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Sunday, July 29, 2012

Insight: As scandal grew, Nomura chairman pushed for shake-up

Nomura Gusoku
Nomura Gusoku (Photo credit: jpellgen)
The biggest management shake-up at Nomura Holdings in a decade and a half was orchestrated by the bank's chairman with the secrecy and precision of a military operation. The closely guarded timing of Thursday’s announcement that Chief Executive Kenichi Watanabe was quitting stunned senior managers at Japan‘s top investment bank. Watanabe, 59, had vowed only a month ago to ride out an insider trading scandal.
Behind the scenes, pressure had been building on Watanabe for weeks to resign from a bank that is at the centre of Japan’s capital markets, people with knowledge of the matter said. Eventually, Chairman Nobuyuki Koga, 61, pushed Watanabe to go in an effort to appease regulators and end an escalating probe that was costing the bank new business, according to people familiar with talks between Nomura and Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA). Nomura has acknowledged staff from its institutional sales team leaked information on three Japanese share issues to clients in 2010. The bank has been caught up in a wider crackdown on tip-offs ahead of share offerings in Japan that has implicated several other brokers and fund management firms. Nomura warned on Thursday that more cases from inside the bank could emerge. ... Continue to read.
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