Slawomir Krupa: Difference between revisions
Created page with "{{Insert top}}{{Insert quote panel | {{Slawomir Krupa/random quote}}}} == Overview == {{Infobox person | name = Slawomir Krupa | honorific_prefix = | honorific_suffix = | image = slawomir-krupa.jpg | birth_date = 1974 | birth_place = Burgas, Bulgaria | citizenship = France, Poland | education = International relations | alma_mater = Institut d’Études Politiques de Paris (Sciences Po) | occupation = Banker | employer = Société Générale | title = Chief Execu..." |
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== Overview == |
== Overview == |
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{{Infobox person |
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| birth_date = 1974 |
| birth_date = 1974 |
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| birth_place = Burgas, Bulgaria |
| birth_place = Burgas, Bulgaria |
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| citizenship = |
| citizenship = French and Polish |
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| education = |
| education = Degree in international relations |
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| alma_mater = Institut |
| alma_mater = Institut d'Études Politiques de Paris (Sciences Po) |
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| occupation = Banker |
| occupation = Banker, business executive |
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| employer = |
| employer = Société Générale |
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| title = |
| title = Chief Executive Officer |
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| term = |
| term = 23 May 2023 – present |
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| predecessor = Frédéric Oudéa |
| predecessor = Frédéric Oudéa |
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| successor = |
| successor = |
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| boards = |
| boards = French Banking Federation (chairman); European Banking Federation (president); Albertine Foundation (vice-chairman) |
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| known_for = |
| known_for = Chief executive officer of Société Générale since 2023 |
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| spouse = |
| spouse = Polish-born concert pianist |
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| children = 1 daughter |
| children = 1 daughter |
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| awards = |
| awards = |
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🏦 '''Slawomir Krupa''' (born 1974) is a Franco-Polish banker who has served since May 2023 as |
🏦 '''Slawomir Krupa''' (born 1974) is a Franco-Polish banker and business executive who has served since May 2023 as chief executive officer of Société Générale, France’s third-largest listed bank by assets.<ref name="ReutersProfile">{{cite web |url=https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/krupa-hard-driving-veteran-entrusted-with-reviving-societe-generale-2023-05-23/ |title=Krupa, hard-driving veteran entrusted with reviving Societe Generale |publisher=Reuters |date=23 May 2023 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="SGExecBio">{{cite web |url=https://investors.societegenerale.com/sites/default/files/documents/governance/executive-committee-biographies.pdf |title=Executive Committee biographies |publisher=Société Générale |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Rising through the bank’s internal inspection and corporate and investment banking ranks, he built a reputation as a demanding “fixer” who restructures underperforming businesses and tightens risk controls, notably during his tenure as chief executive of SG Americas in New York and later as head of the Global Banking and Investor Solutions division.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /><ref name="ReutersQ3">{{cite web |url=https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/socgen-beats-q3-forecasts-french-retail-rebound-equities-trading-2024-10-31/ |title=SocGen jumps after CEO shakes up top team, rival BNP falters |publisher=Reuters |date=31 October 2024 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> As chief executive, Krupa has pursued a conservative “back to basics” strategy focused on capital strength, cost cutting and a simplified business portfolio, a stance that initially disappointed investors but later produced improving earnings and industry influence, including his appointments as chairman of the French Banking Federation and president of the European Banking Federation.<ref name="ReutersStrategy">{{cite web |url=https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/socgen-eyes-return-tangible-equity-rote-between-9-10-2026-2023-09-18/ |title=SocGen shares plummet after new CEO's strategy disappoints |publisher=Reuters |date=18 September 2023 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="FBF">{{cite web |url=https://www.fbf.fr/en/slawomir-krupa-to-become-chairman-of-the-french-banking-federation-from-1-september-2024/ |title=Slawomir Krupa to become Chairman of the French Banking Federation from 1 September 2024 |publisher=French Banking Federation |date=26 July 2024 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="EBF">{{cite web |url=https://www.ebf.eu/ebf-media-centre/krupa-elected-new-ebf-president/ |title=Slawomir Krupa elected new EBF President |publisher=European Banking Federation |date=4 February 2025 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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== Early life and education == |
== Early life and education == |
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🧒 '''Childhood and family background.''' Krupa was born in 1974 in Burgas, on Bulgaria’s Black Sea coast, to Polish academic parents who were then working abroad before returning to communist-era Kraków, where he spent his early childhood.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /> When he was six the family emigrated to France, settling in Lille; his mother became a linguistics professor and his father a language teacher, providing an intellectual and multilingual household that would later underpin his ease in several cultures and languages.<ref name="ScPo">{{cite web |url=https://www.sciencespo.fr/american-foundation/news/slawomir-krupa-there-no-true-success-without-staying-true-yourself/ |title=Slawomir Krupa: "There is no true success without staying true to yourself" |publisher=Sciences Po American Foundation |date=2022 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> The experience of moving from Eastern Europe to northern France, with parents who had lived under different political systems, later informed his emphasis on adaptability and his aversion to rigid ideological views.<ref name="LePoint">{{cite web |url=https://www.lepoint.fr/economie/les-confidences-de-slawomir-krupa-le-nouveau-patron-de-la-societe-generale-31-05-2024-2561658_28.php |title=Son plan pour sa banque, son enfance en Pologne… Les confidences du nouveau patron de la Société Générale |publisher=Le Point |date=31 May 2024 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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🎓 '''Sciences Po |
🎓 '''Sciences Po and intellectual formation.''' After secondary school in France, Krupa was admitted to the Institut d’Études Politiques de Paris (Sciences Po), where he studied in the international relations section and graduated in 1996.<ref name="ScPo" /> His academic focus was initially oriented towards politics, history and international affairs rather than finance, but a formative course in financial markets convinced him that banking could combine analytical rigor with global exposure.<ref name="ScPo" /> Krupa has said that Sciences Po’s multi-disciplinary teaching encouraged him to analyse problems from several angles rather than in “black and white”, a habit he later applied to risk assessment and strategic decisions inside Société Générale.<ref name="ScPo" /><ref name="FrWiki">{{cite web |url=https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slawomir_Krupa |title=Slawomir Krupa |publisher=Wikipédia (French) |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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🧠 '''Multi-disciplinary outlook.''' Krupa has credited Sciences Po's multi-disciplinary approach with teaching him to analyse problems from several angles rather than in "black and white", a way of thinking he says has remained central to his decision-making as a banker and executive.<ref name="sciencespo_interview" /> He has also described his immigrant background and exposure to different political systems as factors that shaped a pragmatic worldview and made him wary of ideological extremes.<ref name="lepoint_profile">{{cite web |url=https://www.lepoint.fr/economie/les-confidences-de-slawomir-krupa-le-nouveau-patron-de-la-societe-generale-31-05-2024-2561658_28.php |title=Son plan pour sa banque, son enfance en Pologne… Les confidences du nouveau patron de la Société Générale |publisher=Le Point |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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== Career == |
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💼 '''Entry into Société Générale and inspection work.''' Upon graduating from Sciences Po in 1996, Krupa joined Société Générale’s prestigious General Inspection department as a junior inspector, embarking on a demanding internal-audit track that rotates high-potential staff through assignments across the group’s businesses and geographies.<ref name="SGExecBio" /> The role gave him broad exposure to the mechanics of retail and investment banking, from balance sheet management to operational risk, and by 2005 he had joined the management team of the Inspection Générale, supervising missions that scrutinised the bank’s global operations.<ref name="SGExecBio" /> Colleagues later noted that these formative years shaped his reputation as a disciplined operator who is comfortable challenging entrenched practices when the control framework appears weak.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /> |
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== Early career at Société Générale == |
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🚀 '''Entrepreneurial detour and return to the bank.''' In 1999, at the height of the dot-com boom and aged 25, Krupa left the relative security of Société Générale to launch an e-finance start-up in Eastern Europe, headquartered in his native Poland.<ref name="ScPo" /> The venture struggled as the technology bubble burst, and he has described the experience as both a “dose of humble pie” and a practical education in risk-taking, failure and resilience.<ref name="ScPo" /> In 2002 he returned to Société Générale, bringing what he characterised as a sharper business sense and a willingness to innovate rather than simply climb the hierarchy, and he later summarised the lesson with the remark that “there is no true success without staying true to yourself”.<ref name="ScPo" /> |
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🏛️ '''General Inspection and first steps in banking.''' Krupa joined [[Société Générale]] in 1996 straight out of university, entering the bank's elite General Inspection programme as a junior auditor.<ref name="sg_exec_bio">{{cite web |url=https://investors.societegenerale.com/sites/default/files/documents/governance/executive-committee-biographies.pdf |title=Executive committee biographies |publisher=Société Générale |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> The programme, which rotates young inspectors through assignments across the group, gave him early exposure to a wide array of businesses and geographies and acquainted him with the bank's risk, control and governance frameworks.<ref name="reuters_profile" /> |
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📊 '''Shift to front-office and regional leadership roles.''' After resuming his inspection responsibilities, Krupa moved in 2007 from audit into front-office roles within the corporate and investment bank, initially as director of strategy and development.<ref name="SGExecBio" /> He subsequently headed Société Générale’s operations in Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Africa, while also serving as deputy head of the global financing division, overseeing activities such as debt capital markets and leveraged finance alongside his regional portfolio.<ref name="SGExecBio" /> These overlapping responsibilities gave him detailed knowledge of the bank’s financing franchises from Paris to Casablanca and Moscow, and helped establish his image as a problem-solver who could untangle complex operational and regulatory issues in very different environments.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /> |
