More local banks have young leaders Chia sẻ | FaceBookTwitter Email Copy Link Copy link bài viết thành công
06/05/2021 12:58 GMT+7
Ms. Tran Thi Thu Hang, CEO of Sunshine Group, has become the youngest leader in Vietnam’s banking industry after being appointed chairwoman of KienLongBank.
In recent years, many businesspeople who were born in the 1980s and even 1990s have joined the management boards of local banks.
Hang, born in 1985, was appointed chairperson of KienLongBank to replace Mr. Le Hong Phuong at the bank’s recent meeting of the Board of Directors for the 2018-2022 term. Hang is the youngest female banking president.
Upheavals in banking sector: many managers are replaced Chia sẻ | FaceBookTwitter Email Copy Link Copy link bài viết thành công
12/03/2021 09:00 GMT+7
During this year’s shareholders’ meeting season, big changes in shareholders’ structure have been made and many bank managers have been replaced.
VietBank (VBB) has officially appointed Le Huy Dung to the post of VietBank’s CEO. He took the office on March 8.
On the same day, Nguyen Tien Sy was appointed to the post of deputy CEO.
Prior to that, on February 23, VietBank unexpectedly announced that Duong Ngoc Hoa had resigned from the post of president and Bui Xuan Khu, who was deputy minister of industry and trade, took the post.
Kienlongbank sets strategic goals for 2021 11:00 | 01/02/2021
Kienlongbank has put the settlement of non-performing loans and digital transformation as its top priorities in 2021
Tran Tuan Anh, member of the Board of Directors cum general director of Kienlongbank said that at the end of 2020, the total consolidated assets of the bank reached VND57.282 trillion($2.5 billion), up 12.09 per cent compared to 2019.
Consolidated pre-tax profit of the bank reached VND158.21 billion ($6.9 million), up 84.14 per cent on-year.
Accordingly, Kienlongbank in 2020 aimed to settle loans with collateral shares related to Sacombankâs shares, under the Kienlongbank restructuring and bad debt settlement plan.
However, Anh stated that the COVID-19 health crisis hampering the bankâs plans to handle Sacombankâs shares. As of December 31, 2020, Kienlongbank could only sell a part of its Sacombankâs shares, thus reducing VND369 billion ($16 million)