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Citigroup names first woman to head a Wall Street bank

Jane Fraser is the first woman to lead a major Wall Street bank
Jane Fraser is the first woman to lead a major Wall Street bank

Citigroup has today named consumer banking head Jane Fraser to succeed Michael Corbat next year as the bank's chief executive officer, making her the first woman to lead a major Wall Street bank. 

Globally, female leaders are still a rarity in banking. 

Alison Rose became the first woman to head a British bank when she took on the role at Natwest Group last year, while Santander executive chairman Ana Botin is the only female head of a major euro zone lender.

Ireland fares better with Francesca McDonagh leading Bank of Ireland, while Jane Howard heads up Ulster Bank here. 

Jane Fraser has long been seen as a rising star on Wall Street, and last year was seen as a potential CEO candidate by Wells Fargo & Co's board, before it settled on former JPMorgan executive Charles Scharf. 

A 16-year veteran at Citi, who first joined to run client strategy in the investment bank, Fraser started her career at Goldman Sachs in the mergers & acquisitions department in London.

She then worked for Asesores Bursátiles in Madrid in Spain. 

Last October, Fraser was promoted to the role of president and tasked to head its global consumer bank, a move that was widely seen as a precursor to her elevation. 

Prior to that, she had been running the bank's Latin America business, including its Citibanamex division in Mexico.

She ran Citi's private bank and its troubled mortgage business, and is credited internally with helping the bank recover after the financial crisis, when it had to take $45 billion in taxpayer funds to survive.