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Small team, limited scopeThe hedge fund makes trades based solely on news from Hunterbrook Media, its media sister company, sometimes getting advanced copies of the articles and placing trades before publication. AdvertisementThe hedge fund, however, has just one sole full-time employee. Before a story is published on Hunterbrook Media, the firm's general counsel reviews it to make sure there's not any insider information — such as leaked earning figures — in it. AdvertisementIf the general counsel and the executives green light the story to be shared, then it goes to the hedge fund — in other words, Dunlevie and Horwitz — prepublication. Opportunities few and far between so farInvestigations from Hunterbrook Media so far have less than a 50% hit rate on turning into trades for the hedge fund.
Persons: , Nate Anderson's Hindenburg, Carl Icahn's, Nathaniel Horwitz, Matt Murray, Paul Steiger, Bethany McLean, That's, Courtney Dunlevie, Horwitz, Sam Koppelman, Brian Koppelman, Dunlevie, Horwitz — prepublication, isn't, It's Horwitz, Matt, Pulitzer, Tony Horwitz, Geraldine Brooks, Cash, Hunterbrook, Marc Lasry, David Fialkow, Matt Cherwin, we're, " Horwitz Organizations: Service, Business, Hunterbrook, Hunterbrook Media, Wall Street, Barclays, Commonstock, Phoenix Suns, Avenue Capital, Catalyst, JPMorgan Locations: Italian, Korean, Brazil
Mr. Cohen has said he acted at Mr. Trump’s direction, but the former president is not charged over the payment itself. If Mr. Trump testifies in his own defense, that could pit Mr. Cohen’s word against Mr. Trump’s — a he-said, he-said story, with two questionable narrators. Mr. Trump’s lawyers will seek to emphasize Mr. Cohen’s checkered past at every turn. And, on cross-examination, Mr. Trump’s lawyers are likely to portray Mr. Cohen as a serial liar with a grudge against his former boss. Mr. Pecker can support at least some of Mr. Cohen’s testimony about Mr. Trump’s involvement in the hush-money deals.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Alvin L, Bragg, Michael D, Cohen, Stormy Daniels, Daniel J . Horwitz, Michael Cohen, ” Mr, Horwitz, Mary Altaffer, Daniels, Trump’s, Joshua Steinglass, Donald Trump, Mr, Steinglass’s, David Pecker, Hope Hicks, Pecker, Bragg’s, Karen McDougal, Marion Curtis, reimbursements, Allen H, Weisselberg, Steinglass, McDougal, Dave Sanders, The New York Times Susan Necheles, Cohen’s, President Trump, Madeleine Westerhout, , , ” William K, Rashbaum, Maggie Haberman, Jonathan Swan, Michael Rothfeld Organizations: Prosecutors, Mr, fixer, National Enquirer, Trump, Trump . Credit, The New York Times, American Media, Associated, Locations: New York, Manhattan, Trump ., America, Russia
Beth Hammack, a past treasurer and CEO of Goldman Sachs Bank USA, recently left after reportedly being passed over for the CFO job. April 11, 2024Carey Halio Named Global Treasurer of Goldman SachsI am pleased to announce that Carey Halio has been named global treasurer of Goldman Sachs and will become a member of the Management Committee. Previously, Carey was chief executive officer of Goldman Sachs Bank USA and deputy treasurer of Goldman Sachs. He first joined Goldman Sachs in 2006 in Investment Banking, where he advised US financial institutions on capital markets and regulatory capital issues. Please join us in congratulating Jehan on his new responsibilities, and in wishing him and the Investor Relations team continued success.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Philip Berlinski, Berlinski, Goldman, Denis Coleman, Carey Halio, Halio, David Solomon, she'll, Jehan Ilahi, who's, Coleman, Russell Horwitz, Beth Hammack, Stephanie Cohen, Solomon, Horwitz, Carey, David, Jehan, Morgan, Denis Coleman Russell Horwitz Organizations: Financial Times, Goldman Sachs Bank USA, Business, BI, Street Journal, Goldman, Management, Investor Relations, Goldman Sachs Bank, Financial, Investment Banking, Equity Investor Relations, Banking Locations: New York
Apple's having a rough year
  + stars: | 2024-03-24 | by ( Matt Turner | Jordan Parker Erb | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +4 min
Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/BIThis week's dispatchTaking a bite out of AppleApple's having a rough year. Apple is to blame for Amazon and Microsoft's phone failures, per the DOJ, which also zeroes in on Apple's green text bubbles. It was a tech antitrust lawsuit more than two decades ago that helped create space for Apple's rise.