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🚀 '''Entrepreneurial detour in e-finance.''' In 1999, at the age of 25, Krupa left the bank to found an internet start-up in the field of e-finance in Eastern Europe at the height of the dot-com boom, basing the venture in Poland to tap into his native region.<ref name="sciencespo_interview" /><ref name="sg_exec_bio" /> The start-up ultimately struggled as the technology bubble burst, and he has since described the experience as both humbling and formative, giving him first-hand exposure to failure, risk-taking and the demands of building a business from scratch.<ref name="sciencespo_interview" /> |
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🗽 '''Chief executive of SG Americas.''' A major turning point came in January 2016, when Krupa was appointed chief executive officer of SG Americas, the group’s New York-based subsidiary, at a time when Société Générale’s U.S. platform faced stricter post-crisis regulations, middling profitability and the lingering fallout from sanctions and benchmark-rigging cases that had led to multi-billion-dollar settlements with American authorities.<ref name="SGExecBio" /><ref name="ReutersProfile" /> In the United States he cut risk exposure in volatile trading businesses, tightened cost discipline and pushed for stronger internal controls, while working to rebuild credibility with regulators such as the Federal Reserve after earlier compliance lapses.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /><ref name="FrWiki" /> Under his leadership the American arm’s profitability and stability improved relative to some European peers, bolstering his standing within the wider group as an executive capable of leading a sensitive turnaround in a demanding supervisory environment.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /> |
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🧩 '''Return to SocGen and early leadership roles.''' Krupa rejoined [[Société Générale]] in 2002, returning to the Inspection Générale where he rose to the management committee by 2005 and deepened his understanding of the group's global operations.<ref name="sg_exec_bio" /> In 2007 he moved into the front office as chief of staff at the corporate and investment bank, a role that put him close to senior management and involved him in strategic projects during the run-up to the global financial crisis.<ref name="sg_exec_bio" /> |
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🏛️ '''Head of Global Banking and Investor Solutions.''' In 2021, amid a wider reshuffle of Société Générale’s senior management, Krupa returned to Paris to join the group’s executive committee as head of the Global Banking and Investor Solutions division, which encompasses corporate and investment banking and had recently suffered losses in structured products during the market turmoil of 2020.<ref name="SGExecBio" /> He responded by reducing risk-weighted assets, exiting less profitable niches and articulating a plan for “profitable and sustainable growth” centred on capital efficiency and client-focused franchises.<ref name="SGExecBio" /><ref name="ReutersProfile" /> Over the following 18 months the division became the group’s main engine of earnings, recording the strongest annual pre-tax profit growth among major French banks and benefiting from double-digit growth in equities trading revenues, developments that helped restore market and internal confidence in the investment bank.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /><ref name="ReutersQ3" /> |
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🌐 '''Strategy chief and regional responsibilities.''' From 2009, Krupa served simultaneously as head of strategy and corporate development and as chief executive for Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Africa (CEEMEA) within the corporate and investment bank, overseeing growth initiatives and reorganisations across emerging markets.<ref name="sg_exec_bio" /> This period established his reputation internally as a "fixer" capable of untangling complex operational issues while balancing risk, profitability and local regulatory constraints.<ref name="reuters_profile" /> |
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👔 '''Succession race and appointment as chief executive officer.''' In September 2022, long-serving chief executive Frédéric Oudéa announced his intention to step down after 15 years, triggering speculation over who would lead Société Générale through its next phase.<ref name="LeMonde">{{cite web |url=https://www.lemonde.fr/en/economy/article/2022/10/03/at-societe-generale-a-break-with-tradition-as-a-new-boss-is-chosen_5998994_19.html |title=At Société Générale, a break with tradition as a new boss is chosen |publisher=Le Monde |date=3 October 2022 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Many observers initially saw Sébastien Proto, a younger deputy with a background in the French civil service, as the likely successor, but in a break with tradition the board chose Krupa, a career banker without experience in the grands corps, as the next chief executive.<ref name="LeMonde" /><ref name="ReutersProfile" /> He took office on 23 May 2023 at the age of 48, becoming the first Société Générale chief executive in recent decades not drawn from the ranks of the elite ENA and Finance Ministry network; chairman Lorenzo Bini Smaghi praised his “vision and leadership” and understanding of markets, while his selection was also linked to his track record in investment banking and his strategic ideas for the group’s future.<ref name="LeMonde" /><ref name="ReutersProfile" /> At the time of his promotion, Krupa held dual French and Polish citizenship and his family was still based in New York, underlining his international profile.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /> |
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== International leadership and rise through the ranks == |
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🗽 '''Head of SG Americas.''' A major turning point in Krupa's career came in January 2016, when he was appointed chief executive officer of SG Americas, the New York-based arm of [[Société Générale]].<ref name="sg_exec_bio" /> At the time the bank's U.S. operations were facing tighter post-crisis regulation, middling profitability and the aftermath of past compliance issues, including large fines over sanctions and benchmark manipulation.<ref name="reuters_profile" /><ref name="wiki_fr">{{cite web |url=https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slawomir_Krupa |title=Slawomir Krupa |publisher=Wikipédia (French) |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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== Strategy and performance as CEO of Société Générale == |
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📉 '''Mandate and initial market scepticism.''' When Krupa formally assumed the chief executive role in 2023, Société Générale’s shares were trading at only around 30% of tangible book value, a discount comparable to that of the then-troubled Deutsche Bank and well below domestic rival BNP Paribas, reflecting deep investor scepticism about the group’s profitability and strategic clarity.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /><ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> His mandate from the board was to improve returns and articulate a clearer identity for France’s third-largest listed lender, and he signalled early on that he would not pursue large “transformational” mergers in the short term, preferring to focus on balance-sheet strength and operational simplification rather than headline-grabbing deals.<ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> |
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🧾 '''Regulatory clean-up and profitability in the U.S.''' In New York, Krupa led a multi-year effort to streamline the Americas platform, reduce risk exposures in volatile trading activities and strengthen internal controls and relationships with U.S. regulators, notably the Federal Reserve.<ref name="reuters_profile" /><ref name="businessinsider">{{cite web |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/societe-generale-slawomir-krupa-interview-2017-3 |title=Societe Generale's Slawomir Krupa on rebuilding the bank in the US |publisher=Business Insider |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Under his tenure, the unit's profitability and stability improved, enhancing the group's credibility in the United States at a time when several European peers were still struggling to meet supervisory expectations.<ref name="reuters_profile" /> |
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📑 '''A cautious medium-term plan.''' In September 2023 Krupa unveiled his first strategic plan, presenting what he called a “realistic” roadmap through 2026 that prioritised resilience over rapid expansion.<ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> The bank guided investors to expect flat to modestly positive annual revenue growth of 0–2% and set a target return on tangible equity of 9–10% by 2026, coupled with a slightly reduced payout ratio of 40–50% of earnings and a core tier-one capital ratio comfortably above 13%.<ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> The plan acknowledged structural pressures on the French retail bank, notably long-dated fixed-rate mortgage books and regulatory constraints, and the recent volatility of markets-facing activities, and it framed the strategy as one of “promise less, deliver more” after what Krupa saw as earlier episodes of over-ambitious targets.<ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> |
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🏙️ '''Head of Global Banking and Investor Solutions.''' In January 2021, amid a broader management reshuffle, Krupa returned to Paris to join the group's executive committee as head of Global Banking and Investor Solutions (GBIS), which comprises [[Investment banking]] and markets activities.<ref name="sg_exec_bio" /><ref name="worldbank">{{cite web |url=https://live.worldbank.org/en/experts/s/slawomir-krupa |title=Slawomir Krupa |publisher=World Bank Live |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> The division had recently suffered heavy losses in structured products during the market turmoil of 2020, prompting a strategic rethink. |
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📉 '''Negative market reaction and defence of the plan.''' The market’s immediate reaction to the September 2023 announcement was sharply negative: Société Générale’s shares fell by more than 9% on the day, erasing roughly €2 billion in market capitalisation and marking the stock’s worst single session in six months, while analysts at Jefferies and other brokers criticised the “underwhelming” growth outlook and lower profitability guidance.<ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> Krupa publicly defended the plan, arguing that “there would be no sense whatsoever” in setting objectives whose credibility investors would immediately question and insisting that the right approach for the bank was one designed “for decades to come” rather than to satisfy short-term expectations.<ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> He framed the subdued revenue ambitions as a deliberate choice to focus on cost control, capital strength and risk management, even at the expense of near-term market approval.<ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> |
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📊 '''Risk reduction and turnaround of the investment bank.''' As GBIS chief, Krupa moved quickly to trim risk-weighted assets, exit less profitable niches and refocus on areas where [[Société Générale]] had stronger franchises, in line with a plan he described as delivering "profitable and sustainable growth".<ref name="reuters_profile" /><ref name="sg_exec_bio" /> Within roughly eighteen months, the investment bank became the group's main engine of earnings, posting the fastest pre-tax profit growth among major French peers and benefiting from a rebound in equities trading.<ref name="reuters_profile" /> This turnaround significantly bolstered his standing with the board and was cited as a key factor in his eventual promotion to group CEO.<ref name="reuters_profile" /> |
