ISLA appoints new board
21 October 2015 London
Image: Shutterstock
The International Securities Lending Association (ISLA) has elected a new board of directors.
Andy Krangel of Citibank, will remain chairman, Casey Whymark of UBS will become co-chair and Mohamed Moursy of ABN AMRO well take on the role of treasurer.
State Street’s Alex Lawton was also newly elected to the board.
Other board members for the new term include: Aviva’s Mick Chadwick, Barclay’s Mark Newton, BlackRock’s Stefan Kaiser, BNP Paribas’s David Raccat and J.P. Morgan’s Duncan Wilson.
PGGM’s Roelof van de Struik, Morgan Stanley’s Martina Szameitatand and Unicredit’s Arne Theia were also re-elected.
The new board will sit for a two-year term and meet regularly throughout the years to help shape the focus of ISLA’s activities in the securities lending industry.
Andrew Dyson, ISLA CEO, said: "It is great to see great continuity with so many board members returning for another two years and I would hope that we can continue with much of the good work we have done previously, especially around our growing and positive dialogue with regulators and policy makers."
Andy Krangel of Citibank, will remain chairman, Casey Whymark of UBS will become co-chair and Mohamed Moursy of ABN AMRO well take on the role of treasurer.
State Street’s Alex Lawton was also newly elected to the board.
Other board members for the new term include: Aviva’s Mick Chadwick, Barclay’s Mark Newton, BlackRock’s Stefan Kaiser, BNP Paribas’s David Raccat and J.P. Morgan’s Duncan Wilson.
PGGM’s Roelof van de Struik, Morgan Stanley’s Martina Szameitatand and Unicredit’s Arne Theia were also re-elected.
The new board will sit for a two-year term and meet regularly throughout the years to help shape the focus of ISLA’s activities in the securities lending industry.
Andrew Dyson, ISLA CEO, said: "It is great to see great continuity with so many board members returning for another two years and I would hope that we can continue with much of the good work we have done previously, especially around our growing and positive dialogue with regulators and policy makers."
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