New CEO for the FMA
Financial Markets Authority (FMA) chairman Mark Todd says Samantha Barrass will take over from Everett in January next year and FMA general counsel Liam Mason will be acting chief executive in the months before her arrival.
Todd says Barrass has a strong New Zealand connection and brings deep international regulatory experience and leadership skills to the role.
“Ms Barrass has had a very successful career to date, operating in a number of complex and challenging environments.
"Her knowledge and experience of the insurance and banking industries will be particularly relevant for the increased role the FMA is to play in those areas,” Todd says.
Barrass has worked in a range of regulatory and executive roles in the UK and Europe and between 2014 and 2019 was the chief executive of the financial regulator in Gibraltar providing conduct and prudential regulatory oversight.
Earlier in her career, she worked for nine years in several roles at the Financial Services Authority in the UK (now the Financial Conduct Authority).
Most recently, Barrass led the establishment of the UK’s Business Banking Resolution Service, an innovative service designed to resolve disputes between banks and their business customers.
She has also held senior roles at the UK Solicitors Regulatory Authority and the London Investment Banking Association.
After graduating in economics from the University of Canterbury in Christchurch and completing post-graduate study at Victoria University of Wellington, Barrass began her career as an economist at the Reserve Bank of New Zealand.
She then moved to the UK to attend the London School of Economics, where she was awarded an MSc.
“We are delighted to have secured Ms Barrass for this role,” Todd says.
“She is a proven leader and has impressive, directly relevant, regulatory experience in the UK and Europe.
“She successfully led the Gibraltar Financial Services Commission through a period of evolution and expansion.
“Her experience as a consensus-building leader will stand the FMA in good stead as it continues its current activities and readies itself for a wider mandate in regulating banks and insurers, as well as climate change reporting."
Barrass says the FMA is at an important juncture in its journey to support and enhance the economy and financial health of Aotearoa New Zealand.
"It’s a privilege to have the opportunity to build on the great work done by Rob Everett and the team," she says.
"I’m very excited to be returning home to lead the FMA in this next phase and working with all to safeguard and foster a financial sector that everyone has a stake in.”
Barrass will be based in Wellington. She has three children who will remain in the UK to complete their university education.