CITY MOVES | WHO’S SWITCHING JOBS
BANK OF IRELAND
The bank has appointed Bill Greaves to the position of head of corporate banking in the UK.
Greaves previously led the bank’s technology, media and telecoms team, which he established in early 2005 upon joining the group. Prior to that, he led the media team at Barclays.
In his new role, he will lead a team concentrating on lending to corporates in the TMT, retail and leisure, healthcare, business services and utilities sectors.
RSA
The insurer has hired Derek Walsh as its new general counsel, responsible for leading the legal, group secretarial and regulatory risk and compliance teams.
Walsh was most recently general counsel at Argo Group and Benfield Group, and has also held positions at law firms Pinsent Curtis (now Pinsent Mason), McKenna & Co (now CMS Cameron McKenna) and Norton Rose.
DELOITTE
The business advisory firm has appointed a new partner, Nigel Willis, to its risk and regulatory practice.
Willis has spent the past 14 years focused on prudential regulation and has advised on a wide range of policy and business issued relating to capital adequacy, liquidity and the associated governance, systems and controls.
He joins from Ernst & Young, where he was a partner and head of financial regulation for the EMEIA region.
BNY MELLON
The bank has appointed Patrick Tadie as business head for its Derivatives 360SM initiative, an integrated derivatives investment services offering.
Tadie joined the company in 2003 and was most recently executive vice president in charge of the global structured credit group within the BNY Mellon Corporate Trust.
He has also worked as a portfolio manager for Freddie Mac and director of finance for First Union Capital Markets.
BARCLAYS CORPORATE
The bank has hired Lisa Le Goater as head of global development organisations, a new specialist team based in London.
Le Goater joins from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and has also held senior positions at Merrill Lynch, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Citibank.