The latest EY European Financial Services Boardroom Monitor – which charts the profile, experience, training and skillsets of board directors across the MSCI Europe Financials Index – finds that despite the relatively low total number of individual directors with senior political experience, it is broadly distributed across Europe’s financial services firms.
While just 17% of all directors tracked have experience of a ministerial or parliamentary position or have had a civil service or government-appointed role, this equates to over eight in ten firms (82%) having at least one board director with senior political expertise to draw upon when navigating political change.
The 15% of all board directors who have held a civil service or government-appointed role are distributed across 80% of all firms; the 2% of all directors who bring the more senior experience of a previous parliamentary or ministerial role within government are distributed across 21% of firms; and the 3% of directors who bring central banking experience are distributed across just over a quarter of firms (26%).
A third (33%) of financial services firms in Switzerland and 30% of firms in France have at least one board member with ministerial or parliamentary experience, compared to just 14% of German firms, 13% of Italian firms and 11% of UK firms.
No European firm has appointed a director with ministerial or parliamentary experience in the past 12-month period.
Omar Ali, EY Global Financial Services Leader-elect, comments: “During a year of major elections – across Europe and globally – boards with directors who understand the inner workings of government, economies, and the dynamics underpinning policymaking are well- positioned to navigate change, especially in an increasingly challenging geo-political environment. While there can be risks to political appointments, and the level and nature of experience varies widely, it’s clear that European chairs of financial services companies see political and public office experience as a valuable part of building a resilient board.
“As domestic and international politics increasingly impacts markets, the ability to draw on the unique perspectives of individuals who’ve run government departments, regulated industries, managed monetary policy decisions or advised multilateral agencies can be invaluable. During times of major change, upheaval, and uncertainty, prior political experience brings both differentiated perspective and important strategic insight.”
Steering firms through macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainty
The EY Boardroom Monitor data indicates that firms are gradually equipping their boards with macroeconomic expertise. During the past 12 months – a period of elevated interest rate holding and anticipated cuts from global central banks – 9% of firms monitored appointed a director with central banking experience, building on the 7% of firms in the previous 12-month period.
At a macro level, the past two years have presented a range of new and compounding challenges for firms operating across borders, not least due to elevated geopolitical tensions and uncertainty in Europe. Across all board directors monitored, 4% have held a role at a multilateral global agency – either at the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund, the OECD, or the World Bank. This equates to 30% of European financial services firms.
Appointments in this area have, however, showed signs of slowing. In the past 12 months, 6% of firms have appointed a director who has held a role at a multilateral global agency, compared with 13% of firms in the previous 12-month period.
Omar Ali, EY Global Financial Services Leader-elect, comments: “Monetary policy is in focus again this year, which makes board directors with central banking experience attractive to financial services companies. For firms managing capital ratios, major liabilities, risk books and investment strategies across the global economy, the wealth of experience that former decision-makers from central banks bring to bear can be invaluable.
“The recent tightening cycle will have been a new experience for younger generations across the financial services sector, so having senior directors with experience of working through similar challenging economic conditions can offer a valuable level of governance and leadership insight. The same is true of directors who have worked at some of the world’s leading multilateral institutions, as they provide unique perspectives that can only come with experience.”
Banks marginally better equipped with political and macroeconomic expertise than insurers and asset managers
Across European financial services firms, banks lead insurers and asset managers in terms of overall board-level political experience. Ninety-one per cent of banks monitored have some form of board-level political experience, while 79% of asset managers and 68% of insurers have similar experience. Looking at the director population, 19% of all board members at banks have political experience, compared with 14% at asset management firms and 13% at insurance firms.
Board level political experience of firms by sector
Across Europe's financial services sector: