CURRICULUM VITAE
Nicholas Whitlam is a company director and former banker.
As CEO and chairman of leading Australian financial institutions, Nicholas Whitlam has participated in most aspects of banking, insurance, superannuation and asset management. At present, apart from private interests, he is involved in establishing the China-related Generations Fund and is non-executive chairman of Salaam Wealth and the State Insurance Regulatory Authority.
Whitlam joined Morgan Guaranty Trust Co (now JP Morgan) in 1969, working at headquarters in New York and then London, where he rose to the position of Vice President. In 1976 and 1977 he worked with American Express in Sydney and Hong Kong; still in Hong Kong, he was with Banque de Paris et des Pays-bas (“Paribas”) from 1978 to 1980. In 1980 he was appointed an executive Commissioner of the Rural Bank of New South Wales; on its reconstitution as the State Bank of New South Wales in 1981, he was appointed Managing Director and CEO of the new bank - and led it from 1981 to 1987. During this time, in 1984, he chaired the “Whitlam Committee”, which recommended the establishment of offshore banking in Australia.
In 1987, together with Malcolm Turnbull, he established the investment bank Whitlam Turnbull. Since 1990 he has provided consulting services and held his private interests via Whitlam & Co.
Whitlam was President of the National Roads and Motorists’ Association, Australia’s largest mutual organisation, from 1996 to 2002. He chaired NRMA Insurance, Australia’s largest general insurance company, from 1996 to 2001, and while at NRMA Insurance he led the process by which that company was demutualised and listed on the Australian Stock Exchange (as Insurance Australia Group or IAG).
In recent years Whitlam has been heavily involved in two disparate sectors-
ports and logistics, where he served as chairman of the new Port Authority of New South Wales from its establishment in 2014 to mid-2018; earlier, from 2004, first in Port Kembla and then in Sydney and Newcastle, he chaired all three NSW port corporations - Sydney, Newcastle and Port Kembla - prior to their amalgamation as the new port authority;
and
the disability and compensation sector, where he has served as chairman of the Lifetime Care & Support Authority and deputy chairman of the WorkCover Fund and WorkCover NSW.
Earlier public sector roles include serving as a director of the Australian Trade Commission and the Export Finance & Insurance Corporation.
Whitlam represented New South Wales and Harvard in swimming. For the 2000 Olympics, he was a member of the Sydney Olympic Games Review Committee (which recommended the bid), and he subsequently served as a member of the Sydney Olympic Games Bid Committee; at the Olympics, he served as Attaché for Hong Kong. He is a former Chairman of Tattersall’s Club, Sydney, has been a Trustee of the Sydney Cricket & Sports Ground and was an inaugural director of the Australian Sports Foundation.
He chaired the Sydney Symphony Orchestra in the 1990s, and for many years chaired the Australian Graduate School of Management and the Whitlam Institute.
Whitlam holds degrees from Harvard University (AB cum laude, 1967) and the University of London (MSc, 1969). He has been awarded honorary doctorates by The University of New South Wales (Hon.DUniv, 1996) and Western Sydney University (Hon.DLitt, 2016). Publications include his new book Paris 1924, Four Weeks One Summer, his memoir, Still Standing and Nest of Traitors. He was born in Sydney and attended Sydney High School. Whitlam is married to Judy (née Frye); they now live in the Sydney suburb of Woollahra, have three adult children and three grandchildren.