Pictured (Clockwise L-R): Inga Beale, Sri Mulyani Indrawati, Janet Yellen and Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

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Lloyd's of London announces first ever female boss will take over in January

Industry veteran Inga Beale will become CEO -- a first in the company's 325-year history

CNN takes a look at other financial trailblazers in world economy

CNN  — 

From Wall Street to the City of London, the world of finance has long been marred by a gender imbalance in the coveted C-suite.

But Lloyd’s of London, the oldest insurance market in the world, took the sector by surprise when it named industry veteran Inga Beale as the next CEO – the first ever female to take on the role in the organization’s 325 year history.

On the heels of Lloyd’s historic appointment, CNN names some fellow female financial trailblazers also making an impact on the world economy.

Inga Beale

When Inga Beale joins Lloyd’s of London this January, she will become the first ever female chief executive to lead the insurance market in its 325-year-old history.

With a slew of international experience built up over her 30-year career, she most recently served as group chief executive of Canopius, a privately held Lloyd’s insurer.

Beale also worked as the global chief underwriting officer at Zurich Insurance. Taking over from current CEO Richard Ward, she will be responsible for pushing through the tech modernization drive along with boosting growth in Latin America and Asia.

Sri Mulyani Indrawati

Since serving as Indonesia’s minister of finance and coordinating minister of economic affairs, Sri Mulyani Indrawati has moved to the international stage with a senior leadership role at the World Bank.

Joining in 2010, she became the managing director and chief operating officer for the prestigious international finance institution where her role involves providing financial capital to developing countries – the World Bank’s ultimate goal of reducing world poverty.

Christine Lagarde

As managing director of the International Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde has become a force majeure in the world of global finance.

In 2007, she became the first woman in France to serve as minister of finance, economy and trade – experience which seems to have proven invaluable since assuming the top job from Dominique Strauss-Kahn at the IMF in June 2011.

Janet Yellen became the official nominee for the next Fed chair when U.S. President Barack Obama announced her nomination on October 9, 2013.

Janet Yellen

Upon Senate confirmation, Janet Yellen is poised to become the first female chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve when current head Ben Bernanke steps down in January.

She has extensive experience as a public servant – she currently serves as Bernanke’s deputy in a role she has held for the last three years. Her longstanding career in academia has also put her in good stead to assume leadership of the central bank.

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has had an impressive career serving as Nigeria’s finance minister and then briefly Foreign Affairs Minister – the first woman to hold either position.

A graduate of Harvard, she earned a Ph.D. in regional economics and development at MIT and then spent 21 years as a development economist at the World Bank working her way up to managing director.

As Nigeria’s current finance minister, she has continued to work to fight corruption, bring transparency to the nation’s finances and institute reforms to make the economy more attractive for foreign investment.

Read: 5 things you didn’t know about Janet Yellen

Watch: World Bank boss’ quest to end poverty

Read: Lagarde: Yellen is ‘as good as you can get’