Hong Ki-myung

This is a Korean name; the family name is Hong.
Hong Ki-myung
Hangul 홍기명
Hanja 洪起明[1]
Revised Romanization Hong Gi-myeong
McCune–Reischauer Hong Ki-myǒng

Hong Ki-myung (born 1959), also known as Kim Hong, is a South Korean financier.[1][2]

Education and career

Hong earned his MBA from the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business.[3] He began his career in finance in the mid-1980s, working at a number of industry firms including Citigroup and Bankers Trust.[3][4] In 2001 he moved to JPMorgan Chase, to become head of their Seoul branch.[4] He became well known in the South Korean finance industry for his role, and at one point it was thought that he would be named head of the Korea Investment Corporation, the sovereign wealth fund managing South Korea's foreign exchange reserves.[5] He later relocated to Hong Kong, while remaining with JPMorgan Chase.[4][5]

In 2007, Hong moved from JPMorgan Chase to Bank of America, where he took up a position as head of global markets for Asia-Pacific.[5] He would continue to be based in Hong Kong.[5] In June 2008, Hong was promoted to Asia-Pacific president, again based in Hong Kong, reporting to Jonathan Moulds. Hong replaced Colm McCarthy, a 30-year BofA veteran who planned to retire.[6] Six months later in December 2008, BofA acquired Merrill Lynch, BofA stated that former Merrill CFO Nelson Chai would relocate to Hong Kong to head the firms' newly merged Asia Pacific businesses.[7] However, just two months after his appointment, Chai resigned, and BofA again named Hong as Asia-Pacific president.[2][8]

In 2010, PIMCO hired Hong to manage their Asia-Pacific business, with responsibility for offices in Hong Kong, Singapore, Sydney, and Tokyo. PIMCO also named him a member of their Global Operating Committee. He continued to be based in Hong Kong, reporting to COO Douglas M. Hodge, who previously held the position of Asia-Pacific head.[9]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.