Persons: , Justin Sullivan, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Tim Cook, Steve Jobs, Apple, Rebecca Zisser, Frazer Harrison, Tyler Le, Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, Patrick Semansky Goldman, Russell Horwitz, Al Schwimmer, Frank Sinatra, Matt Turner, Jordan Parker Erb, Dan DeFrancesco, Lisa Ryan Organizations: Service, Business, Apple, Department of Justice, DOJ, Amazon, FTC, Getty, Google, BI, David Solomon AP Locations: China, Palestine, New York
NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. In today's big story, we've made a March Madness bracket to decide the biggest topics in business, tech, and innovation, and we need you to vote . [2] Interest rates vs. [7] US-China relations: The biggest question in the market is when the Federal Reserve will lower rates. China doesn't have as direct an impact on US businesses as interest rates, but it's not far behind. Anna Moneymaker/Getty ImagesThe Fed holds the line on interest rates.
Persons: , Jensen, we've, ya, Kevin Frayer, Chelsea Jia Feng, it's, Elon Musk, Jerome Powell, Anna Moneymaker, he's, Goldman Sachs, Russell Horwitz, hasn't, Greg Doherty, Mustafa Suleyman, Karén Simonyan, Sam Altman, Alex Nabaum, It's, Elon Musk's Neuralink, Noland Arbaugh, Dan DeFrancesco, Hallam Bullock, Jordan Parker Erb, George Glover Organizations: Business, Service, Federal Reserve, EV, Boomers, Fed, UBS, BI, Wall, Variety, New York Stock Exchange, Microsoft, Amazon, FedEx, Nike Locations: China, VCs, Valley, New York, London
Horwitz's March 13 memo was sent to all partners, managing directors, and vice presidents in response to a recent Wall Street Journal story. Women exits at GoldmanThe story comes amid a recent spate of departures of high-profile female executives at Goldman. Other women partners who have left include Katie Koch, a former top executive in asset management; Heather Miner, ex-global head of investor relations; and Jennifer Davis, a former head of retail investment banking. We are very fortunate to have extraordinary female partners that continue to increase in numbers. Our longer term success depends significantly on developing female partners in senior roles."
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Russell Horwitz, hasn't, Horwitz, David Solomon's, Horwitz —, Goldman, Marc Nachmann, Stephanie Cohen, BI's Bianca Chan, Beth Hammack, Cohen, Hammack, Alison, , Solomon, Katie Koch, Heather Miner, Jennifer Davis, Horowitz, Russell W, David, we've Organizations: Business, Horwitz's, Goldman, Firm, Women, Media Relations
Artificial intelligence is helping fashion brands understand consumer behaviors and demands. The Business of Fashion and McKinsey said that in a survey they conducted, about 73% of fashion executives said they planned to prioritize generative AI in 2024. AI can be used to improve efficiency and sustainability to both identify trends and create new ones — but it requires careful implementation. Horwitz, alongside her colleague Oliver Zimmer, built the first Google Fashion Trends report, which used machine learning to identify trends in Google search data. "But using generative AI, you can also have it review those patterns.
Persons: , Benjamin Bond, Yarden Horwitz, Horwitz, Oliver Zimmer, Zimmer, Bond, Fashable, ChatGPT, Orlando Ribas Fernandes, Fernandes, Fashable's Orlando Ribas Fernandes, Fashable Fernandes Organizations: Service, McKinsey & Company, Industry, Fashion, McKinsey, Kearney, Google, Nike, XNFY, Microsoft Locations: Kearney
Ethan Crumbley pleaded guilty in 2022 to two dozen counts, including four of first-degree murder, and last month was sentenced to life in prison without parole. Jennifer Crumbley and her husband James Crumbley were being tried separately after being charged with four manslaughter counts in late 2021. Legal experts have said that the parents' trial, which appears to be the first of its kind, breaks new legal ground. "Rarely are high school shooters going out and buying guns from a gun store," Horwitz said. Ethan Crumbley was returned to class and later walked out of a bathroom with the gun and began firing, prosecutors say.
