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Failed bank boss to run Boots

Boots - New boss is Andy Hornby
Boots - New boss is Andy Hornby

The boss in charge of HBOS when the bank faced collapse last autumn was confirmed as the new chief executive of high street giant Alliance Boots today.

Andy Hornby will return to the business front-line at the beginning of July - less than nine months after the bank was saved from nationalisation through a rescue takeover by Lloyds TSB.

Mr Hornby, who worked for supermarket Asda before joining the Halifax in 1999, was originally approached to head Boots in 2003 but stayed with the bank.

In his new role, he will report to the company's executive chairman Stefano Pessina, who took the group private with buy-out firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts for £11.1 billion sterling in 2007.

Mr Hornby earned £1.9m at HBOS during 2007 but the salary for his new job has not been disclosed.

Although Mr Hornby will focus on the day-to-day running of the business, the appointment comes a month after Mr Pessina floated the possible idea of Boots moving into personal banking, following the lead of retailers such as supermarket giant Tesco.

Mr Hornby, who was educated at Oxford and Harvard, is also on the board of Home Retail Group, which owns Argos and Homebase. He became chief executive of HBOS in 2006 but the bank was vulnerable because of its reliance on wholesale money markets, which convulsed in the wake of Lehman Brothers' collapse last autumn.

The bank, which reported losses of almost £11 billion last year and will drag Lloyds into the red this year, would almost certainly have been nationalised if the takeover had fallen through.

Alliance Boots posted trading profits of £953m in the year to March 31 - its first full year as a private company - helped by a strong performance in its health and beauty division.

The firm employs more than 115,000 people, has more than 370 wholesale distribution centres in 16 countries, and more than 3,200 health and beauty retail outlets around the world, including Ireland.