Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC) is busy recruiting a number of MDs from major banks in the US and Europe in 2024. The recently joined MD, formerly of Credit Suisse, is a veteran of engineering management in London.
Click here to sign up for our technology newsletter 🔧
Maria Hooton joined SMBC this month as head of cross-product platforms, reporting to the EMEA CIO. She has spent the past nine years in Switzerland, where she most recently served as global head of cross-functional process industrialization engineering platform.
Mr. Hooton joined JPMorgan as ED in 1999 and has served as a banking executive since then. Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation is not his first role at a Japanese bank either. She has worked twice at the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, most recently as interim director of the Treasury Operations Change Program.
Meanwhile, this is not SMBC's first hire as it hired Sabine Chapard in February as its Credit Suisse MD in London in 2024. The bank has also recently hired other technology leaders, including Samantha Howland, who joined last month as head of cyber resilience after six years at the FCA.
Glassdoor's 2024 review of SMBC praises its “great, stable atmosphere” and positive work-life balance. Meanwhile, in 2024 Credit He will be working on Swiss technology that will keep him up at night. Transformation efforts have proven costly for Swiss banks, and Sergio Ermotti warned that technological changes in particular could hinder cost reductions. It is not clear whether Mr. Hooton left of his own accord, but the departure of many of Credit Suisse's engineers does not make matters any easier.
Have a secret story, tip or comment you'd like to share? Contact: +44 7537 182250 (SMS, Whatsapp or voicemail). Telegram: @SarahButcher. Click here to fill out our anonymous form or email editortips@efinancialcareers.com. Signals are also available.
Please feel free to leave a comment at the bottom of this article. All comments are moderated by humans. Sometimes these people might be asleep or away from their desks, so it may take a while for your comment to appear. Eventually it will – unless it's offensive or defamatory (in which case it's not).