Persons: Brad Brooks, Jennifer Crumbley, Ethan, Ethan Crumbley, James Crumbley, James Crumbley's, Josh Horwitz, Horwitz, Karen McDonald, I'm, hadn't, Nick Suplina, Donna Bryson, Michael Perry Organizations: Reuters, Oxford High School, Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions, U.S . Department of Homeland Security, Law, Gun Safety Locations: Michigan, Oakland, Detroit, Longmont , Colorado
Known as "border radio," the unregulated American radio industry sprung up on Mexico's northern border in the 1930s. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty ImagesIn the years that followed, other border radio stations sprung up in Mexico. Hank Thompson, another country music star who grew up in Waco in the 30s, said border radio stations were the only stations where one could listen to country music most of the time. But the legacy of border radio stations continued to live on in the country music they helped popularize, as well as its cousin genres. According to American honky-tonk star Webb Pierce, country music "might not have survived if it hadn't been for border radio."
Persons: , Bill Crawford, Crawford, weren't, Will Horwitz, Horwitz's, Jimmie Rodgers, Carter, Michael Ochs, Jesus Christ, Dallas Turner, John Romulus Brinkley, Brinkley, Pope Brock, Minerva, Minnie, Jones, Patsy Montana, Slim Rinehart, Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Hank Thompson, Lydia Mendoza, Rosa Dominguez, Mexican Nightingale, Dominguez, Maybelle, Webb Pierce, It's Organizations: Service, Business, Amazing Broadcasters, American Airwaves, Keystone, Gamma, Getty Images, US, charlatans, Houston, Country, Michael Ochs Archives, Kansas he'd, The Kansas State Medical Board, Federal Radio Commission, Soibelman, Tejano, Getty, Thunderbirds, ZZ Locations: American, West, Mexico, Canada, United States, Mexican, France, Tamaulipas, KFKB, Kansas, New York, Waco, South Dakota
Meta Platforms has spent months trying to fix child-safety problems on Instagram and Facebook, but it is struggling to prevent its own systems from enabling and even promoting a vast network of pedophile accounts. The social-media giant set up a child-safety task force in June after The Wall Street Journal and researchers at Stanford University and the University of Massachusetts Amherst revealed that Instagram’s algorithms connected a web of accounts devoted to the creation, purchasing and trading of underage-sex content.
Organizations: Facebook, Street Journal, Stanford University, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWSJ's Jeff Horwitz: Instagram's algorithm delivers toxic video mix to adults who follow childrenJeff Horwitz, Wall Street Journal technology reporter and ‘Broke Code’ author, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss tests conducted by WSJ and the Canadian Center for Child Protection, which found that major brand ads could be served alongside sexually explicit images when they aimed to replicate the behavior that a child predator might engage in on Instagram, how Instagram's algorithm delivers inappropriate content to adults who follow children, Meta's response, and more.
Persons: Jeff Horwitz Organizations: Wall Street Journal, WSJ, Canadian Center for Child Locations: Instagram
Instagram’s Reels video service is designed to show users streams of short videos on topics the system decides will interest them, such as sports, fashion or humor. The Meta Platforms -owned social app does the same thing for users its algorithm decides might have a prurient interest in children, testing by The Wall Street Journal showed.
Organizations: Wall Street
Meta says it didn’t design its products to be addictive for teens. Photo: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg NewsMeta Platforms sought to design its social-media products in ways to take advantage of known weaknesses of young users’ brains, according to newly unredacted legal filings citing internal company documents. An internal 2020 Meta presentation shows that the company sought to engineer its products to capitalize on the parts of youth psychology that render teens “predisposed to impulse, peer pressure, and potentially harmful risky behavior,” the filings show. References to the documents were initially redacted in the suit, which was filed in late October by members of a coalition of 41 states and the District of Columbia, alleging that Meta has intentionally built Facebook and Instagram with addictive features that harm young users. Meta approved the filing of an unredacted version on Wednesday.
