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Stephen Hester

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Nationality
  
British

Role
  
Businessman

Name
  
Stephen Hester

Years active
  
1982–present

Occupation
  
Businessman


Stephen Hester RBS boss Stephen Hester urged to turn down 800k bonus

Born
  
14 December 1960 (age 63) (
1960-12-14
)
Yorkshire, England

Alma mater
  
Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University

Salary
  
GBP £4 million (total compensation)

Title
  
Education
  
University of Oxford, Easingwold School, Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford

Similar People
  

Rbs boss stephen hester on his bank and bonuses


Stephen A. M. Hester (born 14 December 1960) is an English businessman and former banker, the chief executive officer (CEO) of RSA Insurance Group and former CEO of the RBS Group.

Contents

Stephen Hester httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Interview with rbs chief executive stephen hester


Early life

Stephen Hester RBS chief Stephen Hester awarded a 25m bonus Telegraph

Hester is the eldest son of Ronald, a chemistry professor at the University of York, and Dr Bridget Hester, a psychotherapist. He grew up in the village of Crayke in North Yorkshire. He was educated at Easingwold School in North Yorkshire a rural comprehensive school, and at Oxford where he studied at Lady Margaret Hall, and after chairing the Tory Reform Group, graduated with a first class honours degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics.

Career

Stephen Hester RBS boss Stephen Hester on bad debts bonuses and the

Hester began his career in 1982 with Credit Suisse, where he started as the chairman's assistant. In 1996 he was appointed to the executive board. Hester held the position of chief financial officer and Head of Support Division, until May 2000. From May 2000 to September 2001, he was Head of the Fixed Income Division.

Stephen Hester Full memo from Stephen Hester to RBS staff Telegraph

In May 2002, he joined Abbey National as Finance Director. He then went on to become chief operating officer, a position he held until November 2004, when he was appointed Chief Executive of British Land. In early 2007, eight months before British Land and other REITs were caught in the commercial property slump, he said: "I don't believe we are about to see a market decline, but the period of sharp growth is over."

Stephen Hester Stephen Hester Centrica plc

Hester was appointed non-executive deputy chairman of the newly nationalised Northern Rock by Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling in March 2008, a role which he resigned from in September 2008 to take a non-executive position on the board of Royal Bank of Scotland.

Royal Bank of Scotland

Stephen Hester Royal Bank of Scotland CEO Stephen Hester interviewed on 2011 Annual

In November 2008, he left British Land and replaced Fred Goodwin as Chief Executive of the RBS Group. Hester was paid an annual salary of £1.1million by RBS. Alongside this, he took home £1.5m in bonus and pension payments in 2010. In 2012 he was offered a bonus of just under £1 million, but following some considerable pressure from politicians and the public, he declined the bonus. Later in 2012, in June, he declined his bonus for the following year after RBS' computer problems.

Stephen Hester RBS boss Stephen Hester spending 260000 a year on RENTING a third

In December 2009, the board of RBS, in which the British government had an 84% stake, threatened to resign unless they were permitted to pay bonuses of £1.5bn to staff in its investment arm. The matter received heavy criticism because it followed a £50bn taxpayer bailout of the banking sector. The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Alistair Darling, said he would not be "held to ransom".

On 12 June 2013 Royal Bank of Scotland announced that Hester would be stepping down as CEO in December 2013, after five years with the bank. He had been brought in to help restructure the bailed-out bank in 2008, at the beginning of the global financial crisis. His leaving package would be in excess of £1.6m.

RSA Insurance

On 4 February 2014, Hester joined RSA Insurance Group as CEO, replacing Simon Lee. Hester will be paid an annual salary of £950,000, less than the £1.2m a year he earned at RBS. However, he will be granted an initial award under RSA's long-term incentive plan of £2.85m, or 300% of salary, and will be eligible for an annual bonus of 160% of his salary, or £1.52m.

Personal life

Hester met his Canadian wife, fellow banker Barbara Abt, when both working at Credit Suisse, They have two children. The family home is in Holland Park, west London, which reportedly went to his wife on their divorce. Hester also owns a 350-acre estate in Oxfordshire, Broughton Grange.Since the divorce Hester has been renting out a £260,000 a year house in london. One of Hester's passions is said to be the garden of Broughton Grange and development of its arboretum, which was designed by landscape architect Tom Stuart-Smith and includes pleached limes, formal beds and five of the first Australian Wollemi pines to be brought into the UK.

Hester is a trustee of the Foundation and Friends of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.

Hester has in the past donated to the Conservative Party.

Hester enjoys tennis, running and shooting, as well as skiing, for which he owns a chalet in Verbier, Switzerland. Hester also enjoys horse riding, and his first wife is a master of fox hounds in Warwickshire. He is quoted as having said: "It’s very important to keep our marriage together that I do the same as she does." The couple separated in 2012.

References

Stephen Hester Wikipedia