People Moves
Change At Top Of Sun Life Financial

The business, which is based in Canada, operates worldwide and provides services including wealth and asset management.
Sun Life
Financial, the Toronto-listed global group that provides
wealth management among its offerings, yesterday said that
its president and chief executive, Dean Connor, is to retire in
August next year.
Kevin Strain, executive vice-president and chief financial
officer, will be made president and a member of the Sun Life
board of directors with effect from 15 February 2021. He will
assume the CEO role when Connor retires. (The men are pictured
below.)
"In his 14 years at Sun Life and nearly 10 years as president and
CEO, Dean retires after a distinguished career where he
transformed Sun Life to become one of the top insurance and asset
management companies in the world,” Bill Anderson, chairman, said
in a statement.
Connor’s time at the helm has coincided with a 12 per cent annual
rise in underlying earnings per share, annualised total
shareholder return of 19 per cent and a rise in assets under
management to C$1.2 trillion ($926 million) from C$466
billion.
Strain – the forthcoming CEO - joined Clarica in 1997, which was
acquired by Sun Life in 2002. He has held senior business and
financial posts including the leadership of the Individual
Insurance and Investments business in Canada. He launched Sun
Life Global Investments (now known as SLGI Asset Management)
before assuming leadership of Sun Life Asia in 2012, where he
expanded into Vietnam and Malaysia and built the firm's
distribution capabilities in the region. He returned to Canada in
2017 where he assumed the role of executive vice president and
chief financial officer along with responsibility for corporate
development and enterprise services.
Strain will continue working with Connor and the board to recruit
a new chief financial officer in the first half of 2021. Until a
new CFO is appointed, Strain will retain that title and
responsibilities.
Sun Life operates worldwide including Canada, the US, the UK,
Ireland, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Japan, Indonesia, India,
China, Australia, Singapore, Vietnam, Malaysia and
Bermuda.