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✂️ '''Cost-cutting and restructuring measures.''' Central to the new strategy was an ambitious cost-cutting programme targeting €1.7 billion of savings by 2026, equivalent to around 8% of the group’s cost base, to bring the cost-to-income ratio below 60%.<ref name="Finextra">{{cite web |url=https://www.finextra.com/newsarticle/43644/societe-generale-to-cuts-900-jobs-in-france |title=Societe Generale to cuts 900 jobs in France |publisher=Finextra |date=19 January 2024 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> The measures included completing the integration of Crédit du Nord into Société Générale’s main French retail network, accelerating digitalisation in international subsidiaries, simplifying the organisational structure and overhauling information systems.<ref name="Finextra" /> In January 2024 the bank announced plans to cut around 900 positions in headquarters and central functions in France, mainly through voluntary departures and redeployments, and to reduce external consultancy costs and management layers, steps that drew criticism from unions but were presented by Krupa as necessary to restore competitiveness.<ref name="Finextra" /><ref name="ReutersJobCuts">{{cite web |url=https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/societe-generale-plans-job-cuts-france-trim-costs-bloomberg-news-2024-01-19/ |title=Societe Generale plans job cuts in France to trim costs- Bloomberg News |publisher=Reuters |date=19 January 2024 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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== Appointment as chief executive of Société Générale == |
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💹 '''Earnings rebound and management shake-up.''' By late 2024 there were early signs that the cost and simplification drive was contributing to stronger results: in the third quarter of 2024 Société Générale reported net income of about €1.37 billion, roughly four times the level a year earlier, supported by a rebound in French retail banking margins and a 10% rise in equities trading revenues.<ref name="ReutersQ3" /> Seizing the momentum, Krupa announced a shake-up of his top team in October 2024, removing chief financial officer Claire Dumas and appointing Leopoldo Alvear, previously of Spanish bank Sabadell, as the new CFO, while personally taking direct oversight of the domestic retail division and changing its leadership.<ref name="ReutersQ3" /> The combination of strong quarterly earnings and decisive governance changes prompted the bank’s shares to rise by more than 10% in a single session, their largest daily gain in years, turning the stock positive for 2024 and prompting some analysts to suggest that the worst of the strategic reset was behind the group.<ref name="ReutersQ3" /> |
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👔 '''Succession race and break with tradition.''' In September 2022, long-serving CEO Frédéric Oudéa announced that he would not seek a new term, triggering a high-profile succession process at [[Société Générale]].<ref name="lemonde_succession">{{cite web |url=https://www.lemonde.fr/en/economy/article/2022/10/03/at-societe-generale-a-break-with-tradition-as-a-new-boss-is-chosen_5998994_19.html |title=At Societe Generale, a break with tradition as a new boss is chosen |publisher=Le Monde |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Contrary to expectations that favoured Sébastien Proto, a senior executive with a background in the French civil service, the board chose Krupa, marking a break with a long tradition of appointing chiefs drawn from the country's grands corps and the National School of Administration.<ref name="reuters_profile" /><ref name="lemonde_succession" /> |
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📈 '''Relative performance and strategic adjustments.''' Despite the rally, Société Générale’s overall share performance under Krupa remained mixed: by the end of 2024 the stock had risen by around 11% since he took office, compared with a roughly 37% increase in a European banking index over the same period, leaving the bank still trading at a discount to peers and subject to what analysts described as a persistent “show-me” valuation.<ref name="ReutersQ3" /><ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> In response to early progress on cost targets, Krupa modestly raised the bank’s profitability ambition to about 9% return on equity for 2023, up from an earlier 8% goal, and accelerated efforts to refocus on a smaller set of core businesses, including the rapid expansion of the online bank Boursorama and the integration of LeasePlan into the listed car-leasing subsidiary ALD to exploit growth in auto leasing.<ref name="FTRetail">{{cite web |url=https://www.ft.com/content/488c1601-ee91-4c4e-b9d5-8b60309b7e61 |title=Société Générale retail arm outshines lacklustre investment banking ... |publisher=Financial Times |date=2025 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="Finextra" /> In investment banking he has promoted an “originate-to-distribute” model less reliant on using the bank’s balance sheet and backed a joint venture with AllianceBernstein in cash equities and research in order to bolster the U.S. franchise without heavy capital consumption.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /><ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> |
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🇪🇺 '''Cosmopolitan profile and board support.''' Krupa, who holds both French and Polish citizenship and whose family had been living in New York prior to his appointment, was seen as something of an outsider to the Paris establishment but as an insider to the bank itself.<ref name="reuters_profile" /><ref name="lemonde_succession" /> Board chairman Lorenzo Bini Smaghi cited his "vision and leadership" and strong grasp of markets, while former colleagues emphasised his problem-solving skills and ability to "take people with him" on strategic changes.<ref name="reuters_profile" /> |
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📅 '''Taking the helm in 2023.''' Krupa formally took over as group chief executive on 23 May 2023, at the age of 48.<ref name="sg_bio" /><ref name="reuters_profile" /> He assumed leadership of a bank that had been through multiple restructurings and scandals over the previous decade and whose market valuation lagged European peers, with shares trading at around 30% of tangible book value in early 2023.<ref name="reuters_strategy" /> |
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== Financial compensation and external roles == |
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💶 '''Remuneration as chief executive.''' As chief executive of Société Générale, Krupa receives a remuneration package that is significant by French standards but modest compared with those of leading U.S. bank chiefs. When he took the top job in 2023 the board set his fixed annual salary at €1.65 million, around €350,000 higher than that of his predecessor, and made him eligible for a variable bonus target of 120% of fixed pay and long-term incentive awards conditional on performance metrics such as profitability, cost control and capital ratios.<ref name="SGComms">{{cite web |url=https://www.societegenerale.com/sites/default/files/documents/2024-03/communication-post-ca-01-03-24-en.pdf |title=Communication post Board of Directors’ meeting - 01/03/2024 |publisher=Société Générale |date=1 March 2024 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="Dogfinance">{{cite web |url=https://dogfinance.com/actu/carriere/combien-gagnent-vraiment-les-patrons-des-banques |title=Combien gagnent vraiment les patrons des banques ? |publisher=Dogfinance |date=27 March 2025 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> In 2024, his first full year in the role, his total pay amounted to about €5 million, including roughly €2.23 million in variable compensation, making him the highest-paid banking chief executive in France that year but still far below some European and U.S. peers.<ref name="Dogfinance" /><ref name="Agefi">{{cite web |url=https://www.agefi.fr/news/banque-assurance/combien-gagnent-les-patrons-des-plus-grandes-banques-occidentales |title=Combien gagnent les patrons des plus grandes banques occidentales ? |publisher=L'Agefi |date=10 April 2025 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Commentators noted that his remuneration remained a small fraction of that of figures such as JPMorgan Chase’s chief executive, underscoring the structural pay gap between Wall Street and continental European banks.<ref name="Agefi" /> |
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== Strategic plan and market reaction == |
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📊 '''Wealth, shareholding and governance requirements.''' Krupa’s personal net worth is not publicly disclosed in detail, and there is no indication that he holds an unusually large equity stake in Société Générale; as a long-serving professional manager rather than a founder, his wealth largely derives from salary, bonuses and deferred stock awards.<ref name="Dogfinance" /><ref name="Agefi" /> The bank’s governance rules require the chief executive to hold a minimum number of Société Générale shares, but public filings suggest that Krupa’s holding is well below 0.1% of the company’s capital, aligning his interests with those of shareholders without conferring controlling influence.<ref name="SGBio">{{cite web |url=https://www.societegenerale.com/en/sg_gouvernance_member/slawomir-krupa |title=Slawomir Krupa |publisher=Société Générale |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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📉 '''Mandate to restore profitability and clarity.''' Upon taking office, Krupa was tasked with improving profitability, simplifying [[Société Générale]]'s business portfolio and restoring investor confidence in France's third-largest listed lender.<ref name="reuters_strategy" /> He signalled early that there would be no immediate pursuit of transformative mergers, instead stressing that his priority was to focus on capital strength, cost discipline and operational efficiency — what he dubbed the "boring basics" of banking.<ref name="reuters_profile" /><ref name="reuters_strategy" /> |
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🏛️ '''Roles in French and European banking associations.''' Beyond his responsibilities at Société Générale, Krupa has emerged as a prominent industry representative. In 2024 he became chairman of the French Banking Federation (FBF), the professional body representing banks operating in France, for a one-year term starting on 1 September.<ref name="FBF" /> In this capacity he has engaged with policymakers and regulators on issues ranging from macroprudential rules to consumer protection, positioning himself as a spokesperson for the sector’s concerns. The following year he was elected president of the European Banking Federation (EBF), succeeding the chief executive of Deutsche Bank and giving him a continental platform to advocate for deeper European capital markets and a regulatory framework that balances financial stability with the competitiveness of EU banks against U.S. and Asian rivals.<ref name="EBF" /> |
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🗺️ '''2026 strategic plan and cautious targets.''' In September 2023, after several months of internal work, Krupa unveiled a new 2026 strategic plan that he described as "realistic" and deliberately sober in its assumptions.<ref name="reuters_strategy" /> The bank guided investors to expect flat to modest annual revenue growth of 0–2% through 2026 and set a return on tangible equity target of 9–10% by that date, alongside a core Tier 1 capital ratio comfortably above 13% and a shareholder payout ratio of 40–50%.<ref name="reuters_strategy" /> The objectives were less ambitious than some previous targets and implied that [[Société Générale]] would remain less profitable than several European rivals in the medium term. |
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🎭 '''Cultural and philanthropic engagements.''' Krupa also holds positions outside pure banking: he serves as vice-chairman of the Albertine Foundation in New York, a cultural organisation promoting French-American exchange in education and the arts, reflecting ties built during his years in the United States.<ref name="SGBio" /> He has supported charitable causes including Imagine for Margo, a French organisation dedicated to children’s cancer research, for which he has raised funds through sponsorship drives and charity runs, asking contacts to contribute to medical research in lieu of traditional farewell gifts when he left New York.<ref name="Alvarum">{{cite web |url=https://www.alvarum.com/slawomirkrupa |title=La collecte de Slawomir Krupa |publisher=Alvarum |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> These activities complement his professional advocacy on financial-sector issues and contribute to his public image as a banker attentive to wider social and cultural questions.<ref name="SGBio" /> |
