Nigel Wicks


Sir Nigel Leonard Wicks is a British financier and former senior British civil servant, currently serving as Chairman of Euroclear.

Career

Educated originally at Beckenham and Penge Grammar School, Wicks joined British Petroleum in 1958 at the age of 18. Whilst at BP, Wicks studied for a University of London external MA in business administration at the Portsmouth College of Technology, now part of the University of Portsmouth.
After 10 years at BP, Wicks joined HM Treasury in 1968. At the Treasury, Wicks undertook a number of positions including secondments to the Prime Minister's Office as a Private Secretary to the Prime Minister and at the British Embassy in Washington, D.C. as Economic Minister from 1983–1985.
In 1985, Wicks took up his position as Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, a post he held for three years until returning to the Treasury as Second Permanent Secretary with responsibility for International Finance, where he remained for twelve years until reaching mandatory retirement age in 2000. After Wick's retirement, the Treasury's International Finance command was merged into that of Macro-Economic Policy, led by Gus O'Donnell.
After retirement, Wicks moved into finance; he served as Chairman of CRESTCo for a year from 2001 until it merged with Euroclear, where he was Deputy chairman 2002–2006 and since then as chairman. Wicks also served as a non-executive director of Morgan Stanley for three years from 2004, and of The Edinburgh Investment Trust since 2005.
In public appointments, Wicks was appointed Chairman of the Committee on Standards in Public Life from 2001–2004, as Chair of the panel appointing the initial members of the then-new Judicial Appointments Commission in 2005, and since 2007 has been Commissioner of the Jersey Financial Services Commission.
In October 2012, Wicks was appointed chairman of the British Bankers Association.

Personal life

As well as his MA degree from the University of London, Wicks holds an MA degree from the University of Cambridge, and honorary LLD degrees from the Universities of Bath and Portsmouth. He is married with three sons.
Wicks was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in Prime Minister Callaghan's Resignation Honours list in 1979, a Commander of the Royal Victorian Order in the 1989 New Year Honours, and a Knight Commander in the 1992 New Year Honours, and then promoted to a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath in the 1999 New Year Honours.

Positions held