Print this article
KBC Shuffles Board Members
Sandra Kilhof
19 November 2013
The Belgian banking group, , has announced that Professor
Dirk Heremans and Julien De Wilde have stepped down from the boards of
directors of KBC Group and KBC Bank, respectively. The move is in line with a
previously announced succession plan, the firm said in a statement. Heremans is being replaced by Júlia Király, who until
earlier this year had been the deputy governor of the Central Bank of Hungary. Király started her career as a research economist at the
Central Statistical Office in Hungary,
before taking up a similar post at the National Planning Office. In 1989, she
became chief executive and dean of banking strategy, monetary economics and
risk management at ITCB Consulting & Training. Király then served as deputy
governor responsible for Financial Stability at the MNB, the Central Bank of Hungary. She has also served as a member of the board of directors of
the Hungarian Credit Bank; on the advisory board of the Supervisory Authority;
and on the board of directors of K&H Bank. She was chairperson of the
Postbank and Savings Bank Corporation and was recently appointed head of department
at the International Business School of Budapest, after serving as a professor
since 1993. Julien De Wilde is being replaced by Nabil Ariss, former
vice chairman of JP Morgan in London. Ariss started his career at the French securities company
Jacques François-Dufour, Jean-Louis Kervern & Cie. He joined McKinsey in
1987 as a management consultant, and then moved on to JP Morgan, where he
developed the European corporate finance business and became vice chairman in
2009. In addition, he has been advising corporate and financial
institutions for 26 years on strategy, operations, organisation, mergers &
acquisitions and capital. He is a member of the board of the Centre for Lebanese
Studies at St Antony's College - University
of Oxford. Both nominations have been approved by the National Bank of Belgium,
the statement said. In related news, the KBC Group posted its latest quarterly
results last week, with the third quarter of 2013 amounting to a net profit of
€272 million ($365.95 million), down from the previous quarters’ €517 million
and €531 million in profits a year earlier. Read more on that story, here.