The boss of challenger bank Starling is stepping down nine years after founding it.

Anne Boden, the first British woman to start a new bank, said she would relinquish the role of chief executive at the end of next month.

She will remain on the board as a non-executive director as well as a shareholder with a 4.9 per cent stake worth £122.5million.

Boden also highlighted her ambition for the company she founded in 2014 to float on the stock market – predicted to happen within two years.

‘Starling is bigger than just one person. It is a piece of infrastructure that is important to the UK. We provide a real role in society,’ she said.

Founder: Starling boss Anne Boden, the first British woman to start a new bank, said she would relinquish the role of chief exec at the end of next month

Founder: Starling boss Anne Boden, the first British woman to start a new bank, said she would relinquish the role of chief exec at the end of next month

She said it was not appropriate’ to have a shareholder as chief executive, due to potential conflicts of interest.

Chief operating officer John Mountain will fill the role until a replacement is appointed. Starling reported a record profit of £195million for the year to the end of March – more than six times the previous year’s £32million. 

Revenues ballooned to £453million from £216million as it cashed in on rising interest rates.

As a digital-only bank, it has no branches and allows customers to run accounts on their phones. 

It has over 3.6m accounts and a funding round last year valued it at £2.5billion. Boden, 63, set it up after the 2008 financial crisis.

She told the BBC: ‘I was ashamed to be part of that whole regime that had let the country down. 

‘I wanted to found a bank that was really good for customers, that was fair. And people never believed I could do it and be profitable. So here we are, we’ve done it.’

This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

7 rarest old coins including London Mint sovereign that could be worth up to £25,000

COIN collectors or people who’ve inherited old change could be sitting on…

‘I have to move my bike to get to the fridge’ – the UK boom in microflats

From rentals the size of a tiny hotel room to Barratt’s pocket-sized…

Tesla cheers record results as sales boom

Tesla posted record quarterly results last night amid booming demand for its…

Haunted by shame: victims of bank transfer scams tell of lasting trauma

Fraud can have devastating consequences on victims, and not only financially Mary…