Mr Richard Etemesi: He will head units in South Africa, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana and Mauritius. FILE
By VICTOR JUMA
In Summary
- Mr Etemesi, 51, will take his new role in Johannesburg as CEO South Africa & Southern Africa once all local regulatory requirements have been approved and concluded.
- He will also be in charge of Stanchart operations in Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana and Mauritius in the new role.
- Mr Etemesi will be replaced on January 1 as head of the Kenya and East Africa business by Lamin Manjang.
Standard Chartered Bank
CEO Richard Etemesi has been promoted to head the lender’s South
African unit and four other countries, making him one of Kenya’s highest
ranking executives in a multinational bank.
Mr Etemesi, 51, will take his new role in
Johannesburg as CEO South Africa & Southern Africa once all local
regulatory requirements have been approved and concluded, the bank said
on Wednesday.
He will also be in charge of Stanchart operations
in Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana and Mauritius in the new role, replacing
Ebby Essoka who has been appointed the bank’s vice chairman, Africa.
Mr Etemesi will be replaced on January 1 as head
of the Kenya and East Africa business by Lamin Manjang, who has been
tapped from Stanchart Oman where he was the chief executive.
Mr Etemesi was the first Kenyan to head the bank’s
local operations when he was appointed CEO in November 2006. Mr
Manjang, 48, is from The Gambia.
“Ebby, Richard and Lamin will drive our ambitious
plans to invest over $100 million over the next three years, as we open
110 new branches by 2015, while strengthening our products and services
and developing our talented staff,” said Diana Layfield, Standard
Chartered’s CEO Africa region in a statement.
“Under Richard’s leadership over the past six
years, the bank’s East African franchises have been among the fastest
growing in the group globally, with Kenya posting income growth of 34
per cent in 2012.”
But the Kenyan unit has lost out in the profit ranking to indigenous banks led by KCB Group, Equity Bank and Co-operative Bank based on the financial statements for the period to September.
In 2006, Stanchart was ranked as Kenya’s second profitable lender behind Barclays Bank. The bank is now ranked fourth.
Mr Etemesi will now handle a larger business compared to his east Africa role.
Mr Manjang will also be faced by the vicious fight
for control of market share pitting the top five lenders, especially
nimbler rivals like Equity and Co-operative Bank.
But it remains to be seen whether he will stick
with Stanchart’s model of focusing on corporate banking and serving the
middle class.
The executive shifts at Stanchart come in a year
when the local banking seen has changed CEOs at the quickest pace,
ushering in new leaders in an industry that has maintained double-digit
growth the past five years.
Four of the banks listed at the Nairobi bourse
have this year made changes to their corner offices including Barclays,
NIC Bank and KCB Group.
Most of the appointments were Kenyans in the diaspora. This includes John Gachora (NIC Bank), Jeremy Awori (Barclays Bank of Kenya) and Munir Ahmed (National Bank).
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