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💸 '''Negative share price reaction.''' The market reaction to the plan was swift and severe: on the day of its presentation, 18 September 2023, [[Société Générale]]'s share price fell by more than 9%, wiping out roughly €2 billion in market value, as analysts criticised what they saw as underwhelming revenue prospects and a more demanding capital target.<ref name="reuters_strategy" /> Jefferies and other brokers highlighted the lack of growth, the increased capital buffer and the lowered profitability ambitions as reasons for their cautious stance.<ref name="reuters_strategy" /> |
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🧭 '''"Promise less, deliver more" approach.''' Krupa defended the strategy as the right course for the bank "for decades to come", arguing that credibility depended on setting targets that could be delivered rather than making bolder promises that might later be missed.<ref name="reuters_strategy" /> He framed his approach as one of promising less and delivering more, contrasting it with prior periods in which management had, in his view, over-promised and under-delivered. This stance, while disappointing some investors, was consistent with his reputation as a blunt, long-term oriented manager. |
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== Personal life and leadership style == |
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🌍 '''Cosmopolitan identity and family.''' Krupa holds both French and Polish citizenship, speaks French and Polish fluently and is also at ease in English, and he often refers to himself as having multiple cultural identities shaped by his childhood in Eastern Europe and adulthood in France and the United States.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /><ref name="FrWiki" /> He met his future wife, a Polish-born concert pianist, during a posting back in Poland in the early 2000s, and the couple have one daughter; for much of the 2010s the family lived in New York during his tenure at SG Americas and continued to maintain links with the United States even after his return to Paris.<ref name="FrWiki" /><ref name="LePoint" /> Friends and colleagues have suggested that this transatlantic life contributes to his ease in navigating different social and business milieus, from French regulatory circles to U.S. markets and Central European contexts.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /> |
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== Cost-cutting, restructuring and portfolio simplification == |
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🧭 '''Management approach and reputation inside the bank.''' Inside Société Générale, Krupa is often characterised as direct, action-oriented and impatient with bureaucracy, traits that some observers describe as closer to an “Anglo-Saxon” management style than the more consensual approach associated with parts of the French establishment.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /><ref name="LePoint" /> Former Société Générale investment banking head Jean-Pierre Mustier, later chief executive of UniCredit, has commented that Krupa has “a way of moving forward, of taking people with him,” while subordinates have remarked that his bluntness means “you always know where you stand”.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /> He is known to drill into details, push teams hard and rapidly change leadership when performance lags, as demonstrated by his decisions to reshuffle the French retail arm and replace the group’s chief financial officer, moves that sent a signal that mediocrity would not be tolerated.<ref name="ReutersQ3" /><ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> |
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✂️ '''Large cost-reduction programme.''' Central to Krupa's strategy was an €1.7 billion cost-cutting plan to be implemented by 2026, representing about 8% of [[Société Générale]]'s cost base.<ref name="reuters_strategy" /><ref name="finextra_jobs">{{cite web |url=https://www.finextra.com/newsarticle/43644/societe-generale-to-cuts-900-jobs-in-france |title=Societe Generale to cuts 900 jobs in France |publisher=Finextra |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Measures included completing the merger of the Crédit du Nord network into the main French retail bank, accelerating digitalisation in international units, simplifying the organisational structure and overhauling IT systems. |
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🏃 '''Interests and life outside the office.''' Away from the executive floor, Krupa is described by acquaintances as affable, witty and intellectually curious, maintaining a long-standing interest in history and international affairs that dates back to his university studies.<ref name="LePoint" /><ref name="FrWiki" /> During his years near the water in New York he developed a passion for sailing, particularly catamaran regattas, and he has drawn parallels between skippering a fast multihull with a crew and managing a trading floor, emphasising the need for rapid, coordinated responses to changing conditions.<ref name="FrWiki" /> He also enjoys distance running and has been seen jogging along the Seine and participating in charity races linked to causes such as Imagine for Margo, integrating physical challenges with fundraising efforts.<ref name="Alvarum" /> Despite leading one of Europe’s major banks, he keeps a comparatively low public profile, preferring time with his family to the Paris social circuit and often eschewing some of the formalities that traditionally surround French corporate leaders.<ref name="LePoint" /> |
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🏢 '''Job cuts and union reactions.''' As part of this drive, the bank announced in early 2024 plans to cut around 900 positions in its French headquarters and support functions, largely through natural attrition and voluntary departures.<ref name="finextra_jobs" /><ref name="reuters_jobs">{{cite web |url=https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/societe-generale-plans-job-cuts-france-trim-costs-bloomberg-news-2024-01-19/ |title=Societe Generale plans job cuts in France to trim costs |publisher=Reuters |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> The cuts prompted concern among French labour unions, which criticised lay-offs at a time when the group was returning to profit, but there were no prolonged strikes. Internally, the programme contributed to a shift in tone towards a more demanding, efficiency-oriented culture. |
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🧱 '''Leadership philosophy and views on career choice.''' In public appearances, including talks to students at his alma mater, Krupa has stressed the importance of authenticity and intellectual engagement in professional life, warning young people not to “choose banking for the wrong reasons” and arguing that a sustainable career requires genuine interest in the subject matter.<ref name="ScPo" /> He has spoken of his role as chief executive as that of “enabling others’ greatness” by creating conditions in which teams can debate openly and take responsibility, rather than relying on hierarchy for its own sake, and he encourages dissenting views in meetings as long as the final decisions are then executed collectively.<ref name="ScPo" /><ref name="ReutersProfile" /> Some commentators have suggested that his forthright style could be a double-edged sword in an industry where diplomacy can smooth conflicts, but thus far he has managed to build a coalition of supportive executives by mixing new appointments with continuity in key positions.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /><ref name="ReutersQ3" /> |
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📦 '''Asset disposals and focus on core activities.''' In parallel, Krupa pursued a simplification of [[Société Générale]]'s perimeter, divesting non-core or capital-intensive businesses such as certain African subsidiaries, an equipment finance division and UK and Swiss private banking units, while reinforcing areas like online banking through Boursorama and auto leasing via ALD's acquisition of LeasePlan.<ref name="reuters_profile" /><ref name="ft_disposals">{{cite web |url=https://www.ft.com/content/b7be4f06-0710-4c64-835a-4ef088949445 |title=SocGen to sell UK and Swiss private bank units for €900mn |publisher=Financial Times |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> The disposals were intended to free up capital and reduce complexity, even though they temporarily weighed on reported revenues. |
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📈 '''Improving cost-to-income and early financial results.''' By late 2024, there were signs that the cost-cutting and portfolio reshaping were gaining traction. Third-quarter 2024 results beat analyst expectations, helped by a rebound in French retail banking and a double-digit rise in equity trading revenues, and investors welcomed the stronger discipline on expenses and capital.<ref name="reuters_q3_2024" /> Management emphasised progress towards a cost-to-income ratio target below 60% by 2026 and reiterated its commitment to a prudent balance-sheet stance.<ref name="reuters_strategy" /><ref name="ft_retail">{{cite web |url=https://www.ft.com/content/488c1601-ee91-4c4e-b9d5-8b60309b7e61 |title=Société Générale retail arm outshines lacklustre investment banking |publisher=Financial Times |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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== Controversies, criticism and challenges == |
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📉 '''Investor scepticism and debate over strategic ambition.''' Krupa’s tenure has been marked from the outset by a tension between his cautious plan and investors’ hunger for bolder moves. The sharp share-price fall that followed his 2023 strategy presentation was widely interpreted as an expression of disappointment with what some analysts saw as overly modest targets and a reluctance to pursue transformative mergers or disposals.<ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> Critics, including academics quoted in the financial press, have questioned whether a mid-sized institution such as Société Générale can sustainably raise its profitability without exploring consolidation, while supporters argue that the group’s existing franchises in European retail and corporate banking, energy-transition financing and specialised financial services can generate acceptable returns if managed with discipline.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /><ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> Krupa has repeatedly played down the prospect of a near-term merger with another European bank, emphasising instead partnership models such as the AllianceBernstein joint venture in equities, and insisting that steady execution will over time convince the market.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /><ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> |
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== Performance under Krupa and investor perceptions == |
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🌍 '''Legacy risks, Russia exit and workforce anxiety.''' Although Krupa was not chief executive during Société Générale’s costly withdrawal from Russia in 2022, which involved the sale of subsidiary Rosbank at a significant loss following the invasion of Ukraine, he has had to manage the redeployment of capital freed by that exit and ensure that risk and compliance frameworks are robust enough to mitigate similar geopolitical exposures in future.<ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> The restructuring associated with his cost-cutting programme, including plans for several hundred job reductions in central functions, has generated unease among employees and pushback from French trade unions, which have questioned the social impact of cuts announced in parallel with a return to profit.<ref name="Finextra" /><ref name="ReutersJobCuts" /> Management has stressed that most reductions will occur through natural attrition, voluntary departures or redeployments and that the branch network would be largely preserved, but the changes represent a cultural shift in a group traditionally known for a more gradualist internal pace.<ref name="Finextra" /><ref name="ReutersProfile" /> |
