Ralph Adrianus Joseph Gerardus Hamers (born 25 May 1966) is a Dutch businessman who was the
chief executive officer (CEO) of
UBS Group from September 2020[3] to April 2023.[4]
He was the CEO of Dutch bank
ING Group from October 2013 until June 2020.[1]
Early life
Ralph Hamers was born on 25 May 1966.[2][5] He holds a master of science (MS) in business econometrics/operations research from
Tilburg University.[5][1]
Career
Hamers joined UBS in September 2020 as a member of the group executive board and became group CEO on 1 November 2020, replacing
Sergio Ermotti.[3][6][7][8]
Prior to UBS, Hamers spent 29 years at Dutch bank ING Group.[5]
Hamers joined ING in 1991 and was the CEO of ING from 1 October 2013 to June 2020.[9][10] During his time as CEO, he steered the bank to profitability while repaying the Dutch government money it received during the financial crisis. Also under his leadership, ING invested heavily in its digital transformation, relying far more on its online offering and less on its branch network than most rivals, leading to the bank having one of the lowest cost-to-revenue ratios in Europe at the time.[11]
In 2018, there was an uproar in the Netherlands following a proposal to raise Hamers' yearly salary from 1.6 million euro to 3 million euro.[12] Following the uproar, the Board withdrew the offer, leaving his salary unchanged.
In December 2020, a Dutch court ordered the public prosecutor to open a probe into Hamers' involvement in his previous role as CEO of ING in the company's failure to comply with
anti-money laundering regulations in 2018. Although the investigation was settled in 2018 with a €775 million fine paid by ING and, according to
Bloomberg News, the public prosecutor stated that "it didn’t find enough evidence for criminal accusations against individuals at ING, including the top management",[13] Hamers' investigation could continue into 2022 at the earliest.[14][15]