Charles Schwab CEO Walt Bettinger is retiring from his function on the finish of December after 16 years main the brokerage agency, the corporate introduced Tuesday.
Bettinger might be changed on Jan. 1, 2025, by Charles Schwab President Rick Wurster. Bettinger will stay because the co-chair of Schwab’s board.
Charles Schwab, 5 years
In an announcement, Bettinger cited his sixty fifth birthday subsequent 12 months as a cause to step apart and praised the selection of Wurster.
“The Schwab Board’s considerate and disciplined method to succession planning helps make this transition easy. Rick Wurster and I’ve labored collectively each day for greater than eight years. I’ve full confidence in his management, and I’m thrilled that the Schwab Board of Administrators has chosen him as my successor,” the assertion mentioned.
In an interview on CNBC’s “Squawk Field,” Wurster indicated that there wouldn’t be any fast change in technique with the CEO handoff.
“I do not assume there might be a transition within the sense that we will proceed what we have been doing, which is ship for our purchasers and delight them,” Wurster mentioned.
Since Bettinger took over in 2008, the corporate’s consumer belongings have grown to $9.74 trillion from $1.14 trillion, and consumer brokerage accounts have grown to greater than 43 million from fewer than 10 million. This development is due partially to Schwab’s acquisition of TD Ameritrade, which closed in 2020.
Bettinger mentioned on “Squawk Field” that the mixing of Ameritrade was accomplished earlier this 12 months and was another excuse that he thought this was a superb time to step apart from the CEO function.
Schwab’s inventory has gone up roughly 150% throughout Bettinger’s tenure, which started in the course of the monetary disaster, however it has underperformed the broader market over the previous two years.
“I typically say that not many CEOs halve their firm’s inventory worth within the first 90 days, however that was just about what I walked into within the monetary disaster,” Bettinger mentioned on “Squawk Field.”
Shares of Schwab fell 1.4% Tuesday because the broader inventory market declined.