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💹 '''Share price evolution and revised targets.''' Despite these operational improvements, [[Société Générale]]'s overall stock performance under Krupa initially lagged the wider European banking index, reflecting persistent market scepticism about its earnings power and strategy.<ref name="reuters_q3_2024" /> Responding to early progress on cost objectives and capital generation, management modestly revised profitability guidance, targeting around 9% return on equity for 2023 instead of 8%, while reiterating longer-term goals for 2026.<ref name="ft_retail" /> |
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♻️ '''ESG and climate-policy criticism.''' The area where Krupa has faced the most visible public criticism has been environmental policy, particularly the bank’s stance on fossil-fuel financing. At the May 2023 annual general meeting, which coincided with his formal start as chief executive, activists from non-governmental organisations including Reclaim Finance and ShareAction challenged Société Générale’s continued participation in financing oil and gas expansion and pressed for stricter exclusions similar to those adopted by some rival banks.<ref name="Reclaim">{{cite web |url=https://reclaimfinance.org/site/en/2023/05/23/societe-generale-agm-a-new-boss-but-no-improvement-for-the-climate/ |title=Société Générale AGM: a new boss, but no improvement for the climate |publisher=Reclaim Finance |date=23 May 2023 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Krupa acknowledged the climate challenge but described the energy transition as “a complicated subject” and argued against abrupt disengagement, instead emphasising a gradual reduction in exposure and support for clients’ transition plans, an approach that activists criticised as insufficient and overly incremental.<ref name="Reclaim" /> Under continued pressure, Société Générale has since tightened its fossil-fuel policies, including commitments not to finance new oil and gas field development, and has expanded its sustainable finance ambitions to more than €300 billion by the mid-2020s, although campaigners continue to monitor the implementation of these pledges.<ref name="Reclaim" /><ref name="Fintech">{{cite web |url=https://fintechmagazine.com/articles/how-will-societe-generale-hit-525bn-green-finance-target |title=COP 29: Societe Generale Boosts Sustainable Finance Goal |publisher=FinTech Magazine |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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🏦 '''Business model adjustments and partnerships.''' On the investment banking side, Krupa promoted an "originate-to-distribute" model that relies less on the group's balance sheet, and he agreed a joint venture in cash equities and research with AllianceBernstein to strengthen the U.S. franchise while limiting capital usage.<ref name="reuters_profile" /><ref name="reuters_strategy" /> Within retail and specialised financial services, he doubled down on Boursorama's digital banking growth and on ALD's expansion in vehicle leasing, presenting these as scalable, capital-light engines of future earnings.<ref name="finextra_jobs" /><ref name="reuters_q3_2024" /> |
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🏛️ '''Regulatory stance and political positioning.''' As head of both the French and European banking federations, Krupa has been closely involved in debates over banking regulation, advocating what he describes as a balanced approach that maintains strong capital and liquidity standards while avoiding rule-making that could unduly disadvantage European banks relative to global competitors.<ref name="EBF" /> He has engaged with national and European authorities on topics such as the implementation of Basel III reforms, proposals for windfall taxes on banks and the creation of a deeper capital markets union, generally favouring pragmatic compromises over polarising public interventions.<ref name="FBF" /><ref name="EBF" /> In domestic social debates he has taken a relatively low-profile stance, continuing programmes on diversity and gender balance inherited from previous management but rarely speaking in partisan terms, a discretion that some observers link to his background in a family that experienced contrasting political regimes and that taught him to distrust ideological extremes.<ref name="LePoint" /><ref name="ReutersProfile" /> |
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📊 '''Ongoing market scepticism.''' Analysts and some investors have continued to question whether the relatively conservative plan is ambitious enough to re-rate the stock, with some commentators calling for more radical moves such as a cross-border merger or further large-scale disposals.<ref name="reuters_profile" /> Krupa has consistently played down the prospect of transformational M&A, arguing that the group can create value as a stand-alone institution by improving efficiency, reallocating capital to higher-return businesses and delivering stable, through-the-cycle performance.<ref name="reuters_strategy" /> |
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== Compensation, industry roles and philanthropy == |
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💶 '''CEO pay package.''' Upon his appointment as chief executive in 2023, [[Société Générale]]'s board set Krupa's annual fixed salary at €1.65 million, an increase of €350,000 compared with his predecessor.<ref name="sg_board_comm">{{cite web |url=https://www.societegenerale.com/sites/default/files/documents/2024-03/communication-post-ca-01-03-24-en.pdf |title=Communication post Board of Directors’ meeting - 01/03/2024 |publisher=Société Générale |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> He is eligible for an annual variable bonus targeted at 120% of base pay and for long-term incentive awards linked to financial and non-financial performance indicators such as profitability, cost control and capital ratios.<ref name="sg_board_comm" /><ref name="dogfinance_pay">{{cite web |url=https://dogfinance.com/actu/carriere/combien-gagnent-vraiment-les-patrons-des-banques |title=Combien gagnent vraiment les patrons des banques ? |publisher=Dogfinance |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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📈 '''Relative position among European bank chiefs.''' In his first full year as CEO, Krupa's total remuneration has been reported at around €5 million, including fixed salary and variable components, making him one of the better-paid banking CEOs in France but still well below compensation levels at major U.S. banks and some large European rivals.<ref name="dogfinance_pay" /><ref name="agefi_ceo_pay">{{cite web |url=https://www.agefi.fr/news/banque-assurance/combien-gagnent-les-patrons-des-plus-grandes-banques-occidentales |title=Combien gagnent les patrons des plus grandes banques occidentales ? |publisher=L’Agefi |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Commentators have noted that his remuneration reflects both the complexity of the turnaround task and regulatory and cultural constraints on pay in the French market. |
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🏛️ '''Leadership in banking associations.''' Beyond his role at [[Société Générale]], Krupa holds prominent positions in industry bodies. In September 2024 he became chairman of the [[French Banking Federation]], representing French banks in national debates on regulation and financial policy.<ref name="fbf_press">{{cite web |url=https://www.fbf.fr/en/slawomir-krupa-to-become-chairman-of-the-french-banking-federation-from-1-september-2024/ |title=Slawomir Krupa to become Chairman of the French Banking Federation from 1 September 2024 |publisher=French Banking Federation |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> In early 2025 he was elected president of the [[European Banking Federation]], giving him a platform in Brussels to advocate for a more integrated European capital market and what he describes as a balanced regulatory approach that preserves banks' competitiveness while safeguarding stability.<ref name="ebf_press">{{cite web |url=https://www.ebf.eu/ebf-media-centre/krupa-elected-new-ebf-president/ |title=Slawomir Krupa elected new EBF President |publisher=European Banking Federation |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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🎭 '''Cultural and charitable involvement.''' Krupa serves as vice-chairman of the Albertine Foundation in New York, a non-profit organisation that promotes French-American cultural and educational exchange linked to the Albertine bookstore and cultural centre.<ref name="sg_bio" /> He has also supported charities such as Imagine for Margo, a French organisation dedicated to children's cancer research, for which he organised fundraising initiatives, including charity runs, during his time in the United States and upon his departure back to France.<ref name="alvarum_charity">{{cite web |url=https://www.alvarum.com/slawomirkrupa |title=La collecte de Slawomir Krupa |publisher=Alvarum |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> |
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== Personal life and management style == |
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👨👩👧 '''Family and cosmopolitan identity.''' Krupa holds dual French and Polish citizenship and is fluent in French, Polish and English.<ref name="reuters_profile" /><ref name="wiki_fr" /> He met his wife, a Polish-born concert pianist, during a posting in Poland in the early 2000s, and the couple have one daughter. For much of the 2010s the family was based in New York due to his role at SG Americas, maintaining ties to the United States even after his return to Paris.<ref name="wiki_fr" /><ref name="sg_bio" /> |
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🗣️ '''Direct and "Anglo-Saxon" leadership style.''' Colleagues and observers often describe Krupa's management style as direct, action-oriented and at times "Anglo-Saxon" in a French banking context, reflecting both his years in the U.S. and his Central European roots.<ref name="reuters_profile" /><ref name="wiki_fr" /> Former SocGen investment banking head Jean-Pierre Mustier, one of his early mentors, has remarked on his capacity to "move forward" and bring teams along with him on difficult decisions.<ref name="reuters_profile" /> Compared with his predecessor, seen as more consensus-seeking, Krupa is known for blunt communication and a willingness to challenge internal orthodoxies, attributes that have earned him both respect and occasional unease within the organisation. |
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⛵ '''Interests and hobbies.''' Outside the office, Krupa is reported to be an enthusiastic sailor, particularly keen on catamaran regattas, a pastime he developed while living near the water in New York.<ref name="wiki_fr" /> He has likened skippering a racing boat with a crew to managing a trading floor, stressing the importance of quick reactions and teamwork under changing conditions. He also enjoys distance running and has participated in charity runs linked to cancer research causes.<ref name="alvarum_charity" /> Despite the visibility of his role, he maintains a relatively low public profile, preferring to spend time with family and colleagues rather than on the Paris social circuit.<ref name="lepoint_profile" /> |
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💬 '''Leadership philosophy.''' In public remarks, including talks at his alma mater, Krupa has emphasised authenticity and intellectual engagement as key to a career in finance, warning students not to choose banking for the wrong reasons and insisting that "there is no true success without staying true to yourself".<ref name="sciencespo_interview" /> He has said that his role as CEO is to "enable others' greatness" rather than to cultivate personal power, and that he encourages open debate within teams while maintaining clear accountability for results.<ref name="sciencespo_interview" /> |
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== Controversies and challenges == |
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📊 '''Strategic scepticism and merger debate.''' The muted market reaction to [[Société Générale]]'s 2026 plan and the sharp share price fall on its announcement highlighted investor doubts about whether Krupa's cautious strategy can significantly improve valuation.<ref name="reuters_strategy" /> Some analysts and academics have argued that the group may ultimately need to consider mergers or more radical restructuring to achieve scale and efficiency comparable to larger European competitors, a path Krupa has so far resisted in favour of incremental portfolio optimisation and partnerships.<ref name="reuters_profile" /> |
