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Mr Nelson has been acting as interim chair since October
Dave ClarkWednesday 03 December 2025 09:21 GMTComments
HSBC appoints Brendan Nelson as group chairman (REUTERS)
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HSBC has officially named Brendan Nelson as its new group chair, confirming his permanent appointment after a period as interim head.
Mr Nelson, who joined the banking giant's board in 2023 and served as interim chair since October, brings extensive experience from KPMG and board positions with BP and Royal Bank of Scotland.
His appointment follows what the bank described as 'a robust process that considered both internal and external candidates'. He succeeds Sir Mark Tucker, who departed at the end of September to assume the equivalent role at Hong Kong-based insurer AIA.
It was announced in May that Sir Mark would retire by the end of 2025, ending an eight-year tenure at the helm of the bank’s board.
His departure came after AIA confirmed his appointment as non-executive chairman on October 1 – a move that saw him return to the group he led as chief executive for seven years until 2017.
George Osbourne, the former chancellor under the Conservatives, had previously been reported to be in the running to become HSBC’s chair.
HSBC senior independent director Ann Godbehere said: “On behalf of the board, I am delighted with Brendan’s appointment as our group chair.
“Since assuming the role of interim group chair, Brendan has demonstrated his excellent leadership capabilities backed by his strong banking and governing credentials.”
HSBC said that Mr Nelson would remain as chairman of the group audit committee until the publication of 2025’s results in February 2026.
The firm is undergoing a major overhaul as it seeks to slash costs by 1.5 billion US dollars (£1.1 billion) by the end of next year.
HSBC has also faced mounting pressure from one of its biggest shareholders, Chinese insurer Ping An, in recent years to split the bank in two and create a separate Asia-headquartered business.
A plan to break up the bank was rejected by shareholders last year, but the restructuring announcement initially prompted some speculation that it could eventually fracture.
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