H
business
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

HSBC has a new chair but the succession process should have been slicker

about 5 hours ago
A picture


It turns out that Sir Mark Tucker, 67, retired as chair of HSBC in September to make way for an older man.Say hello to Brendan Nelson, 76, a former KPMG partner, who has been doing the job on an interim basis for a couple of months but was regarded as a rank outsider to get the gig permanently.Just how permanent remains to be seen because the HSBC chief executive, Georges Elhedery, clearly unaware that Nelson had thrown his hat into the ring, appeared to rule him out when speaking at an FT conference only on Monday.He said Nelson didn’t wish to do a full term of six to nine years, a remark that didn’t feel controversial at the time.After all, while US presidents may go on into their 80s these days, chairs of globally important banks tend not to.

Nelson has been an HSBC non-executive director for two years, so should know the bank’s unique vibe by now.He’s also done time on the boards of BP and post-crisis Royal Bank of Scotland/NatWest during periods of boardroom rough and tumble.Those are not insignificant qualifications for the role, and when the balance sheet is as complex as HSBC’s, top-level audit experience helps.Yet it’s easy to see why – likely length of tenure aside – Nelson wasn’t attracting much betting money.He may have advised banks at KPMG but he’s not a banker.

He hasn’t chaired a FTSE 100 company.And he doesn’t bring much experience of walking geopolitical tight ropes.HSBC is a UK-regulated bank that makes half its money in Hong Kong and mainland China and must constantly be alert to flare-ups between Washington, Beijing and London.Memories are fresh of how HSBC was accused by Mike Pompeo, when US secretary of state, of “a corporate kowtow” to the Chinese Communist party for its response in 2020 to Beijing’s move to end Hong Kong’s autonomy.Maybe it was the political and Chinese considerations that led HSBC to interview podcaster (and former chancellor) George Osborne for the role.

Come on, though, that would have been an extraordinary appointment: Osborne doesn’t have banking or boardroom expertise.Goldman Sachs’s Asia boss Kevin Sneader, a former management consultant, was reported to be another on the shortlist but clearly didn’t convince enough of the board either.It is, admittedly, a hard post to fill.There simply aren’t many figures who tick all the boxes.HSBC, for most of its 160 years, shopped internally for its chairs but that approach led to a few exciting bust-ups.

Tucker, former boss of the Prudential and Asian-focused insurer AIA, was the first external appointment in 2017 and fitted the bill as an experienced financial services executive and old China hand,Yet the difficulty in finding candidates isn’t an excuse for an appointment process that, as names have come in and out of the frame, has appeared shambolic,Tucker probably didn’t help matters by hopping off a year earlier to go back to AIA, but succession-planning is meant to be a constant obsession for boards,The game is about maintaining a likely list of candidates just in case you need to move quickly,Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionIn this case, Ann Godbehere, the non-executive leading the search, has produced an appointment that has everyone scratching their heads.

Maybe Nelson will surprise us, stay for ages and prove the ideal pick.But this is the UK’s second-largest listed company, and the European bank most exposed to deteriorating US-China relations.The succession process is meant to be slicker.
recentSee all
A picture

Advertising giant WPP relegated from FTSE 100 after nearly 30 years

WPP has been relegated from the FTSE 100 after nearly 30 years, as the advertising multinational struggles to stem an exodus of clients and match the artificial intelligence and data capabilities of rivals.The market valuation of WPP, once the world’s largest advertising group, has plummeted from about £24bn in 2017 to £3.1bn.The company’s share price has plunged by two-thirds this year and it has been relegated from the blue chip index after a quarterly reshuffle, confirmed when stock markets closed on Wednesday afternoon.British Land, which was the most valuable company in the FTSE 250, was promoted to the FTSE 100 to take the spot vacated by WPP

about 3 hours ago
A picture

Post Office avoids fine over leak of wrongfully convicted operators’ names

The Post Office has avoided a fine over a data breach that resulted in the mistaken online publication of the names and addresses of more than 500 post office operators it had been pursuing during the Horizon IT scandal.The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has reprimanded the Post Office over the breach, in which the company’s press office accidentally published an unredacted version of a legal settlement document with the operators on its website.The ICO said the data breach in June last year involving the release of names, home addresses and operator status of 502 out of the 555 people involved in the successful litigation action against the Post Office led by Sir Alan Bates had been “entirely preventable”.“The people affected by this breach had already endured significant hardship and distress as a result of the IT scandal,” said Sally Anne Poole, the head of investigations at the ICO.“They deserved much better than this

