Ian Hay Davison
Ian Frederic Hay Davison CBE (1931–2022) was an accountant, chairman, executive and bell ringer.[1] He was the chief executive of Lloyd's of London from 1982 and helped to reform the insurer.[1]
Ian Hay Davison | |
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Born | Ian Frederic Hay Davison 30 June 1931 Uxbridge, England |
Died | 20 September 2022 91) | (aged
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In 1988, he led a report on the management and operations of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, following its closure during the Black Monday crash of 1987. Defects were found and reforms recommended.[2]
In 1998, the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales recognised him with the Founding Societies’ Centenary Award for his outstanding contributions.[3]
He campaigned to reopen Templecombe railway station and became an enthusiastic bell ringer.[1]
References
- "Ian Hay Davison", The Times, p. 82, 15 October 2022
- Peter Norman (2011), The Risk Controllers : Central Counterparty Clearing in Globalised Financial Markets, Wiley, p. 170, ISBN 9781119977940
- John Stokdyk (19 March 1998), "Profile - The fixer", Accountancy Age
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