Updated July 3, 2026 — 11:24am,first published July 3, 2026 — 7:47amTPG Capital decided to retain Joel Thickins in his multimillion-dollar role as partner and co-head of Asia following his guilty plea to charges over a crash and refusing a breath test while driving in Sydney’s eastern suburbs and an internal investigation of serious allegations involving alcohol and drugs.In addition to his court-mandated penalties of a $1430 fine and nine-month driving ban, TPG has imposed “appropriate disciplinary action” against Thickins, according to a statement from the company. It did not provide further information.In addition to his court-mandated penalties, TPG has imposed “appropriate disciplinary action” against Joel Thickins.BloombergThe fine is unlikely to trouble Thickins. TPG’s Australian operation, led by Thickins, paid its 30 staff a whopping $62 million last year.The drama comes at a crucial time for the firm, with supermarket giant Coles confirming it is in talks to acquire TPG’s Petbarn and vets business Greencross with a price tag reported to be as much as $4 billion.“Coles confirms that it is in discussions with TPG in relation to a potential acquisition of thebusiness and is undertaking due diligence,” it told the ASX this week.The magistrate said that the driving offences were as bad as it gets without maiming or killing someone.“It is an absolute shocker,” Judge Michael Barko said. “Without maiming or killing someone, it can’t get worse [than this].”He described how Thickins hit two cars in oncoming traffic before losing control and rear-ending another car with such force that its rear axle was “sawn off” and his vehicle was forced into two other parked vehicles. Then there was Thickins’ refusal, twice, to submit to breathalyser tests and his refusal to co-operate with police.“He was obviously indignant, also argumentative.”TPG said law firm Debevoise & Plimpton was brought in to conduct an investigation into the crash and “subsequent allegations pertaining to Joel and TPG’s portfolio company Novotech”.The allegations refer to reports in The Australian Financial Review concerning a multimillion-dollar payout to a former senior TPG executive, Rob Speedie, after he reportedly threatened to expose what he claimed was a culture of drinking and drug-taking at the firm.“Debevoise’s investigation has determined those claims to be unsubstantiated and meritless,” TPG said. “Extensive interviews with relevant parties, as well as a review of tens of thousands of documents, unearthed nothing to corroborate the claims that were raised.”The findings, together with Thickins’ acceptance of responsibility, co-operation with investigators and previously clean disciplinary record, led it to conclude that he’ll remain in the role, TPG said.“With the investigation now complete and the legal proceedings concluded, our focus is now on moving forward and supporting the continued success of our strong Asia franchise,” TPG said.The decision marks a vote of confidence in one of TPG’s most senior Asia executives, who has spent a decade at the firm and helped build its Australian franchise into one of the country’s most active private equity investors.Thickins joined in 2016 as head of Australia. In 2024, he was appointed Asia co-head alongside Ganen Sarvananthan, who’s also head of the Middle East and sits on TPG’s board and executive committee.The Australian portfolio has experienced a series of successful exits and realisations, underscoring the maturity of the franchise. These include the Made Group exit, where Cocobella and Rokeby were sold to Danone in a deal valued at as much as $2 billion.with BloombergThe Business Briefing newsletter delivers major stories, exclusive coverage and expert opinion. Sign up to get it every weekday morning.Colin Kruger is a senior business reporter for the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.Connect via email.From our partners
Private equity boss keeps his job despite guilty plea as $4b deal looms
TPG has imposed “appropriate disciplinary action” against Joel Thickins, who pleaded guilty this week to two charges after an incident in Sydney in early June.











