BANKS
The 14 new executive directors
In a rare move, 14 public sector bank officers were elevated to EDs at the same time.
In a rare move, 14 public sector bank officers were elevated to EDs at the same time.
In a rare move, 14 public sector bank officers were elevated to
EDs at the same time. Indianbankingnews.com takes a brief look at their
backgrounds.
Kollegal Raghvendra, ED of Punjab & Sind
Bank
A man with an eye for
detail, Kollegal V Raghvendra served as the chief financial officer (CFO) of
Bank of India before being elevated to the position of executive director at
Punjab & Sind Bank.
Raghvendra, popularly
known as Raghu among his friends and colleagues, is an affable and approachable
banker who can find solutions as quickly as possible.
Being with Bank of India
for nearly 38 years, Raghvendra has experience in all formats of banking such
as branch operations, corporate and subsidiary management. He also served as
the chairman of Narmada Jhabua Gramin Bank, a leading regional rural bank (RRB)
sponsored by Bank of India.
Having worked in Bank of
India’s Hong Kong branch, Raghvendra has experience in international banking.
An avid reader,
Raghvendra is deeply interested in philosophy and history.
Rajeev Puri, ED of Central Bank of India
Former chief general
manager (CGM) of Punjab National Bank (PNB), Rajeev Puri has taken over as
executive director (ED) of Central Bank of India.
Just after the Nirav Modi
scam broke out, Puri became PNB zonal manager posted at Mumbai, with the states
of Maharashtra, Gujarat and Goa under him. In the scam-hit bank, he recovered
Rs 8,125 crore.
Prior to that, Puri was
the circle head in the newly formed state of Telangana. Facing several
challenges, he was responsible for elevating the circle’s status to the top,
from its earlier 48th position. Total business in the Telangana circle zoomed
to Rs 16,975 crore, from Rs 5,150 crore.
Puri has snapped up 55
awards, achieving various targets in agri banking, retail banking and business
performance.
“I like to take up
challenges. The new assignment is yet another challenge,” Puri told
Indianbankingnews.com, referring to the fact that Central Bank of India is
still under the Reserve Bank of India’s prompt corrective action (PCA) list and
has high non-performing assets (NPAs).
Outside banking, Puri is keen on social service.
Nitesh Ranjan, ED of Union Bank of India
At 44 years, Nitesh
Ranjan is the youngest of the 14 new appointees to take charge as ED of Union
Bank of India.
Beginning his career at
Food Corporation of India, Ranjan joined Union Bank of India in 2008. He has
handled various portfolios like treasury, chief investor relations officer,
head of balance-sheet management group, chief economist and regional head. He
was responsible for steering the bank’s vision and goals, including its
strategic agenda of end-to-end digitisation.
Ranjan dedicated 100 days to imparting spoken English skills to underprivileged youth, under the TeachIndia initiative.
Monika Kalia, ED of Bank of India
A charismatic orator,
Monika Kalia has been elevated to ED of Bank of India at the age of 48. Prior
to this, she was the CGM of Union Bank of India.
Kalia has held
responsibilities in the bank’s financial planning, investor relations, personal
banking and operations at crucial times, including demonetisation and
amalgamation, when she carried out due diligence and decided the share swap
ratio.
Kalia has headed retail
lending, marketing and third-party product distribution, corporate
communications, compliance and board secretariat. She was also director on the
board of two joint ventures of the bank—Star Union Dai ichi Life Insurance and
Union Asset Management Trustee company.
An avid reader, she is also a music aficionado and loves gardening.
Imran Amin Siddiqui, ED of Indian Bank
A chess champion, Imran
Amin Siddiqui started his banking career as PO of Allahabad Bank, where he
joined as field officer in 1997. He was GM before he assumed the new role of ED
at Indian Bank.
As ED of Indian Bank, he
will oversee the bank’s credit monitoring, risk, compliance, resources and
retail. He will also have five field general managers—Bengaluru, Kolkata, Meerut,
Lucknow and Patna—report to him.
An engineering graduate
from Kanpur, Siddiqui has worked in the bank’s rural, semi-urban and metro
centre branches, as well as administrative offices. His strength lies in his
administrative abilities, which helped him take the Kolkata zone of Allahabad
Bank to the premier position.
Speaking to
Indianbankingnews.com, Siddiqui said he persuaded everyone to work together as
a team, as if they were playing cricket for the bank. He motivated some of the
staff while acting tough with some others.
A fitness freak, Siddiqui walks every day to keep fit.
Debadatta Chand, ED of Bank of Baroda
Debadatta Chand, aged 50,
has assumed charge as ED of Bank of Baroda. He was the CGM of PNB, heading the
Mumbai zone, the bank’s largest zone.
Chand has successfully
handled the responsibilities as head of PNB’s zonal audit office at Patna,
circle head at Bareilly, and head of integrated treasury operations. He was
also on the board of PNB Principal Mutual Fund and Swift India Pvt. Ltd. He was
an ex-officio in many of the private equity funds in India. He also headed one
of the subsidiaries of PNB.
Chand started his career at Allahabad Bank as a probationary officer (PO) in 1994. He subsequently worked as a manager in Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI) from 1998 to 2005. He joined PNB in 2005 as chief manager and rose to the post of CGM with sheer hard work and attention to details.
