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RBC Names New Chief Risk Officer, Sees Board Changes
Eliane Chavagnon
30 August 2013
Morten Friis, chief risk officer at ,
will retire on January 10, 2014, after over 30 years at the firm. Friis joined RBC in 1979 and has worked in various divisions
including project finance, corporate banking, fixed income, business banking
and within RBC’s financial institution business. He was appointed as CRO
in 2004 and joined RBC’s Group Executive, the bank’s senior management
committee, in 2009. Mark Hughes, currently chief operating officer, RBC Capital
Markets, has been named as RBC's new CRO, effective January 10, 2014 - he will also
join RBC’s Group Executive and become deputy chief risk officer on November 1, 2013. RBC, which yesterday issued its third quarter results, has also announced that
David O’Brien will retire as chair of the board, effective December 31, 2013. O’Brien
will be replaced by Kathleen Taylor, who has been an independent director since
2001. O’Brien has served as non-executive chair since 2004 and as an independent
director since 1996. He will stay on as a director until the annual meeting of
shareholders in Toronto
on February 26, 2014, RBC said. The Canada- and New York-listed Bank has, meanwhile, added
Thomas Renyi to its board of directors. Renyi is a corporate director with experience in the
financial services industry, having served as executive chairman of The Bank of
New York Mellon from July 2007 until he retired in August 2008. Prior to that, he
was chairman and chief executive of The Bank of New York Company and the Bank
of New York for 10 years. As reported elsewhere on Family Wealth Report today, Net income at RBC Wealth
Management ended the third quarter of 2013 at what the firm said was a record $236 million, up $80 million, or 51 per
cent, compared to a year, and up $11 million, or 5 per cent, on the previous
quarter (view full results here).