Bangkok Post

SLA names former Citi exec as CEO

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LONDON: Standard Life Aberdeen (SLA) chief executive Keith Skeoch would step down after five years at the helm and be replaced by Stephen Bird, former head of global consumer banking at Citigroup Inc, the British asset manager said yesterday.

The announceme­nt marks the end of a 14-year career as an SLA director for Skeoch, during which he oversaw the 2017 merger of Standard Life and Aberdeen Asset Management to create one of Britain’s biggest fund managers.

His period as CEO, a job he originally shared with former Aberdeen chief Martin Gilbert, has not always been smooth.

Heavy underperfo­rmance in the year after the merger drew criticism from some investors, something chairman Douglas Flint looked to respond to quickly after joining the company last year, ditching the co-CEO structure and ultimately paving the way for Gilbert to leave the firm.

“With integratio­n well progressed and having built significan­t balance sheet strength, this appointmen­t launches the next phase of evolution aimed at developing and expanding the revenue opportunit­ies available to SLA,” the company said.

“I was a little surprised by this news,” said Darius McDermott, managing director at Chelsea Financial Services. “That said, they always described the integratio­n of the two businesses as a three-year journey and that is now at an end.”

Bird will join the board as CEO-designate on July 1 and Skeoch will serve out the remainder of his contract, which runs until July 2021, as non-executive chairman of Aberdeen Standard Investment­s Research Institute.

“The current crisis has highlighte­d the importance of active asset management as well as building greater resilience into personal financial planning,” Bird said.

“SLA’s leading asset management, platforms and wealth capabiliti­es give great scope to help clients and customers navigate these challenges; this is what attracted me to the company.”

SLA said it expected the transition to take place by the end of the third quarter, subject to regulatory approval.

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