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🌍 '''Russia exit and legacy risk issues.''' Although Krupa was not CEO when [[Société Générale]] took a substantial loss on its exit from the Russian bank Rosbank in 2022, he has had to manage the post-transaction reallocation of capital and ensure that lessons are applied to future geostrategic risk decisions.<ref name="reuters_profile" /><ref name="reuters_strategy" /> Earlier legacy issues, including the Jérôme Kerviel rogue trading scandal and multiple compliance settlements, also colour perceptions of the bank; as head of SG Americas, Krupa had been involved in negotiations with U.S. authorities to resolve some of those matters and has since emphasised a stricter culture of risk management and compliance.<ref name="reuters_profile" /><ref name="wiki_fr" /> |
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👷 '''Workforce anxiety and internal culture.''' The cost-cutting programme, including job reductions and limits on external consultancy spending, has raised concerns among employees and unions about workload and morale.<ref name="finextra_jobs" /><ref name="reuters_jobs" /> While there has been no major labour conflict, internal surveys have reflected a mixture of anxiety and cautious optimism, with some staff welcoming clearer priorities and others wary of what they perceive as a more pressurised, performance-driven culture compared with earlier eras.<ref name="reuters_q3_2024" /> |
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♻️ '''Climate policy and activist criticism.''' Krupa's approach to climate finance has drawn criticism from environmental groups. At the May 2023 annual general meeting, his first as CEO, activists from Reclaim Finance and ShareAction urged [[Société Générale]] to move more quickly in ending financing for new oil and gas developments and aligning lending policies with the goals of the Paris Agreement.<ref name="reclaim_climate">{{cite web |url=https://reclaimfinance.org/site/en/2023/05/23/societe-generale-agm-a-new-boss-but-no-improvement-for-the-climate/ |title=Société Générale AGM: a new boss, but no improvement for the climate |publisher=Reclaim Finance |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Krupa acknowledged the scale of the climate challenge but described the energy transition as "a complicated subject", arguing for a gradual approach focused on client transition plans rather than an abrupt halt to fossil fuel financing, which activists criticised as insufficiently ambitious.<ref name="reclaim_climate" /> |
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🌱 '''Climate commitments and ESG positioning.''' Under pressure from stakeholders, [[Société Générale]] has tightened some of its policies since 2023, including announcing that it would cease financing new upstream oil and gas field developments and significantly increasing its sustainable finance targets for the coming decade.<ref name="sustainability_mag">{{cite web |url=https://fintechmagazine.com/articles/how-will-societe-generale-hit-525bn-green-finance-target |title=COP 29: Societe Generale Boosts Sustainable Finance Goal |publisher=FinTech Magazine |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Krupa has emphasised that the group sees itself as a leading arranger in green and sustainability-linked financing, but activist organisations continue to monitor its implementation of climate commitments and to call for tighter criteria on fossil fuel clients.<ref name="reclaim_climate" /> |
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⚖️ '''Regulatory debates and political positioning.''' In his roles at the French and European banking federations, Krupa has taken part in debates over banking regulation, capital requirements and potential windfall taxes, generally advocating robust but proportionate rules that avoid unduly disadvantaging European banks relative to U.S. competitors.<ref name="ebf_press" /> He has tended to avoid strong public positioning on broader political or social issues, instead presenting himself as a pragmatic moderator between regulators, policymakers, shareholders and the banking industry. |
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== Legacy and assessment == |
== Legacy and assessment == |
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🔭 '''Long-term questions over Société Générale’s trajectory.''' Commentators have noted that Krupa’s project for Société Générale hinges on proving that a large but not dominant European bank can restore its reputation and profitability through discipline, simplification and incremental reallocation of capital rather than through dramatic mergers or aggressive risk-taking.<ref name="ReutersStrategy" /><ref name="ReutersProfile" /> Supporters argue that his internal track record—from restructuring SG Americas to revitalising the Global Banking and Investor Solutions division—demonstrates his ability to execute difficult turnarounds, while critics worry that the bank’s structural challenges and competitive pressures may ultimately require bolder moves than those currently envisaged.<ref name="ReutersProfile" /><ref name="FTRetail" /> In a widely read profile, the French magazine ''Le Point'' framed the central question of his mandate as whether this “newcomer” to France’s traditional financial establishment will succeed in “restoring Société Générale’s shine”, a formulation that encapsulates both the expectations and the doubts surrounding his leadership.<ref name="LePoint" /> Krupa, for his part, has continued to express confidence that his conservative plan is “the right one for decades to come”, suggesting that he is playing a long game in which consistent delivery, rather than rapid headline change, will be the ultimate test of his tenure.<ref name="ReutersStrategy" /> |
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🔮 '''Long-term ambitions and open questions.''' Krupa has framed his tenure as a long-term effort to turn [[Société Générale]] into a simpler, more resilient and more profitable European banking group while preserving its role as a pillar of French finance.<ref name="reuters_strategy" /><ref name="lepoint_profile" /> Supporters credit him with tackling long-standing cost and complexity issues and with bringing a more forthright, execution-oriented culture. Critics question whether his cautiously conservative strategy and incremental reforms will be sufficient to close the valuation gap with peers in an industry experiencing rapid technological and competitive change. As of the mid-2020s, the answer to whether he can "restore Société Générale's shine", as one French profile put it, remains a central question for investors and observers of European banking.<ref name="lepoint_profile" /> |
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== Related content & more == |
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== References == |
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=== YouTube videos === |
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{{Youtube thumbnail | nisGh9409qQ | caption=World Economic Forum panel \"Are Banks Ready for the Future?\" featuring Slawomir Krupa at Davos 2024}} |
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{{Youtube thumbnail | cee7AfkfaeI | caption=Slawomir Krupa's talk on the Bang stage at Bpifrance Big 2025 about Societe Generale and the future of banking}} |
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=== biz/articles === |
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* [[Société Générale]] |
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* [[French Banking Federation]] |
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* [[European Banking Federation]] |
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Latest revision as of 16:18, 22 December 2025
"Nothing is impossible; the only thing limiting your life is whatever you choose to be your limitation."
— Slawomir Krupa[3]
Overview
Slawomir Krupa | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1974 (age 51–52) Burgas, Bulgaria |
| Citizenship | French and Polish |
| Education | Degree in international relations |
| Alma mater | Institut d'Études Politiques de Paris (Sciences Po) |
| Occupation(s) | Banker, business executive |
| Employer | Société Générale |
| Known for | Chief executive officer of Société Générale since 2023 |
| Title | Chief Executive Officer |
| Term | 23 May 2023 – present |
| Predecessor | Frédéric Oudéa |
| Board member of | French Banking Federation (chairman); European Banking Federation (president); Albertine Foundation (vice-chairman) |
| Spouse | Polish-born concert pianist |
| Children | 1 daughter |
| Website | https://www.societegenerale.com/en/sg_gouvernance_member/slawomir-krupa |
🏦 Slawomir Krupa (born 1974) is a Franco-Polish banker and business executive who has served since May 2023 as chief executive officer of Société Générale, France’s third-largest listed bank by assets.[4][5] Rising through the bank’s internal inspection and corporate and investment banking ranks, he built a reputation as a demanding “fixer” who restructures underperforming businesses and tightens risk controls, notably during his tenure as chief executive of SG Americas in New York and later as head of the Global Banking and Investor Solutions division.[4][6] As chief executive, Krupa has pursued a conservative “back to basics” strategy focused on capital strength, cost cutting and a simplified business portfolio, a stance that initially disappointed investors but later produced improving earnings and industry influence, including his appointments as chairman of the French Banking Federation and president of the European Banking Federation.[7][8][9]
Early life and education
🧒 Childhood and family background. Krupa was born in 1974 in Burgas, on Bulgaria’s Black Sea coast, to Polish academic parents who were then working abroad before returning to communist-era Kraków, where he spent his early childhood.[4] When he was six the family emigrated to France, settling in Lille; his mother became a linguistics professor and his father a language teacher, providing an intellectual and multilingual household that would later underpin his ease in several cultures and languages.[10] The experience of moving from Eastern Europe to northern France, with parents who had lived under different political systems, later informed his emphasis on adaptability and his aversion to rigid ideological views.[11]
🎓 Sciences Po and intellectual formation. After secondary school in France, Krupa was admitted to the Institut d’Études Politiques de Paris (Sciences Po), where he studied in the international relations section and graduated in 1996.[10] His academic focus was initially oriented towards politics, history and international affairs rather than finance, but a formative course in financial markets convinced him that banking could combine analytical rigor with global exposure.[10] Krupa has said that Sciences Po’s multi-disciplinary teaching encouraged him to analyse problems from several angles rather than in “black and white”, a habit he later applied to risk assessment and strategic decisions inside Société Générale.[10][12]
Career
💼 Entry into Société Générale and inspection work. Upon graduating from Sciences Po in 1996, Krupa joined Société Générale’s prestigious General Inspection department as a junior inspector, embarking on a demanding internal-audit track that rotates high-potential staff through assignments across the group’s businesses and geographies.[5] The role gave him broad exposure to the mechanics of retail and investment banking, from balance sheet management to operational risk, and by 2005 he had joined the management team of the Inspection Générale, supervising missions that scrutinised the bank’s global operations.[5] Colleagues later noted that these formative years shaped his reputation as a disciplined operator who is comfortable challenging entrenched practices when the control framework appears weak.[4]
🚀 Entrepreneurial detour and return to the bank. In 1999, at the height of the dot-com boom and aged 25, Krupa left the relative security of Société Générale to launch an e-finance start-up in Eastern Europe, headquartered in his native Poland.[10] The venture struggled as the technology bubble burst, and he has described the experience as both a “dose of humble pie” and a practical education in risk-taking, failure and resilience.[10] In 2002 he returned to Société Générale, bringing what he characterised as a sharper business sense and a willingness to innovate rather than simply climb the hierarchy, and he later summarised the lesson with the remark that “there is no true success without staying true to yourself”.[10]
