People Moves
HSBC Names One Of Its Own As New Chief Executive

The new CEO, who is taking up the role from the start of September, was previously its chief financial officer, joining the bank in 2005.
HSBC has appointed one of
its own senior figures, Georges Elhedery, as group chief
executive to take over from Noel Quinn, effective from 2
September.
The UK/Hong Kong-listed bank, which reports second-quarter
results on 31 July, said it chose Elhedery after examining a
range of internal and external candidates.
At the lender since 2005, Elhedery joined the board as chief
financial officer in 2023.
“He is an exceptional leader and banker who cares passionately
about the bank, our customers, and our people. He has a track
record of leading through change, driving growth, delivering
simplification, containing costs and brings a strong focus on
execution,” group chairman Sir Mark Tucker said in a statement
today.
Since joining the board as group CFO and and throughout the
selection process, Elhedery “has demonstrated his strategic
insight and vision, and deep international
perspectives,” Sir Mark said.
Including his 19 years at the bank, Elhedery has worked in
financial services for almost three decades. His experience
covers stints in Asia, the Middle East and Europe.
When Quinn announced
his retirement at the end of April, his decision took
observers by surprise. Quinn’s tenure coincided with HSBC’s pivot
towards Asia as the primary source of its earnings and the
lockdowns in Hong Kong, mainland China and much of the world as
Covid-19 erupted in 2020. He has also been able to fend off
investor demands for the bank to be
broken up. Quinn has been at the lender since 1987; he was
the chief executive for an interim period before being formally
appointed to the role in March 2020.
In its Q1 2024 results, HSBC said that on a reported basis, it
logged a first-quarter pre-tax profit of $12.65 billion, down
from $12.886 billion a year earlier. Diluted earnings per share
rose to $0.54 per share from $0.52 per share. Its net interest
margin slipped to 1.63 per cent from 1.69 per cent.
Shares in HSBC are up 5.2 per cent since the start of January
this year, at 663 pence per share.