlled by Catherine Manuel, a director of the Cannon-Brookes Foundation. The trust recently added a three-bedroom house on Mission Beach for $1.1 million.

CBC Co owns almost $60 million worth of property, including the couple’s Kangaloon home and a slew of Southern Highlands farmland, the most expensive of which is a former racehorse stud that has been turned into a regenerative farm.

A couple of trusts have acquired property in Pittwater, including an $8 million estate on Scotland Island and a house on Great Mackerel Beach, although he recently bought another house on the same stretch of sand for $2.55 million.

Also on the western foreshores of Pittwater is a house at Coasters Retreat, bought for $4.65 million last year by CBC Co, which was threatened by a bushfire two weeks ago.

News of the Cannon-Brookes separation comes less than a fortnight after Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest and Nicola Forrest announced they would end their marriage after 31 years. They said the decision will have no impact on their mining business or charity foundation.

“After 31 years of marriage, we have made the decision to live apart,” a statement released by the couple said.

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“There is no impact on the operations, control or direction of Fortescue, Minderoo or Tattarang.”

Andrew Forrest is the founder and executive chairman of Fortescue Metals Group, the West Australian iron ore producer. Private investment company Tattarang is also owned by the couple and owns a diverse range of businesses across agri-food, energy, health technology, property, resources and lifestyle.

The Morning Edition newsletter is our guide to the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up here.



The family divide their time between Rosehill Farm, at Kangaloon in the Southern Highlands, and a historic house in Double Bay known as Verona, bought a few weeks before Fairwater for $17 million.

Loading

The Cannon-Brookes portfolio is held either in Mike’s own name or the CBC Co Pty Limited corporate entity, of which he is the sole director and owner.

While the portfolio is not in Annie’s name, she is widely tipped to have spearheaded much of the property acquisitions in both Sydney and the northern beaches.

The company attributed the purchase of Queensland’s Dunk Island to Annie Cannon-Brookes soon after they bought it last year for $27.5 million.

That is held in a corporate trust, Green Seaweed 1 Pty Ltd, controlled by Catherine Manuel, a director of the Cannon-Brookes Foundation. The trust recently added a three-bedroom house on Mission Beach for $1.1 million.

CBC Co owns almost $60 million worth of property, including the couple’s Kangaloon home and a slew of Southern Highlands farmland, the most expensive of which is a former racehorse stud that has been turned into a regenerative farm.

A couple of trusts have acquired property in Pittwater, including an $8 million estate on Scotland Island and a house on Great Mackerel Beach, although he recently bought another house on the same stretch of sand for $2.55 million.

Also on the western foreshores of Pittwater is a house at Coasters Retreat, bought for $4.65 million last year by CBC Co, which was threatened by a bushfire two weeks ago.

News of the Cannon-Brookes separation comes less than a fortnight after Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest and Nicola Forrest announced they would end their marriage after 31 years. They said the decision will have no impact on their mining business or charity foundation.

“After 31 years of marriage, we have made the decision to live apart,” a statement released by the couple said.

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“There is no impact on the operations, control or direction of Fortescue, Minderoo or Tattarang.”

Andrew Forrest is the founder and executive chairman of Fortescue Metals Group, the West Australian iron ore producer. Private investment company Tattarang is also owned by the couple and owns a diverse range of businesses across agri-food, energy, health technology, property, resources and lifestyle.

The Morning Edition newsletter is our guide to the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up here.

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