HSBC shares gain after bank names AIA’s Tucker as chairman

FILE PHOTO: AIA Chief Executive Mark Tucker speaks during a news conference on the company's 2011 interim results and business performance in Hong Kong July 29, 2011.  REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File photo   TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

 

Bloomberg

HSBC Holdings Plc named insurance executive Mark Tucker to succeed Douglas Flint as chairman, enlisting an outsider to oversee Europe’s biggest bank as it overhauls management.
Tucker, 59, chief executive officer of AIA Group Ltd. and former head of Prudential Plc, will take the post Oct. 1, the bank said in a statement on Monday. AIA Regional CEO Ng Keng Hooi will immediately become CEO-designee and formally succeed Tucker on September 1.
Tucker’s major task will be to find a successor to CEO Stuart Gulliver, who has led the London-based bank for more than six years. A replacement is expected to be announced during 2018, in order to meet Gulliver’s stated desire to retire in that timeframe, HSBC said in the statement.
HSBC, one of the world’s largest lenders with about 235,000 employees in about 70 countries, is restructuring to adapt to tougher regulations, a law requiring the separation of its retail operations from the investment bank in the U.K. and amid a legacy of failed compliance and misconduct. The bank remains under the watch of the U.S. Justice Department after helping South American drug cartels launder money, and faces moderating economic growth in China and the prospect of a post-Brexit slowdown in the U.K., its two most important regions.
In Tucker, HSBC will add an executive with more than two decades of Asia experience to help the lender in its so-called pivot toward the region. Tucker was CEO of Prudential Corporation Asia from 1994 to 2003, where he expanded the insurer into 12 countries in the region from three. He took over AIA in 2010 prior to its listing in October that year, according to a biography from the Hong Kong-based insurer. AIA has quadrupled its value of new business, which measures the future profitability of new policies, with Tucker at its helm, exchange filings show.
“He’s clearly done a good job at AIA,” said Hugh Young, Asia managing director at Aberdeen Asset Management Plc, which holds HSBC and AIA shares. “Let’s see how it pans out but I think it could be an inspired appointment.”
HSBC rose 0.9 percent to 672.7 pence at 8:30 a.m. in London trading, bringing its advance this year to 2.4 percent. AIA dropped 3 percent in Hong Kong, the most since December.
Tucker played professional soccer in his early life and was on several U.K. teams including the Wolverhampton Wanderers, Rochdale and Barnet, according to reports from the Daily Telegraph. He switched to finance after attending the University of Leeds. He was finance director at HBOS Plc, as well as his leadership jobs at Prudential and AIA. Tucker is also on the board of New York-based Goldman Sachs Group Inc. He will step down from Goldman before taking up his role at HSBC.
“Appointing Mark Tucker as chair is a very bold, very good move for HSBC,” Sandy Chen, an analyst at Cenkos Securities in London wrote in a note to investors. “Tucker possesses two key qualities in spades — integrity, and an ability to inspire and reinvigorate large, complex financial institutions.”
HSBC has revamped its board after coming under pressure from shareholders unhappy about declining profitability. The bank added Axa SA CEO Henri de Castries and former leader of Diageo Plc Paul Walsh as independent non-executive directors in November. The board’s senior independent director Rachel Lomax ran the search for the new chairman, which the bank has said would be an external hire and take a non-executive role.
Scotland-born Flint, 61, joined HSBC in 1995, becoming finance director that year before being named executive chairman in 2010. Oxford-educated Gulliver, 57, started at the bank in 1980 and excelled as a trader, rising through the ranks to become CEO in 2011.
Job Cuts
Since 2011, the duo has announced more than 87,000 job cuts and exited more than 80 businesses, reducing HSBC’s global footprint. Alongside most other European banks, the executives have been struggling to increase profitability faced with record-low interest rates, misconduct fines and rising compliance and regulatory costs.
The pair endured a difficult period in early 2015, when U.K. lawmakers criticized their leadership after fresh details from files leaked in 2008 showed the bank helped drug cartels and arms dealers launder money and advised customers on how to evade tax.

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