📊 Shift to front-office and regional leadership roles. After resuming his inspection responsibilities, Krupa moved in 2007 from audit into front-office roles within the corporate and investment bank, initially as director of strategy and development.[5] He subsequently headed Société Générale’s operations in Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Africa, while also serving as deputy head of the global financing division, overseeing activities such as debt capital markets and leveraged finance alongside his regional portfolio.[5] These overlapping responsibilities gave him detailed knowledge of the bank’s financing franchises from Paris to Casablanca and Moscow, and helped establish his image as a problem-solver who could untangle complex operational and regulatory issues in very different environments.[4]
🗽 Chief executive of SG Americas. A major turning point came in January 2016, when Krupa was appointed chief executive officer of SG Americas, the group’s New York-based subsidiary, at a time when Société Générale’s U.S. platform faced stricter post-crisis regulations, middling profitability and the lingering fallout from sanctions and benchmark-rigging cases that had led to multi-billion-dollar settlements with American authorities.[5][4] In the United States he cut risk exposure in volatile trading businesses, tightened cost discipline and pushed for stronger internal controls, while working to rebuild credibility with regulators such as the Federal Reserve after earlier compliance lapses.[4][12] Under his leadership the American arm’s profitability and stability improved relative to some European peers, bolstering his standing within the wider group as an executive capable of leading a sensitive turnaround in a demanding supervisory environment.[4]
🏛️ Head of Global Banking and Investor Solutions. In 2021, amid a wider reshuffle of Société Générale’s senior management, Krupa returned to Paris to join the group’s executive committee as head of the Global Banking and Investor Solutions division, which encompasses corporate and investment banking and had recently suffered losses in structured products during the market turmoil of 2020.[5] He responded by reducing risk-weighted assets, exiting less profitable niches and articulating a plan for “profitable and sustainable growth” centred on capital efficiency and client-focused franchises.[5][4] Over the following 18 months the division became the group’s main engine of earnings, recording the strongest annual pre-tax profit growth among major French banks and benefiting from double-digit growth in equities trading revenues, developments that helped restore market and internal confidence in the investment bank.[4][6]
👔 Succession race and appointment as chief executive officer. In September 2022, long-serving chief executive Frédéric Oudéa announced his intention to step down after 15 years, triggering speculation over who would lead Société Générale through its next phase.[13] Many observers initially saw Sébastien Proto, a younger deputy with a background in the French civil service, as the likely successor, but in a break with tradition the board chose Krupa, a career banker without experience in the grands corps, as the next chief executive.[13][4] He took office on 23 May 2023 at the age of 48, becoming the first Société Générale chief executive in recent decades not drawn from the ranks of the elite ENA and Finance Ministry network; chairman Lorenzo Bini Smaghi praised his “vision and leadership” and understanding of markets, while his selection was also linked to his track record in investment banking and his strategic ideas for the group’s future.[13][4] At the time of his promotion, Krupa held dual French and Polish citizenship and his family was still based in New York, underlining his international profile.[4]
Strategy and performance as CEO of Société Générale
📉 Mandate and initial market scepticism. When Krupa formally assumed the chief executive role in 2023, Société Générale’s shares were trading at only around 30% of tangible book value, a discount comparable to that of the then-troubled Deutsche Bank and well below domestic rival BNP Paribas, reflecting deep investor scepticism about the group’s profitability and strategic clarity.[4][7] His mandate from the board was to improve returns and articulate a clearer identity for France’s third-largest listed lender, and he signalled early on that he would not pursue large “transformational” mergers in the short term, preferring to focus on balance-sheet strength and operational simplification rather than headline-grabbing deals.[7]
📑 A cautious medium-term plan. In September 2023 Krupa unveiled his first strategic plan, presenting what he called a “realistic” roadmap through 2026 that prioritised resilience over rapid expansion.[7] The bank guided investors to expect flat to modestly positive annual revenue growth of 0–2% and set a target return on tangible equity of 9–10% by 2026, coupled with a slightly reduced payout ratio of 40–50% of earnings and a core tier-one capital ratio comfortably above 13%.[7] The plan acknowledged structural pressures on the French retail bank, notably long-dated fixed-rate mortgage books and regulatory constraints, and the recent volatility of markets-facing activities, and it framed the strategy as one of “promise less, deliver more” after what Krupa saw as earlier episodes of over-ambitious targets.[7]
📉 Negative market reaction and defence of the plan. The market’s immediate reaction to the September 2023 announcement was sharply negative: Société Générale’s shares fell by more than 9% on the day, erasing roughly €2 billion in market capitalisation and marking the stock’s worst single session in six months, while analysts at Jefferies and other brokers criticised the “underwhelming” growth outlook and lower profitability guidance.[7] Krupa publicly defended the plan, arguing that “there would be no sense whatsoever” in setting objectives whose credibility investors would immediately question and insisting that the right approach for the bank was one designed “for decades to come” rather than to satisfy short-term expectations.[7] He framed the subdued revenue ambitions as a deliberate choice to focus on cost control, capital strength and risk management, even at the expense of near-term market approval.[7]
✂️ Cost-cutting and restructuring measures. Central to the new strategy was an ambitious cost-cutting programme targeting €1.7 billion of savings by 2026, equivalent to around 8% of the group’s cost base, to bring the cost-to-income ratio below 60%.[14][7] The measures included completing the integration of Crédit du Nord into Société Générale’s main French retail network, accelerating digitalisation in international subsidiaries, simplifying the organisational structure and overhauling information systems.[14] In January 2024 the bank announced plans to cut around 900 positions in headquarters and central functions in France, mainly through voluntary departures and redeployments, and to reduce external consultancy costs and management layers, steps that drew criticism from unions but were presented by Krupa as necessary to restore competitiveness.[14][15]
💹 Earnings rebound and management shake-up. By late 2024 there were early signs that the cost and simplification drive was contributing to stronger results: in the third quarter of 2024 Société Générale reported net income of about €1.37 billion, roughly four times the level a year earlier, supported by a rebound in French retail banking margins and a 10% rise in equities trading revenues.[6] Seizing the momentum, Krupa announced a shake-up of his top team in October 2024, removing chief financial officer Claire Dumas and appointing Leopoldo Alvear, previously of Spanish bank Sabadell, as the new CFO, while personally taking direct oversight of the domestic retail division and changing its leadership.[6] The combination of strong quarterly earnings and decisive governance changes prompted the bank’s shares to rise by more than 10% in a single session, their largest daily gain in years, turning the stock positive for 2024 and prompting some analysts to suggest that the worst of the strategic reset was behind the group.[6]
📈 Relative performance and strategic adjustments. Despite the rally, Société Générale’s overall share performance under Krupa remained mixed: by the end of 2024 the stock had risen by around 11% since he took office, compared with a roughly 37% increase in a European banking index over the same period, leaving the bank still trading at a discount to peers and subject to what analysts described as a persistent “show-me” valuation.[6][7] In response to early progress on cost targets, Krupa modestly raised the bank’s profitability ambition to about 9% return on equity for 2023, up from an earlier 8% goal, and accelerated efforts to refocus on a smaller set of core businesses, including the rapid expansion of the online bank Boursorama and the integration of LeasePlan into the listed car-leasing subsidiary ALD to exploit growth in auto leasing.[16][14] In investment banking he has promoted an “originate-to-distribute” model less reliant on using the bank’s balance sheet and backed a joint venture with AllianceBernstein in cash equities and research in order to bolster the U.S. franchise without heavy capital consumption.[4][7]
Financial compensation and external roles
💶 Remuneration as chief executive. As chief executive of Société Générale, Krupa receives a remuneration package that is significant by French standards but modest compared with those of leading U.S. bank chiefs. When he took the top job in 2023 the board set his fixed annual salary at €1.65 million, around €350,000 higher than that of his predecessor, and made him eligible for a variable bonus target of 120% of fixed pay and long-term incentive awards conditional on performance metrics such as profitability, cost control and capital ratios.[17][18] In 2024, his first full year in the role, his total pay amounted to about €5 million, including roughly €2.23 million in variable compensation, making him the highest-paid banking chief executive in France that year but still far below some European and U.S. peers.[18][19] Commentators noted that his remuneration remained a small fraction of that of figures such as JPMorgan Chase’s chief executive, underscoring the structural pay gap between Wall Street and continental European banks.[19]
📊 Wealth, shareholding and governance requirements. Krupa’s personal net worth is not publicly disclosed in detail, and there is no indication that he holds an unusually large equity stake in Société Générale; as a long-serving professional manager rather than a founder, his wealth largely derives from salary, bonuses and deferred stock awards.[18][19] The bank’s governance rules require the chief executive to hold a minimum number of Société Générale shares, but public filings suggest that Krupa’s holding is well below 0.1% of the company’s capital, aligning his interests with those of shareholders without conferring controlling influence.[20]
🏛️ Roles in French and European banking associations. Beyond his responsibilities at Société Générale, Krupa has emerged as a prominent industry representative. In 2024 he became chairman of the French Banking Federation (FBF), the professional body representing banks operating in France, for a one-year term starting on 1 September.[8] In this capacity he has engaged with policymakers and regulators on issues ranging from macroprudential rules to consumer protection, positioning himself as a spokesperson for the sector’s concerns. The following year he was elected president of the European Banking Federation (EBF), succeeding the chief executive of Deutsche Bank and giving him a continental platform to advocate for deeper European capital markets and a regulatory framework that balances financial stability with the competitiveness of EU banks against U.S. and Asian rivals.[9]
🎭 Cultural and philanthropic engagements. Krupa also holds positions outside pure banking: he serves as vice-chairman of the Albertine Foundation in New York, a cultural organisation promoting French-American exchange in education and the arts, reflecting ties built during his years in the United States.[20] He has supported charitable causes including Imagine for Margo, a French organisation dedicated to children’s cancer research, for which he has raised funds through sponsorship drives and charity runs, asking contacts to contribute to medical research in lieu of traditional farewell gifts when he left New York.[21] These activities complement his professional advocacy on financial-sector issues and contribute to his public image as a banker attentive to wider social and cultural questions.[20]
Personal life and leadership style
