By John Letzing 

ZURICH--Former CEO of Zurich Insurance Group AG Martin Senn, who left the company in December, has killed himself, marking the second suicide among the insurer's top management ranks in the past few years.

"It is with great shock and sadness that we must inform you of the sudden death of Martin Senn," Zurich Insurance said in a statement on Monday. "His family informed us that Martin took his life last Friday."

"With the passing of Martin, we lose not only a highly valued former CEO and colleague but also a close friend. Our thoughts are with his bereaved family and friends, to whom we extend our deepest sympathies."

Mr. Senn's death at age 59 follows the suicide of former Zurich Insurance Chief Financial Officer Pierre Wauthier in 2013. An internal probe at the insurer, conducted under the supervision of Switzerland's financial regulator, later cleared company leaders of placing an inappropriate amount of stress on Mr. Wauthier.

During the company's annual meeting in early 2014, Mr. Senn said that, "The grief and shock we experienced at the suicide of our colleague Pierre Wauthier was enormous."

Mr. Senn stepped aside in early December, capping what had been a difficult period for the company. At the time, Mr. Senn cited Zurich Insurance's difficulties in revamping its largest business, and its failure to seal an ambitious acquisition of U.K.-based RSA Insurance Group PLC.

Last February, the company reported a larger-than-expected loss for the fourth quarter, and said about 15% of its employees would be "affected" by cost-cutting efforts.

The earnings report came shortly after Zurich Insurance had announced a successor to Mr. Senn, former Assicurazioni Generali SpA CEO Mario Greco--a one-time Zurich Insurance executive who assumed the CEO role at the Zurich-based company in March.

Mr. Senn, a former executive at Credit Suisse Group AG, joined Zurich Insurance as chief investment officer in 2006 and later assumed the CEO role in 2010.

The shocking death of Mr. Wauthier, who killed himself at age 53 in August, 2013, left Mr. Senn in an awkward position. Mr. Wauthier left behind a note blaming former Zurich Insurance Chairman Josef Ackermann for creating an unbearably stressful work environment. Mr. Ackermann, a one-time CEO of Deutsche Bank AG, abruptly resigned and issued a statement rejecting blame for Mr. Wauthier's death.

Mr. Senn appeared on Swiss television as events unfolded, to say the company regretted Mr. Ackermann's departure, and was unaware of the sort of friction between Messrs. Ackermann and Wauthier "which could or should have led to such a death."

In November, 2013 Zurich Insurance announced that its internal investigation found no indication that Mr. Wauthier had been subjected to "undue pressure" by the insurer's top management.

That finding was criticized by Mr. Wauthier's widow at the company's annual meeting the following April. Addressing company executives including Mr. Senn, Fabienne Wauthier said the company had unjustly sought to avoid blame for her husband's death. "The way you handled Pierre's suicide is a sign that unaccountability remains part of Zurich's corporate culture," she said.

Write to John Letzing at john.letzing@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

May 30, 2016 05:44 ET (09:44 GMT)

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