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Michael Geoghegan

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Michael Geoghegan
Born
Michael Francis Geoghegan

(1953-10-04) 4 October 1953 (age 71)
NationalityBritish
OccupationBanker
Known forFormer CEO, HSBC

Michael Francis Geoghegan CBE (born 4 October 1953) is an international banking business executive, who served as the chief executive (CEO) of HSBC from 26 March 2006 to 31 December 2010. He joined HSBC in 1973 and had previously led the group's South American and European operations.[1]

Early life and education

Michael Geoghegan was born in Windsor, UK, and was educated in the UK and Ireland.

Professional career

Early Career and HSBC : 1973 - 2006

He joined HSBC in 1973 as an international manager and, since then, spent twelve years in North and South America, eight years in Asia, seven years in the Middle East and three years in Europe. Geoghegan arrived in Brazil in March 1997 to establish the Group's operations in the country following the creation of Banco HSBC Bamerindus S.A. He was appointed a group general manager of HSBC Holdings plc in the same year.

In January 2000, as president of HSBC Bank Brasil S.A.- Banco Multiplo, he became responsible for all of HSBC's business throughout South America and chaired the group's regional executive committee. In October 2000 he became President of HSBC Investment Bank Brasil HSBC Seguros S.A. which resulted from the Group’s acquisition of CCF and the incorporation of certain activities of HSBC Brasil.

Once Geoghgan was appointed chief executive and a director HSBC Bank plc on 1 January 2004, he gave up the position of UK CEO on 6 March 2006 which was in turn filled by Dyfrig John.

Appointed Group CEO of HSBC till retirement: 2006 - 2010

HSBC announced on 28 November 2005 that he would succeed Stephen Green as Chief Executive of HSBC Holdings, as Green became Group Chairman of HSBC Holdings. Geoghegan was named Deputy Chairman of HSBC Bank plc 26 May 2006. In that management shuffle, the group management board was created in 2006. Before that, the chairman essentially held the duties of a chief executive, while the chief executive served as the deputy. Green said he wanted to break that tradition, having a management cadre to look after the business, while the chairman would oversee the controls of the business through compliance and audit and the direction of the business.[2]

Geoghegan was paid an annual salary of £1,070,000 for his role as chief executive. [3][4]

He has shifted the chief executive's office of HSBC Group from London to Hong Kong on 28 January 2010. He became the chairman of The Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation.

With group chairman Stephen Green planning to depart HSBC to accept a government appointment as Minister of Trade, Geoghegan was expected to become the next chairman. However, while many current and former senior employees supported the tradition of promoting the chief executive to chairman, many shareholders were instead pushed for an external candidate. Geoghegan's detractors noted that while he was effective at getting things done, they argued that his blunt style was unsuited to leading the board and representing HSBC with heads of government, and his appointment as chairman would also flout UK governance guidance that discouraged chief executives becoming chairman. Geoghegan had reportedly threatened to quit if he was passed over in favour of former Goldman Sachs President John L. Thornton.[5][6] HSBC's board of directors had reportedly been split over the succession planning, and investors were alarmed that this row would damage the company.[7]

On 23 September 2010, Geoghegan announced he would step down as chief executive of HSBC. [8] He was succeeded as chief executive of HSBC by Stuart Gulliver, while Green was succeeded as Chairman by Douglas Flint; Flint was serving as HSBC's finance director (chief financial officer). Geoghegan remains with HSBC as an adviser until 30 June 2011. In an interview after he retired, Geoghegan stated that he was proud that Flint and Gulliver were chosen to lead HSBC.[2]

Controversies

Following a 2012 US senate investigation into charges of money laundering against HSBC Mexico, Michael Geoghegan left HSBC. Subsequently HSBC CEO David Flint admitted that the bank was considering a bonus clawback procedure against Michel Geoghegan and Sandy Flockhart linked to the record settlement between HSBC and the United States Department of Justice[9]

In April 2016 Geoghegan was named as one of the clients of Panamanian corporate service provider Mossack Fonseca, and The Guardian newspaper reported on his legal use of offshore firms to "manage his wealth".[10]

Personal life

Geoghegan is married with two sons.[11] In June 2003 he was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in recognition of his contribution to British business interests in Brazil.[12] Geoghegan is not a UK resident and has non-domiciled tax status.[10]

References

  1. ^ "HSBC Replaces An Irreplaceable CEO". Forbes. Archived from the original on 30 September 2010. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
  2. ^ a b Reece, Damian (20 December 2010). "HSBC ex-chief Michael Geoghegan relaxes as another marathon looms". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  3. ^ "M. F. Geoghegan Profile". Forbes.com. Forbes. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
  4. ^ "Michael Geoghegan: Executive Profile & Biography". BusinessWeek. McGraw-Hill. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
  5. ^ Wilson, Harry; Farrell, Sean; Aldrick, Philip (22 September 2010). "HSBC investors against Michael Geoghegan becoming chairman". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  6. ^ "HSBC chief Michael Geoghegan 'to quit' after failing to get top job". NewsCore. 24 September 2010.
  7. ^ Wilson, Harry (23 September 2010). "Douglas Flint to be HSBC chairman, Michael Geoghegan to leave in radical reshuffle". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  8. ^ "Great HSBC reshuffle".Euromoney
  9. ^ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/9439520/Former-HSBC-chiefs-faces-bonus-clawbacks.html
  10. ^ a b Watt, Holly; Pegg, David (7 April 2016). "Former HSBC boss tried to avoid tax on £8m Kensington house". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  11. ^ Blackhurst, Chris (1 September 2009). "Michael Geoghegan on how HSBC beat the crash". Management Today. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  12. ^ "Michael Francis Geoghegan CBE". Businessweek. Retrieved 19 March 2013.

Sources

Business positions
Preceded by Group Chief Executive of HSBC Group
2006 – 2011
Succeeded by