Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 15th July 2026, 5:12 PM
QBE Asia has announced the appointment of its Chief Financial Officer, Tay Siang Leng, as the Interim Chief Executive Officer of Wholesale Markets Asia. He steps into the role to succeed Ronak Shah, who is currently serving a period of garden leave slated to run until the end of September.
In a brief corporate statement, the multinational insurer expressed its gratitude to Shah, acknowledging his nine years of dedicated service and contributions to QBE Asia’s regional operations.
The transition marks a strategic pivot for Tay, who joined the global insurance group in 2019. During his seven-year tenure with the firm, he was highly instrumental in laying the financial and operational foundations of QBE’s regional Wholesale business. Given his deep familiarity with the segment’s underlying structure and market positioning, the board viewed him as a natural choice to steer the business through this leadership transition.
Tay has already assumed direct, day-to-day management of the Wholesale Markets Asia division. To ensure operational stability and maintain strong relationships with key corporate clients, brokers, and business partners, he will gradually transition out of his primary responsibilities as Chief Financial Officer over the interim period.
In this temporary capacity, Tay will report directly to Rob Kosova, the Chief Executive Officer of QBE Asia. This direct reporting line is intended to streamline decision-making at a time when the wholesale insurance market in the region is experiencing heightened activity.
Understanding the wholesale insurance market
Unlike retail insurance, which caters to individual consumers, the wholesale market deals with highly complex, large-scale, or unusual commercial risks. These are risks that standard retail insurers are typically unable or unwilling to underwrite.
Wholesale brokers act as intermediaries between retail insurance agents and specialized underwriting syndicates. In a rapidly evolving financial hub like Asia, maintaining leadership continuity in this sector is critical, as corporate clients rely on long-term relationships and steady risk-assessment models to secure coverage for major infrastructure, marine, and aviation assets.
While QBE Asia has not yet announced a permanent successor to Shah, the temporary elevation of the finance chief suggests a focus on fiscal discipline and internal stability. Handing the reins to an executive who co-founded the division minimizes the threat of operational disruption.
As a key member of the executive team since 2019, Tay’s temporary dual focus on finance and wholesale operations will be crucial for QBE as it seeks to capitalise on new commercial opportunities across major Asian financial centres. The company is expected to conduct a robust search process for a permanent chief executive over the coming months.
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