🌍 Cosmopolitan identity and family. Krupa holds both French and Polish citizenship, speaks French and Polish fluently and is also at ease in English, and he often refers to himself as having multiple cultural identities shaped by his childhood in Eastern Europe and adulthood in France and the United States.[4][12] He met his future wife, a Polish-born concert pianist, during a posting back in Poland in the early 2000s, and the couple have one daughter; for much of the 2010s the family lived in New York during his tenure at SG Americas and continued to maintain links with the United States even after his return to Paris.[12][11] Friends and colleagues have suggested that this transatlantic life contributes to his ease in navigating different social and business milieus, from French regulatory circles to U.S. markets and Central European contexts.[4]
🧭 Management approach and reputation inside the bank. Inside Société Générale, Krupa is often characterised as direct, action-oriented and impatient with bureaucracy, traits that some observers describe as closer to an “Anglo-Saxon” management style than the more consensual approach associated with parts of the French establishment.[4][11] Former Société Générale investment banking head Jean-Pierre Mustier, later chief executive of UniCredit, has commented that Krupa has “a way of moving forward, of taking people with him,” while subordinates have remarked that his bluntness means “you always know where you stand”.[4] He is known to drill into details, push teams hard and rapidly change leadership when performance lags, as demonstrated by his decisions to reshuffle the French retail arm and replace the group’s chief financial officer, moves that sent a signal that mediocrity would not be tolerated.[6][7]
🏃 Interests and life outside the office. Away from the executive floor, Krupa is described by acquaintances as affable, witty and intellectually curious, maintaining a long-standing interest in history and international affairs that dates back to his university studies.[11][12] During his years near the water in New York he developed a passion for sailing, particularly catamaran regattas, and he has drawn parallels between skippering a fast multihull with a crew and managing a trading floor, emphasising the need for rapid, coordinated responses to changing conditions.[12] He also enjoys distance running and has been seen jogging along the Seine and participating in charity races linked to causes such as Imagine for Margo, integrating physical challenges with fundraising efforts.[21] Despite leading one of Europe’s major banks, he keeps a comparatively low public profile, preferring time with his family to the Paris social circuit and often eschewing some of the formalities that traditionally surround French corporate leaders.[11]
🧱 Leadership philosophy and views on career choice. In public appearances, including talks to students at his alma mater, Krupa has stressed the importance of authenticity and intellectual engagement in professional life, warning young people not to “choose banking for the wrong reasons” and arguing that a sustainable career requires genuine interest in the subject matter.[10] He has spoken of his role as chief executive as that of “enabling others’ greatness” by creating conditions in which teams can debate openly and take responsibility, rather than relying on hierarchy for its own sake, and he encourages dissenting views in meetings as long as the final decisions are then executed collectively.[10][4] Some commentators have suggested that his forthright style could be a double-edged sword in an industry where diplomacy can smooth conflicts, but thus far he has managed to build a coalition of supportive executives by mixing new appointments with continuity in key positions.[4][6]
Controversies, criticism and challenges
📉 Investor scepticism and debate over strategic ambition. Krupa’s tenure has been marked from the outset by a tension between his cautious plan and investors’ hunger for bolder moves. The sharp share-price fall that followed his 2023 strategy presentation was widely interpreted as an expression of disappointment with what some analysts saw as overly modest targets and a reluctance to pursue transformative mergers or disposals.[7] Critics, including academics quoted in the financial press, have questioned whether a mid-sized institution such as Société Générale can sustainably raise its profitability without exploring consolidation, while supporters argue that the group’s existing franchises in European retail and corporate banking, energy-transition financing and specialised financial services can generate acceptable returns if managed with discipline.[4][7] Krupa has repeatedly played down the prospect of a near-term merger with another European bank, emphasising instead partnership models such as the AllianceBernstein joint venture in equities, and insisting that steady execution will over time convince the market.[4][7]
🌍 Legacy risks, Russia exit and workforce anxiety. Although Krupa was not chief executive during Société Générale’s costly withdrawal from Russia in 2022, which involved the sale of subsidiary Rosbank at a significant loss following the invasion of Ukraine, he has had to manage the redeployment of capital freed by that exit and ensure that risk and compliance frameworks are robust enough to mitigate similar geopolitical exposures in future.[7] The restructuring associated with his cost-cutting programme, including plans for several hundred job reductions in central functions, has generated unease among employees and pushback from French trade unions, which have questioned the social impact of cuts announced in parallel with a return to profit.[14][15] Management has stressed that most reductions will occur through natural attrition, voluntary departures or redeployments and that the branch network would be largely preserved, but the changes represent a cultural shift in a group traditionally known for a more gradualist internal pace.[14][4]
♻️ ESG and climate-policy criticism. The area where Krupa has faced the most visible public criticism has been environmental policy, particularly the bank’s stance on fossil-fuel financing. At the May 2023 annual general meeting, which coincided with his formal start as chief executive, activists from non-governmental organisations including Reclaim Finance and ShareAction challenged Société Générale’s continued participation in financing oil and gas expansion and pressed for stricter exclusions similar to those adopted by some rival banks.[22] Krupa acknowledged the climate challenge but described the energy transition as “a complicated subject” and argued against abrupt disengagement, instead emphasising a gradual reduction in exposure and support for clients’ transition plans, an approach that activists criticised as insufficient and overly incremental.[22] Under continued pressure, Société Générale has since tightened its fossil-fuel policies, including commitments not to finance new oil and gas field development, and has expanded its sustainable finance ambitions to more than €300 billion by the mid-2020s, although campaigners continue to monitor the implementation of these pledges.[22][23]
🏛️ Regulatory stance and political positioning. As head of both the French and European banking federations, Krupa has been closely involved in debates over banking regulation, advocating what he describes as a balanced approach that maintains strong capital and liquidity standards while avoiding rule-making that could unduly disadvantage European banks relative to global competitors.[9] He has engaged with national and European authorities on topics such as the implementation of Basel III reforms, proposals for windfall taxes on banks and the creation of a deeper capital markets union, generally favouring pragmatic compromises over polarising public interventions.[8][9] In domestic social debates he has taken a relatively low-profile stance, continuing programmes on diversity and gender balance inherited from previous management but rarely speaking in partisan terms, a discretion that some observers link to his background in a family that experienced contrasting political regimes and that taught him to distrust ideological extremes.[11][4]
Legacy and assessment
🔭 Long-term questions over Société Générale’s trajectory. Commentators have noted that Krupa’s project for Société Générale hinges on proving that a large but not dominant European bank can restore its reputation and profitability through discipline, simplification and incremental reallocation of capital rather than through dramatic mergers or aggressive risk-taking.[7][4] Supporters argue that his internal track record—from restructuring SG Americas to revitalising the Global Banking and Investor Solutions division—demonstrates his ability to execute difficult turnarounds, while critics worry that the bank’s structural challenges and competitive pressures may ultimately require bolder moves than those currently envisaged.[4][16] In a widely read profile, the French magazine Le Point framed the central question of his mandate as whether this “newcomer” to France’s traditional financial establishment will succeed in “restoring Société Générale’s shine”, a formulation that encapsulates both the expectations and the doubts surrounding his leadership.[11] Krupa, for his part, has continued to express confidence that his conservative plan is “the right one for decades to come”, suggesting that he is playing a long game in which consistent delivery, rather than rapid headline change, will be the ultimate test of his tenure.[7]
References
- ↑ "Slawomir Krupa: There is no true success without staying true to yourself". Sciences Po American Foundation.
- ↑ "My role at Societe Generale is to enable others' greatness". Sciences Po American Foundation.
- ↑ "My role at Societe Generale is to enable others' greatness". Sciences Po American Foundation.
- ↑ 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 4.14 4.15 4.16 4.17 4.18 4.19 4.20 4.21 4.22 4.23 4.24 4.25 4.26 "Krupa, hard-driving veteran entrusted with reviving Societe Generale". Reuters. 23 May 2023. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 "Executive Committee biographies" (PDF). Société Générale. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 "SocGen jumps after CEO shakes up top team, rival BNP falters". Reuters. 31 October 2024. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 7.00 7.01 7.02 7.03 7.04 7.05 7.06 7.07 7.08 7.09 7.10 7.11 7.12 7.13 7.14 7.15 7.16 7.17 7.18 "SocGen shares plummet after new CEO's strategy disappoints". Reuters. 18 September 2023. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 "Slawomir Krupa to become Chairman of the French Banking Federation from 1 September 2024". French Banking Federation. 26 July 2024. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 "Slawomir Krupa elected new EBF President". European Banking Federation. 4 February 2025. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 10.6 10.7 10.8 "Slawomir Krupa: "There is no true success without staying true to yourself"". Sciences Po American Foundation. 2022. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 11.5 11.6 "Son plan pour sa banque, son enfance en Pologne… Les confidences du nouveau patron de la Société Générale". Le Point. 31 May 2024. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 "Slawomir Krupa". Wikipédia (French). Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 "At Société Générale, a break with tradition as a new boss is chosen". Le Monde. 3 October 2022. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 14.5 "Societe Generale to cuts 900 jobs in France". Finextra. 19 January 2024. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 "Societe Generale plans job cuts in France to trim costs- Bloomberg News". Reuters. 19 January 2024. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 "Société Générale retail arm outshines lacklustre investment banking ..." Financial Times. 2025. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ "Communication post Board of Directors' meeting - 01/03/2024" (PDF). Société Générale. 1 March 2024. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 18.2 "Combien gagnent vraiment les patrons des banques ?". Dogfinance. 27 March 2025. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 19.2 "Combien gagnent les patrons des plus grandes banques occidentales ?". L'Agefi. 10 April 2025. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 20.2 "Slawomir Krupa". Société Générale. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 21.0 21.1 "La collecte de Slawomir Krupa". Alvarum. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 22.2 "Société Générale AGM: a new boss, but no improvement for the climate". Reclaim Finance. 23 May 2023. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
- ↑ "COP 29: Societe Generale Boosts Sustainable Finance Goal". FinTech Magazine. Retrieved 2025-11-20.