Glencore turns to familiar names for board roles

By Quentin Webb and Eric Onstad

LONDON (Reuters) - Glencore, the Swiss commodity trader, named former BP Chief Executive Tony Hayward to lead a five-strong team of independent directors, as it launched a flotation that could top $12 billion.

Investors considering backing what could be London's largest-ever listing are likely to scrutinize the directors' experience and ability to stand up to an executive team used to running a tight-knit partnership with little outside influence.

However, several directors have close links to Glencore. They include a former classmate of CEO Ivan Glasenberg, a former chairman of a Glencore subsidiary and a holder of the trading and mining giant's convertible bonds.

Glencore named Peter Coates, the outgoing chairman of Glencore subsidiary Minara Resources Ltd, and William Macaulay, the chairman and CEO of energy buyout firm First Reserve, which helped Glencore prepare for listing, as independent directors.

Also on the list are RHJ International SA CEO Leonhard Fischer and Hong Kong businessman Li Ning -- a contemporary of Glasenberg's at a Californian business school in the early 1980s.

The directors will serve alongside executive directors Ivan Glasenberg, CEO, and Steven Kalmin, chief financial officer, on the eight-strong board. Hours after its initial statement on the flotation, Glencore named Simon Murray, Polar adventurer and former Vodafone board member as its non-executive chairman.

Following are profiles of the non-executive independent directors:

THE OIL MAN

Tony Hayward, 53, stepped down as BP CEO in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, which killed 11 men and triggered the worst oil spill in U.S. history.

Hayward, who helped stoke public and political outcry with a string of PR gaffes, said he felt "demonized and vilified" at his treatment.

Still, he is beginning to notch up new industry roles -- people familiar with the matter say he is preparing to launch an energy investment company with financier Nat Rothschild.

THE MINER

Peter Coates, 65, has longstanding ties to Glencore. He stepped down as chairman of Minara, the Australian nickel producer which is 70.5 percent owned by Glencore, on Monday.

Until 2007, he was CEO of the coal division of Xstrata Plc, the London-listed miner 34.5 percent owned by Glencore.

Coates holds a degree in mining engineering and is former chairman of the Minerals Council of Australia.

THE BANKER

Leonhard Fischer, 48, is CEO of RHJ, the European investment firm spun off from U.S. private equity firm Ripplewood Holdings.

A former JPMorgan trader, Fischer ran Dresdner Bank's investment bank, Dresdner Kleinwort, in his thirties and later turned round Credit Suisse's insurance arm Winterthur.

Last year RHJ bought Kleinwort Benson from Commerzbank, which rescued Dresdner, and Fischer is aiming to build a "classical merchant banking business" around the storied brand.

THE ENERGY BUYOUT BARON

William Macaulay, who is 65 and valued by Forbes magazine at about $1.1 billion, is a pioneer of leveraged buyouts (LBOs) targeting the energy industry, and has already backed Glencore.

He is the boss of First Reserve, the Greenwich, Connecticut firm that is one of the biggest private-equity investors in energy, and whose most recent fund raised $9 billion.

First Reserve was in a select band of investors that bought more than $2 billion of Glencore bonds in late 2009 that will convert into equity when the IPO completes.

Macaulay is chairman of Dresser-Rand Group Inc, a firm floated by First Reserve, and has held board positions at 10 of the world's 50 biggest oilfield services companies.

THE HONG KONG BUSINESSMAN

Li Ning, 53, is the son-in-law of Lee Shau Kee, the tycoon behind Henderson Land Development Co and Henderson Investment Ltd. Li serves as an executive director at both companies.

His father-in-law is Hong Kong's second-richest man, with a fortune estimated at $18.5 billion by Forbes.

Li and Glasenberg both earned MBAs from the University of Southern California's Marshall School of Business in 1983, USC records show.

(Reporting by Quentin Webb; additional reporting by Eric Onstad; editing by Sophie Walker)