Family Office
ING USA re-silos retail "wealth-management" units

Dutch insurance giant restructures in order to capture
post-crisis business. ING USA has restructured its
wealth-management business. The changes come as the unit's former
CEO Kathleen Murphy gets set to join Fidelity next month as head
of the fund giant's personal-investment business.
In a bid to gear up for what it sees as a flurry of new business
from shell-shocked retirement savers who have been knocked around
in the financial-market firestorm of the past 16 months, ING USA.
has separated annuities from retirement services -- previously
parts of ING USA Wealth Management -- and made them separate
business units along with insurance and investments.
Work cut out
"One of the unfortunate consequences of the financial markets'
steep declines has been the erosion of countless Americans'
retirement savings," says Tom McInerney, head of ING's insurance
business in the Americas. "As the markets eventually recover, ING
will operate its businesses to help Americans re-establish their
retirement savings program, create and protect reliable sources
of retirement income, and ultimately, reclaim the pursuit of
their retirement ambitions."
Catherine Smith, head of ING U.S. insurance business, will become
CEO of U.S. Retirement Services; U.S. life-insurance chief
Butch Britton will take Smith's old job; Bill Lowe, head of
wholesale distribution for the wealth-management unit, will take
the helm the annuity business.
A head for ING USA's investments business is still to be
named.
As for Murphy, McInerney says ING is grateful for her "many
valuable contributions over the years and we wish her the very
best in her new pursuit." He adds that ING has "substantial
management bench strength, which allows the company to
immediately appoint experienced leaders who will facilitate a
seamless transition to our new alignment."
ING USA is a subsidiary of ING Groep, a Dutch insurance and
banking conglomerate. -FWR
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