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facts about stuart gulliver.html

13 Facts About Stuart Gulliver

facts about stuart gulliver.html1.

Stuart Thomson Gulliver was born on 9 March 1959 and is a British banker, and the former group chief executive of HSBC.

2.

Stuart Gulliver was succeeded on 21 February 2018 by John Flint.

3.

Stuart Gulliver's father Philip was a legal executive, while his mother Jean was personal assistant to the senior engineer at a local dockyard.

4.

Stuart Gulliver worked his way up in treasury and capital markets divisions, rose through the ranks in the bank's Global banking and markets division, and held a number of key roles in the group's operations worldwide; including postings in London, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Kuala Lumpur and the United Arab Emirates.

5.

Stuart Gulliver was appointed to run the Asian and treasury capital markets desks from Hong Kong in the mid 1990s.

6.

Stuart Gulliver served as the head of treasury and capital markets in Asia-Pacific from 1996 to 2012.

7.

Stuart Gulliver was appointed a group general manager in 2000, and later he led the global markets division from 2002 to 2003.

8.

Stuart Gulliver moved back to London in early 2003 to co-head the group's global corporate, investment banking and markets division along with John Studzinski.

9.

Stuart Gulliver was a director of HSBC North America Holdings Inc until May 2009; of HSBC Bank Middle East Ltd from February 2010 to May 2011; of HSBC Latin America Holdings Limited until December 2009.

10.

Stuart Gulliver was made a director of The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited in September 2006 and has been an executive director of HSBC Holdings plc since May 2008.

11.

Stuart Gulliver was appointed the chairman of The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of HSBC Holdings plc.

12.

Stuart Gulliver's primary residence is in Kensington in West London, where he lives with his Australian-born second wife, Amanda "Mandy" Henricks.

13.

The Guardian newspaper reported that Stuart Gulliver was a client of the scandal-ridden Panamanian lawfirm Mossack Fonseca, investing bonus payments through them.