HSBC To Name AIA CEO Mark Tucker as Chairman, Sources Say -- Update
2017年3月13日 - 4:25AM
Dow Jones News
By Margot Patrick
LONDON -- HSBC Holdings PLC is set to name AIA Group Ltd. Chief
Executive Mark Tucker as its next chairman, the first time the bank
has hired from outside for the role in its 151 year history.
Mr. Tucker will join the bank in the fall, people familiar with
the matter said Sunday, replacing outgoing HSBC veteran Douglas
Flint. Mr. Tucker, currently based in Hong Kong, will relocate to
London.
Mr. Flint's planned departure is the first step in refreshing
the bank's leadership and setting out its next set of goals. HSBC
Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver, who has said he would leave once
Mr. Flint's successor is in place, is to announce he will leave the
bank in 2018, a person familiar with the matter said Sunday.
That announcement, and Mr. Tucker's joining, is expected to come
after AIA confirms Mr. Tucker's departure in an announcement early
Monday in Hong Kong.
Mr. Tucker has been at AIA since 2010. He joined the insurer as
its former owner, American International Group Inc., readied it for
an initial public offering in Hong Kong. Before AIA, Mr. Tucker was
chief executive of Prudential PLC, building its Asian franchise in
the 1990s, and has been a nonexecutive director at the Bank of
England.
Along with resigning from AIA, Mr. Tucker will also step down
from the board of Goldman Sachs Inc., the people familiar with the
matter said.
Mr. Flint, alongside Mr. Gulliver, helped HSBC reshape itself
and adapt to harsher regulation and lower profitability for banks
after the financial crisis. Their five-year strategy plan in 2011
saw the bank rein in its sprawling global operations, closing
dozens of business and exiting much of Latin America.
After HSBC paid $1.9 billion in a 2012 settlement over money
laundering lapses, Mr. Flint and Mr. Gulliver oversaw a costly
effort to raise financial crime fighting standards at the bank,
which is still subject to a deferred prosecution agreement that was
part of the settlement.
The two men were seen by analysts and investors as a formidable
duo, with Mr. Flint becoming a top voice in bank regulation
circles, and Mr. Gulliver credited with managing the bank's risks
with the eye of the trader he once was. But some investors had
urged the bank not to let Mr. Flint and Mr. Gulliver linger too
long, and last year they clarified their plans to leave.
Mr. Flint became chairman in December 2010 and has been on
HSBC's board since 1995, the year he joined the bank as finance
director. Mr. Gulliver, at the bank since 1980, became CEO at the
start of 2011.
Since starting in Hong Kong in 1865, HSBC has always selected
insiders as chairman, even when it meant falling afoul of U.K.
corporate governance recommendations. It had said that this time
around it would bring in an outsider.
Write to Margot Patrick at margot.patrick@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 12, 2017 15:10 ET (19:10 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
AIA (PK) (USOTC:AAGIY)
過去 株価チャート
から 11 2024 まで 12 2024
AIA (PK) (USOTC:AAGIY)
過去 株価チャート
から 12 2023 まで 12 2024