about 4 hours ago
A picture

Doom, gloom … and Belle Gibson? The top Google searches in Australia in 2025

We may, indeed, be living in the end of times, with natural disasters, death and politics dominating Google searches in Australia in 2025.Cyclone Alfred was the number one overall Google search term by Australians in 2024, according to the annual search results list released by the tech company on Thursday.It was followed by American political activist Charlie Kirk, who also topped Wikipedia’s list of the year’s most-read articles after being fatally shot in September, and in third place was Australian federal election 2025.When we weren’t voting or doomscrolling, we were watching television. Belle Gibson, the Australian wellness scammer and subject of the hit show Apple Cider Vinegar, made it into the overall top 10 list, as did serial killer Ed Gein from the series Monster

about 2 hours ago
A picture

Amazon and the tightening grip of capitalism | Letters

Yanis Varoufakis argues that Amazon marks a shift to “technofeudalism”, claiming its ownership of digital infrastructure forces capitalists, governments and users to pay it economic rents (How Amazon turned our capitalist era of free markets into the age of technofeudalism, 27 November). This rests on an idealised view of capitalism. Early capitalism saw similar dynamics: the East India Company, backed by the British state, controlled trade routes, exploited resources and wielded political power, enabling it to charge above-market prices for commodities such as tea and spices.In Capital, Karl Marx noted that English landlords helped establish capitalism by dispossessing peasants and commodifying land. They earned monopoly rents from their exclusive control of this productive resource – a portion of surplus value originally created by exploited labour and first appropriated by industrial capitalists before being transferred to landowners

about 3 hours ago
A picture

Maro Itoje eyes World Cup glory after England dodge big guns in 2027 draw

Maro Itoje has set his sights on Rugby World Cup glory in Australia in 2027 after England were handed a ­potentially favourable path through the tournament when the draw was made in Sydney on Wednesday.England, who have risen to third in the world rankings after an 11-match winning streak, emerged on the other side of the draw from the reigning world champions, South Africa, the three-times winners New Zealand and France.England are in Pool F with Wales, Tonga and Zimbabwe at the expanded 24-team event with Italy, Australia, Ireland and Argentina possible opponents in the last 16 and beyond.“Our ambition is to do very well and win this tournament,” Itoje, the England captain, said. “But to do that we know we have to make sure we get our preparation right and the next two years leading to the World Cup is massive

about 3 hours ago
A picture

Cummins conundrum is key as Australia try not to overthink tactics

Will the captain return? Will Nathan Lyon play? Who will open? Ashes hostilities are renewed and the hosts don’t need to ask too many questionsAt last, at long last, an Ashes series is about to start. It feels that way, anyway, after so many months of lead-up, such an eternal blur of preview and prediction and preamble, were supposed to reach their end – only to find that the end was instead a momentary interruption, a hiccup, an indigestion-dream of a Test from Perth, a contest done in the span of 31 hours, leaving everyone to return to punditry and prognostication for a further 11 blasted and benighted days.We are, for pity’s sake, in a discussion cycle about Ben Stokes correctly applying a bike helmet while not on a bike, or Steve Smith correctly applying eye-black stickers in his Tim Tebow tribute act, or the archaeologically uncovered fact that Australian teams have a good record at the Gabba. Like farmers waiting for the rains, we are praying for play to start to let us talk about something that has happened, rather than something that might. Even the day-night format means another wait, four more hours than would usually be the case before the balm of the first ball

about 4 hours ago
politicsSee all
A picture

‘Failed former Tory MPs’ who join Reform unlikely to be selected as candidates, Zia Yusuf says – as it happened

about 3 hours ago
A picture

Keith McDowall obituary

about 3 hours ago
A picture

Who will lose out when Labour cuts red tape? | Brief letters

about 3 hours ago
A picture

Spoilt for choice, Conspiracy Kemi grabs wrong end of every stick | John Crace

about 4 hours ago
A picture

Mark Fisher obituary

about 4 hours ago
A picture

Foreign Office lost ‘opportunities to influence’ US after Harry Dunn death, review finds

about 4 hours ago