Swarup Kumar Saha, ED of PNB
Swarup Kumar Saha started
his career in banking in erstwhile Oriental Bank of Commerce in 1990 as PO. He
is a certified associate member of Indian Institute of Bankers (CAIIB). He also
holds a diploma in Treasury, Investment and Risk Management (DTIRM) from the
Indian Institute of Banking and Finance (IIBF) and holds a certificate in Risk
in Financial Services from IIBF in collaboration with CISI, London, along with
various certifications related to IT security, cybercrimes and fraud
management.
In a career spanning more
than 30 years, he has worked in different capacities across the country. He has
wide exposure to human resource development (HRD), treasury, international
banking, credit, risk management, organisational restructuring and board matters.
During his tenure at the
head office of the erstwhile Oriental Bank of Commerce, he headed treasury and
international banking and HRD divisions. Prior to this, Saha was CGM at the
Lucknow zone, a responsibility he had been holding since April 2020.
M Karthikeyan, ED of Bank of India
During his professional
journey of over 32 years, M Karthikeyan has gained extensive experience at
Indian Bank’s corporate office and in field banking. He was zonal manager of
Dharmapuri, Pune and Chennai North Zone. He was field general manager for
Delhi, controlling eight zones.
Aged 56, Karthikeyan has
headed the bank’s recovery and legal department in the head office. He has also
been on the board of Tamil Nadu Grama Bank, which was formed as a merged entity
of two regional rural banks—Pandian Grama Bank (a subsidiary of Indian Overseas
Bank) and Pallavan Grama Bank (a subsidiary of Indian Bank).
Prior to his post as ED
of Bank of India, Karthikeyan was with Indian Bank as general manager.
Swarup Dasgupta, ED of Bank of India
Prior to becoming ED of
Bank of India, Swarup Dasgupta was general manager at Bank of India where he
handled recovery.
During his professional
journey of over 23 years, Dasgupta has extensive exposure of corporate and
field banking operations. He has worked in the corporate credit department at
the head office. He has headed the mid and large corporate branches at
Hyderabad, Chennai and Andheri. He has also worked in the bank's foreign centre
in London.
Dasgupta has headed critical departments of vigilance, board secretariat, SME (small and medium enterprise) and recovery at the bank’s head office.
Vivek Wahi, ED of Central Bank of India
Vivek Wahi, aged 55, was
general manager at Bank of India before being made ED of Central Bank of India.
Joining Bank of India as
probationary officer in 1990, Wahi has worked in the important verticals like
branch banking, overseas dealing room and large corporate credit branches, and
more. He has also worked in various capacities as zonal manager, treasury head
and field general manager.
Wahi was posted as zonal manager of Bank of India's Mumbai South Zone, the largest zone with business mix parameters. He has also headed the bank’s treasury operations at Mumbai for more than two years. He has worked as field general manager of northern territory of Bank of India, comprising six states and headquartered in New Delhi.
AB Vijayakumar, ED of Bank of Maharashtra
Prior to assuming the new
role as ED, AB Vijayakumar was the vigilance officer of Indian Overseas Bank.
He took up this responsibility in April 2020.
Vijayakumar was also the
chief vigilance officer for the erstwhile Corporation Bank, which later got
merged with the Union Bank of India. For some time, he was chairman of the
Madhya Pradesh Gramin Bank.
Vijayakumar started as a
PO of Bank of India in 1984. He has about 34 years of multifarious experience
in the field and at the corporate office. He was also the bank’s vigilance
officer for its Hong Kong operations. Additionally, he has handled the bank’s
large corporate finance, retail lending and forex operations.
S Srimathy, ED of Indian Overseas Bank
Before landing her present post as ED of Indian Overseas Bank, S
Srimathy was CGM at Canara Bank and was also deputed to NABARD as chief
vigilance officer (CVO).
Srimathy has also held
additional charge as CVO of New India Assurance Company, State Bank of India,
and Bank of Baroda for varying periods.
Joining Canara Bank as PO
in November 1986, Srimathy has over 34 years of banking experience and is well
exposed to various verticals like branch operations, mid and large credits, HRD
and risk management. She has worked across the country and headed the bank’s
prime corporate branch at Cuffe Parade, Mumbai, for over three years. She
headed the corporate credit wing and international operations at the bank’s
head office. She was then made head of Canara Bank’s Chennai circle.
Israq Ali Khan, ED of UCO Bank
A great team person and a consensus builder, Israq Ali Khan was
CGM and chief technology officer (CTO) at the Union Bank of India. He was also
the first chief information security officer (CISO) of the bank.
Khan handled the bank’s
IT integration project and was instrumental in bringing new technologies and
establishing its green datacentre.
During his 33 years of
service at Union Bank of India, he held various positions in the regional
office, zonal offices and FGM offices as field general manager.
During his banking career, Khan has mentored many young staff members of the bank.
K Satyanarayan Raju, ED of Canara Bank
Prior to becoming ED of
Canara Bank, K Satyanarayana Raju was CGM of Bank of Baroda.
During his 33 years of banking
career, Raju has headed various branches for 12 years, including the
specialised corporate banking branch. He was regional head of Shimoga,
Vijayawada, Hyderabad and Mumbai. He was zonal head of Mumbai zone, which is
the biggest zone of the bank. He also headed the operations and services
department at the head office.
Raju has rich experience
in all segments of banking, including branch banking, corporate credit, retail
credit, agri financing, credit monitoring, credit recovery and compliance.
Raju was a director in
BoB Financial Solutions Ltd, a subsidiary of Bank of Baroda. He also became a
member of the steering committee of BoB-IIT Bombay Innovation Centre.