Print this article
CEO Of Europe's KBC Group Leaves After Almost 41 Years At Firm
Tom Burroughes
28 February 2012
The chief executive of Europe’s
KBC group, Jan Vanhevel, is to retire at the annual meeting on 3 May, rounding
out almost 41 years at the firm and 16 as a member of its executive committee,
the firm said today. Vanhevel will be succeeded by Johan Thijs, CEO of KBC’s Belgium
business unit. "KBC Group owes an enormous debt of gratitude to Jan
Vanhevel. He agreed to take the helm in exceedingly difficult circumstances in
2009, postponing the retirement he had originally planned to take in that year.
Since then, and with unconditional dedication to the group, he has led the
conception and implementation of a far-reaching turnaround plan,” Thomas
Leysen, chairman of KBC, said in a statement today. Vanhevel began his career at the Kredietbank in 1971 in its
legal division. From 1972 to 1994, he held a number of increasingly senior
positions in the bank and also taught financial law at the Handelshogeschool in
Antwerp. He
became general manager of the IT division in 1994, a member of the executive committee
of the Kredietbank in 1996 and of KBC Bank and KBC Group in 1998. In 2006, he
was appointed CEO of the Central & Eastern Europe and Russia Business Unit
of KBC Group, and in 2009, CEO of the whole group.