Bank of Ireland confirms Gavin Kelly as next Davy chief

Executive will lead bank’s new wealth and insurance division, including the stockbroking unit

Bank of Ireland has confirmed the appointment of senior group executive Gavin Kelly as the next chief executive of its Davy stockbroking and wealth management unit.
Bank of Ireland has confirmed the appointment of senior group executive Gavin Kelly as the next chief executive of its Davy stockbroking and wealth management unit.

Bank of Ireland on Friday confirmed the appointment of senior group executive Gavin Kelly as the next chief executive of its Davy stockbroking and wealth management unit.

The bank also said it is establishing a new division, Wealth and Insurance, over Davy and the group’s New Ireland life and pensions business. Mr Kelly will lead the new division.

The Irish Times reported last month that Mr Kelly, currently chief executive of the bank’s corporate and commercial banking team, had been selected to lead Davy and that he was going through a standard regulatory vetting procedure at the time.

Bernard Byrne, who stepped up in 2021 to take charge of the business and oversee its sale to Bank of Ireland in the wake of a Central Bank fine, said in November that he planned to leave the firm this year. He joined Davy as head of its capital markets division in May 2019, having previously served as chief executive of AIB.

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“On behalf of Davy I would like to welcome Gavin, and I really look forward to working closely with him when he joins as CEO later this year,” said Davy chairman Vincent Crowley.

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“Gavin brings significant experience, which will support Davy as we seek to deepen the value we offer corporate and private clients of the firm and ensure Davy remains a great place to work for our people. Finally, I thank Bernard Byrne for his valuable contribution to Davy and particularly navigating Davy change in ownership in recent years. I wish him all the best in the future.”

The appointment of a senior Bank of Ireland figure underscores how the bank wants to have much greater control over the business than in the period between 1988 and 2006, when it had held a majority stake in Davy, but the firm had enjoyed a high degree of autonomy.

Bank of Ireland chief executive Myles O’Grady highlighted to shareholders at the company’s annual general meeting in May that its wealth and insurance assets, including Davy and New Ireland, increased by 18 per cent to €46 billion last year, and that he sees “scope for further growth in the years ahead supported by Ireland’s favourable demographics”.

It had grown further to €49.5 billion, spanning 650,000 customers, by the end of March.

Davy key wealth unit’s assets under management stood at about €16 billion by the time it was put up for sale. It had increased to close to €26 billion by the end of March, including about €2 billion transferred from Bank of Ireland in early 2023 as about 2,000 high net-worth clients moved across.

Davy’s higher-profile capital markets unit has been under pressure in recent times amid a number of large corporate exits from the Irish market and a slump in deals activity. The firm has about 900 employees.

Joe Brennan

Joe Brennan

Joe Brennan is Markets Correspondent of The Irish Times