Omar Kutayba Alghanim (born 1973) is a Kuwaiti businessperson.[1][2][3] He has been chairman of Gulf Bank and CEO of Alghanim Industries.
Early life, education, career
editBorn in 1973 in Kuwait, Alghanim spent much of his youth in the United States. After he earned his undergraduate degree, he joined Morgan Stanley in London.[3] After graduating Harvard Business School, at age 29 he moved from an investment banking training program at Morgan Stanley for the Alghanim family business in Kuwait.[1] According to Spear's, he joined Alghanim Industries in 2003, a diversified conglomerate with branches including automotive, banking, consumer electronics, and oil in gas. He became CEO in 2005, and left in 2019.[3]
In March 2013, Omar Kutayba Alghanim was appointed chairman of Kuwait’s Gulf Bank KSC. The appointment came after Mahmoud Al Nouri stepped down for health reasons.[4]
He won the Arabian Business Businessman of the Year award in 2013,[5] and Arabian Business then named him among the 100 Most Powerful Arabs of 2014.[6]
In 2015, as CEO of Alghanim Industries and chairman of Gulf Bank, he won the Visionary of the Year Award at the CEO Middle East Awards held in Dubai.[7]
In 2016, he received the Knowledge and Education Development CEO Excellence Award from the Middle East Excellence Awards Institute.[8]
In June 2018, he succeeded Abdulaziz Abdulla Al Ghurair as head of the Family Business Council - Gulf.[9]
In 2018, he was responsible for and signed an initiative agreement along with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, to raise $10 million and immediately donate $1.5 million to educate and train Syrian refugees.[10]
As of 2019, he continued to control Alghanim Trading, which also had a stake in the Gulf Bank.[11]
He ranked second of the seven Kuwaitis in the Gulf Business annual Arab Power list for 2020, ranking 32 overall, having ranked 34 the year prior. As of 2020, he remained chairman of the Gulf Bank. He was also a member of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) MENA sustainability board.[2]
As of 2021, he was working on a project for the Family Business Network (FBN), sitting on its board and chairing its Gulf chapter. He was also on the board of the NGO INJAZ Al-Arab, after co-founding the organization in 2002. Around 2021, he formed the impact investment fund Yakoa in London.[3]
References
edit- ^ a b "Exclusive: Inside the mind of Omar Alghanim," Ed Attwood, February 16, 2015; Arabian Business
- ^ a b "Revealed: Top 5 most powerful Arabs in Kuwait," February 22, 2020, gulfbusiness.com; Gulf Business
- ^ a b c d "Liquid Lunch: Omar Alghanim talks his family firm, and how it’s inspired his next venture," Edwin Smith, November 21, 2021; Spear's Wealth Management Survey
- ^ "Gulf Bank appoints Omar Alghanim as chairman-statement," March 16, 2013; Reuters
- ^ "Gulf Bank boss takes top honours at Kuwait awards," September 22, 2013; Arabian Business
- ^ "Omar Alghanim," 2014; Arabian Business
- ^ "And the winner is… 2015’s richest, most powerful and those destined to be the stars of the future," Dec 25, 2015; Arabian Business
- ^ "Omar Alghanim Wins Prestigious CEO Award - Receives Knowledge and Education Development CEO Award," June 19, 2016; Arab Times Online
- ^ "Family Business Council – Gulf names new chairman," June 13, 2018; Arabian Business
- ^ "Alghanim Signs MoU With UNHCR To Train Syrian Refugees In MENA ," Jan 31, 2018; Asia Biz News
- ^ "Gulf Bank Shareholder Aims to Build $880 Million Stake in Lender," Abbas Al Lawati, Feb 2, 2019; Bloomberg