Hedge fund Man Group is cutting ties with Britain's prestigious Booker Prize Foundation after nearly two decades, both sides announced on Sunday, January 27. The group has invested £25 million (Dh121m) in the literary prize, its international iteration and other related events and activities in the past 17 years. Now, the Booker Prize Foundation "are in discussion with a new sponsor", said its trustees, adding that they "are confident that the new funding will be in place for 2020." The two 2019 prizes will run as usual. Luke Ellis, Man Group's chief executive, said the company was "truly honoured to have been a part of something so special and unique", but it would "focus its resources" on a new campaign to expand the firm's charitable initiatives. Helena Kennedy, the Booker Prize Foundation chairwoman, said: "Man Group has been an excellent and very generous sponsor for nearly 18 years since 2002. "With their support we have seen the prizes and our charitable activities flourish so that today the prizes can claim to be the most significant literary awards in the world. "However, all good things must come to an end and we look forward to taking the prizes into the next phase with our new supporter." The winner of the Man Booker Prize receives £52,500 (Dh255,000), although the bigger benefit is seen as a spike in sales, which invariably follow. Previous winners include V S Naipaul, Iris Murdoch, Salman Rushdie, J M Coetzee, Kingsley Amis, Kazuo Ishiguro, A S Byatt and Ian McEwan among others. Last year, author Anna Burns won for her novel <em>Milkman</em>, making it the first time a Northern Irish writer had been awarded the prize. The award, launched in 1969, was only open to novelists from Commonwealth states until it began permitting those from other English-speaking countries in 2014. The decision was controversial, leading to fears that the United States would dominate. Two American writers have since won. Author Sebastian Faulks, who was once a judge on the prize, but has never won it, last year criticised Man Group as "the enemy", reported<em> The Sunday Times</em>. He said they were "not the sort of people who should be sponsoring literary prizes, they're the kind of people literary prizes ought to be criticising". Ellis reportedly hit back at last year's event, saying: "Literature and the arts need their champions to step in where public money has been pulled out."