Tue Jan 3, 2006 2:55 PM GMT
LONDON (Reuters) - Global bank HSBC Holdings said on Tuesday its Chief Operating Officer Alan Jebson will retire in May and that it had hired Simon Robertson, a former Goldman Sachs banker and chairman of Rolls-Royce
Tue Jan 3, 2006 2:55 PM GMT
LONDON (Reuters) - Global bank HSBC Holdings said on Tuesday its Chief Operating Officer Alan Jebson will retire in May and that it had hired Simon Robertson, a former Goldman Sachs banker and chairman of Rolls-Royce
See the latest about Bobby and TransUnion
A former Buy Buy executive is now CEO of Circuit City, as Circuit City turns from losses to profitability. That’s one CEO that knows not to align his Circuit City customers with predatory credit cards and predatory lending. The Best Buy credit card is managed by Household Internaitonal but the new name of the nation’s largest predator is now HSBC Finance Corporation.
Tuesday, 06 December, 2005
Mr Dyfrig John, who served as an Executive Director with HSBC Bank Malta p.l.c. until May of this year, has been appointed as Chief Executive Officer at HSBC Bank plc. in the U.K. The appointment follows Wednesday’s announcement that Group Chairman, Sir John Bond, will be retiring in May 2006. Sir John will be succeeded as Chairman by Mr Stephen Green, the current Chief Executive Officer of HSBC Group, who in turn will be succeeded by Mr Michael Geoghegan, the present Chief Executive of HSBC Bank plc.
Mark Odell / London December 05, 2005
Sir John Bond, who is retiring from HSBC next year, has emerged as a leading candidate to replace Lord MacLaurin as chairman of Vodafone, the world’s largest mobile phone operator. This week, Sir John said he would step down as chairman of the world’s third largest financial group next May after a 45-year career at the bank. The move prompted speculation in the City he was being lined up to replace his counterpart at Vodafone. Rumours started earlier in the year that Vodafone was searching for a replacement for Lord MacLaurin, 68, who is coming to the end of his tenure as chairman.
Sir John, who joined the board of the mobile phone operator in January this year, is no stranger to the mobile phone industry, serving as non-executive director of Orange between 1996 and 1999. Sir John, 64, is seen as an ideal replacement for Lord MacLaurin, although some analysts questioned whether he is too old.