DCM chief Arnaudy to exit StanChart

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DCM chief Arnaudy to exit StanChart

Anthony Arnaudy, Standard Chartered’s head of Northeast Asia debt capital markets, is leaving the bank after three years.

Anthony Arnaudy, managing director and head of Northeast Asia debt capital markets (DCM) at Standard Chartered, has been let go from bank this week after three years in his role.

Arnaudy’s last day will be Friday (March 8). Sources could not confirm his next move.

Standard Chartered declined to comment.

Hong Kong-based Arnaudy joined Standard Chartered in early 2010 to assume his current role, charged with leading investment grade and high yield bond origination for Greater China. He joined from Nomura, where he was head of debt capital markets in Asia ex Japan.

Arnaudy has worked in capital markets for more than 20 years. He first joined Lehman Brothers in New York in 1992, managing the international financing team. Twelve years later, Arnaudy moved to Asia to run Lehman Brothers’ DCM business across the region.

Arnaudy joined Nomura after Lehman’s collapse in 2008. He left the Japanese bank in the fourth quarter of 2009.

This is the latest senior departure at Standard Chartered in recent months. In November, the bank announced that Philip Cracknell, global head of loan syndications, would retire at the end of March 2013 after more than two decades at the bank. Singapore-based Cristian Jonsson, former global head of bond syndicate, assumed his role on January 1 this year.

Jonsson reports to Carsten Stoehr, global head of capital markets, who himself assumed his position in February of last year.

Aaron Russell-Davison was named to replace Jonsson as global head of bond syndicate, elevated from his role as head of Asian debt syndicate. He is also based in Singapore.

Meanwhile, in November, the bank announced that Justin Crane, who had run Asian loans syndicate at Credit Suisse, would join Standard Chartered in 2013 as global head of loan distribution. He replaced David Kempton, who now focuses on Southeast Asian loans.

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