Home / News / Kalman leaving Equity Trustees for places unknown

Kalman leaving Equity Trustees for places unknown

News

Harvey Kalman, the global head of business development for fund services at Equity Trustees and key business driver for many years, has resigned, seeking a new yet-unknown challenge.

Kalman, 54, has been with Equity Trustees since January 2000 and for the past three years has expanded his role to include additional responsibilities as managing director for UK, Ireland and Europe, still based in Melbourne.

He said last Friday (March 19) that, given his fiduciary roles at the firm, whose name in some circles has become synonymous with his own, he wanted to do something different but didn’t want to look for new
roles while still at Equity Trustees. He leaves on July 2.

  • Very much the public face of Equity Trustees in the investments world, spanning institutional and wholesale sectors, Kalman is an economist and accountant who started his career as an analyst with the Ford Motor Credit Company in 1990. He followed this with several stints, including a year as policy adviser on environment and heritage for the Liberal Party, at ANZ and KPMG, before finding his feet at what used to be an independent but-sleepy trustee and executor company, founded in 1888.

    Mick O’Brien, Equity Trustees managing director, said: “We warmly thank Harvey for just over two decades of incredible service building a successful Corporate Trustee Services (CTS) business, including taking the business into the UK and Ireland, and wish him all the best for the future.”

    Russell Beasley, executive general manager of the Australian CTS business, would continue to lead the team of fund services specialists based in Melbourne and Sydney, and a growing client base of investment managers, O’Brien said. Arrangements for the overseas offices were currently being considered.

    Greg Bright

    Greg has worked in financial services-related media for more than 30 years. He has launched dozens of financial titles, including Super Review, Top1000Funds.com and Investor Strategy News, of which he is the former editor.




    Print Article

    Related
    ‘A force to be reckoned with’: Funds heading for retirement tipping point

    Some members are excited for retirement, while others approach it with a “real sense of shame and fear”. Funds are going to have to figure out how to cater to both groups or risk failing them all.

    Lachlan Maddock | 20th Nov 2024 | More
    Super early access for housing would hurt every member’s balance: Aware

    Opening up early access to super for housing would have a negative effect on the balances of even those members that don’t dig into their savings, with funds forced to adopt more conservative investment strategies and hold more liquid assets.

    Lachlan Maddock | 15th Nov 2024 | More
    HESTA brings total portfolio thinking to ‘nuanced’ housing crisis

    The circa $88 billion industry fund for workers in health and community services reckons that alleviating the affordable housing crisis will boost its other investments by easing the cost of living and inflation.

    Lachlan Maddock | 15th Nov 2024 | More
    Popular