WOW! Things are really changing in the Arab world- Saudi Arabia for the first time ever appoints a woman as the head of one of their foremost bank arms! See details below:
By David French
DUBAI, March 4 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's National
Commercial Bank (NCB) has appointed Sarah Al-Suhaimi as chief executive of its
investment banking arm, sources aware of the matter said, the first time a
woman has been named to head an investment bank in the conservative kingdom.
Suhaimi, currently head of asset management and chief
investment officer at Jadwa Investment in Saudi Arabia, replaces Tariq Linjawi,
who has been serving as acting chief executive of the unit, NCB Capital.
Linjawi's last day was Feb. 27 but Suhaimi's start date has
not yet been confirmed, one of the sources said. A second source said the start
date was unclear because the appointment was still subject to approval by Saudi
financial regulators.
The sources spoke on condition of anonymity as the
information isn't yet public. NCB Capital officials could not immediately
comment.
Saudi Arabia is often criticised by human rights groups for
its treatment of women; under the kingdom's strict guardianship rules, women
must be accompanied by a male relative when in public, are banned from driving
and must seek approval to open a bank account or travel overseas.
But in the business world, women are gradually coming to
enjoy greater opportunities, partly because of heavy government spending on women's
education including state-funded scholarships to foreign universities.
Some women have risen to key roles in financial
institutions, such as Lama Ghazzaoui, who is chief accountant at NCB, the
kingdom's largest lender by assets.
Suhaimi, whose father Jammaz was head of the country's
Capital Market Authority between 2004 and 2006 and is currently chairman of
Bahrain-based Gulf International Bank, is highly regarded in the Saudi
financial markets.
"She is considered a rising star," said another
source who has worked with Suhaimi.
Parent NCB is expected to sell a 15 percent stake to the
public later this year, the kingdom's finance minister said last week. It will
be one of the most anticipated initial public offers on the Saudi bourse in
years.
(Editing by Andrew Torchia)

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