Janice Fukakusa Explained

Janice Fukakusa
Order:5th
Office:Chancellor of Toronto Metropolitan University
President:Mohamed Lachemi
Predecessor:Lawrence Bloomberg
Occupation:Business executive, University chancellor
Known For:Former CFO of RBC,
Founding chairperson of the Canada Infrastructure Bank,
Chancellor of Toronto Metropolitan University

Janice R. Fukakusa (born 1955) is a Canadian business executive and current chancellor of Toronto Metropolitan University. She was both the chief financial officer and the chief administrative officer of the Royal Bank of Canada for 8 years. Following her retirement from the bank in 2017 after a 31-year career, she was appointed to 15 corporate, non-profit or government boards. She was notably the Canada Infrastructure Bank's founding chairperson, a position she held from 2017 to 2020.

Early life and education

Janice Fukakusa was born in 1955 in a family of 8 children. Her parents were Japanese immigrants to Canada, and her father was an entrepreneur.[1] Her first job was as a cashier at a dry cleaning business.[2]

Fukakusa studied at the University of Toronto where she received a Bachelor of Arts in Political science and Philosophy. She then studied to become a chartered accountant and obtained a Master of Business Administration at York University's Schulich School of Business in 1979.

Career

PricewaterhouseCoopers

After her studies, Janice Fukakusa worked in the auditing then business valuation departments of PricewaterhouseCoopers. She describes the latter job as a "pretty good springboard for me into the financial services and banking sector".[3]

RBC

In 1985, Fukakusa started to work at the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) in mergers and acquisitions. Over the years, she worked in retail banking, corporate finance, business banking and treasury within RBC.[4] In 2004, she was appointed chief financial officer of the bank, and also became chief administrative officer in 2009.[5] She says that, in these roles, she worked to diversify the upper echelons of the bank to include more women and people of diverse backgrounds, and coached multiple women to take leadership roles at RBC.

In 2007, Fukakusa was inducted into Canada's Most Powerful Women Hall of Fame.[6] In 2013, Fukakusa took part in the administration of RBC's acquisition of Ally Canada, the Canadian operations of Ally Financial, which were fully integrated into RBC.[7] In 2014, she was nominated as Canada's CFO of the Year by Financial Executives Canada, PricewaterhouseCoopers and Robert Half.[8] That year, she earned C$4.96 million in compensation excluding pension, the highest she made in one year.[9]

For four consecutive years from 2013 to 2016, the American Banker magazine named Fukakusa one of the 25 Most Powerful Women in Banking. She retired from RBC on January 31, 2017, after a 31-year career at the bank. Upon her retirement, she was Canada's highest-paid female banking executive, with revenues of C$4.67 million in 2016.

Board member

Following her retirement from RBC, Janice Fukakusa has been part of 15 corporate, non-profit and government boards.[10]

Canada Infrastructure Bank

In July 2017, Fukakusa became the founding chairperson of the board of directors of the Canada Infrastructure Bank (CIB).[11] She says she "spent a lot of the first six months just setting up base infrastructure, premises, governance in place, all of that". She also took part in selecting the rest of the board of directors, executives, and investment staff.

The CIB came under heavy criticism during Fukakusa's tenure as chairperson of the bank. Some right-wing groups criticized its slow approval process, while left-wing organisations objected to its mandate of promoting public–private partnerships. Both the Conservative Party and the New Democratic Party, Canada's two main opposition parties, promised to wind it down if they were elected in the 2019 Canadian federal election.[12] That fall, Fukakusa announced her intention to step down from the bank leadership. She eventually left the CIB in April 2020.[13]

Toronto Metropolitan University

In 2018, Janice Fukakusa became Ryerson University's fifth chancellor, the first woman in that position. Under her chancellorship, the university changed its name to Toronto Metropolitan University in 2022.

Other

As of 2021, Janice Fukakusa is notably part of the board of directors of Loblaw Companies, Brookfield Asset Management, RioCan Real Estate Investment Trust, the Schulich School of Business and Cineplex Entertainment. In the latter position, she earns C$120,000 per year as the Independent Director of Cineplex.[14]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2015-11-20. An interview with Janice Fukakusa, one of the most powerful women in banking. 2021-07-18. Nikkei Voice The Japanese Canadian National Newspaper. en-US.
  2. Web site: Janice Fukakusa (MBA '79). 2021-07-18. Schulich School of Business. en-US.
  3. Web site: 2019-09-13. A profile of Janice Fukakusa, chair of the Canada Infrastructure Bank. 2021-07-18. Benefits Canada.com. en.
  4. Web site: 2016-10-21. RBC CFO Janice Fukakusa to retire after 31 years at bank - BNN Bloomberg. 2021-07-18. BNN Bloomberg. The Canadian Press.
  5. News: 21 October 2016. RBC's CFO Janice Fukakusa to retire. The Globe and Mail. The Canadian Press. 2021-07-18.
  6. Web site: Janice Fukakusa, Chancellor. 2021-07-18. Ryerson University. en.
  7. News: February 20, 2013. RBC to close accounts at newly acquired Ally Financial. CBC News. The Canadian Press.
  8. Web site: PricewaterhouseCoopers. Janice Fukakusa, PwC alumnus, wins CFO of the year for 2014. 2021-07-18. PwC. en-ca.
  9. News: 13 March 2017. RBC's Janice Fukakusa sets pay benchmark for Canada's female bankers. 2021-07-18. Bloomberg News. Financial Post. en-CA .
  10. Web site: Janice Fukakusa, Board Chair & Interim Chief Executive Officer at The Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation - Relationship Science. 2021-07-18. relationshipscience.com.
  11. News: 6 July 2017. Janice Fukakusa announced as new chair of Canada Infrastructure Bank. CBC News. The Canadian Press.
  12. News: Curry. Bill. July 30, 2019. Canada Infrastructure Bank executive Nicholas Hann resigns amid growing industry frustration with pace of project approvals. The Globe and Mail. 2020-06-29.
  13. Web site: Cartier. Ashleigh. 2020-04-06. La Banque de l'infrastructure du Canada annonce des changements à sa direction. 2021-07-18. Canada Infrastructure Bank - Banque de l'infrastructure du Canada. fr-CA.
  14. Web site: Janice Fukakusa Net Worth (2021) – wallmine.com. 2021-07-18. ca.wallmine.com. en-ca.