Persons: Meta, David Paul Morris Organizations: Bloomberg, Meta, District of Columbia
The new book, "The Fund: Ray Dalio, Bridgewater Associates, and the Unraveling of a Wall Street Legend" — which Dalio and his lawyers have pushed back against — describes everything from Bridgewater's investment process to internal grudges and backstabbing to allegations of sexual harassment. Here are the places where the dozens of Bridgewater employees and consultants named in the book ended up. Dalio, the book said, wrote into the firm's bylaws that he could never hold that title again. Before that, she was the head of investment research and a co-chief investment officer for sustainability. He's worked at different funds since leaving in 2006, including Larch Lane Advisors and Bonaccord Capital as an investor and business-development professional.
Persons: Rob Copeland's, Ray Dalio, Dalio, , Bridgewater, Greg Jensen, YouTube Dalio, nixed, Copeland, He's, Jensen, Eileen Murray, Morgan Stanley, David McCormick, Dina Powell, McCormick, Dave McCormick, Michael M, Nir Bar Dea, Stefanova, Dalio's, Paul McDowell, Bob Eichinger, McDowell, Eichinger, Jen Healy, Osman Nalbantoglu, Matthew Granade, Steve Cohen, Steve Cohen's Point72, Bob Prince, politicking, Karen Karniol, Bridgewater Associates Karen Karniol, Vladimir Putin, Bob Elliott, Elliott, James Comey, Winn McNamee, Barack Obama, Donald Trump, Hillary, Britt Harris, Bridgewater's, Julian Mack, L, Michael Partington, Spencer Stuart, Niko Canner, Jon Rubinstein, Beck Diefenbach Jon Rubinstein, Steve Jobs, Tom Adams, Rosetta Stone, J, Michael Cline, Cline, Kevin Campbell, Campbell, Craig Mundie, Bill Gates, Gates, Mundie, Bill Clinton, George W, Bush, David Ferrucci, IBM's Watson, Ferrucci, Keith Alexander, Alexander, Larry Culp, Culp, Jamie Gorelick, conscientiously, Clinton, Jared Kushner, Jesse Horwitz, Comey, Horwitz, Samantha Holland, Perry Poulos, Murray, Joe Sweet, Tara Arnold, Arnold —, Leah Guggenheimer, She's, Charles Korchinski, Harris, Kent Kuran Organizations: New York Times, Bridgewater Associates, Business, Bridgewater, YouTube, HSBC, Broadridge, Life Insurance, Wells, Treasury Department, Republican, Getty, GOP, Israel Defense Forces, Marto, Princeton University, McKinsey, Point72, Bridgewater didn't, Domino Data, CircleUp, FBI, Trump, of, University of Texas Investment Management Co, Apple, Dalio, Health, Cognition, Mundie, National Security Agency, Amazon, General Electric, Boston Globe, Electric, Trump White House, Harvard Law School, , Hubble, Stefanova's Marto, HBR Consulting, MIO Partners, Burford, Larch Lane Advisors, Bonaccord, Eaton Partners, Stanford, NextEra Energy Resources Locations: Bridgewater, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, China, San Francisco, of Texas, Atlanta, WilmerHale, Asia, India, Shanghai, Singapore, Israel, Africa
The filing suggests that many of the executives who publicly dismissed the seriousness of Instagram’s potential harm to young users had long warned about them. Photo: Niharika Kulkarni/Zuma PressMeta Platforms Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg repeatedly dismissed warnings from senior company officials that its flagship social-media platforms were harming young users, according to unsealed allegations in a lawsuit filed by Massachusetts. According to the suit, as early as 2019, Meta’s head of responsible innovation was telling Zuckerberg that mounting evidence showed the net effect of their platforms on user well-being was negative. Around that time, multiple executives, including Instagram head Adam Mosseri , were pushing for the company to ban filters that mimic plastic surgery due to concerns they were harming the mental health of women and teens.
Persons: Niharika Kulkarni, Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg, Adam Mosseri Locations: Massachusetts
Jeff Horwitz — Reporter at The Wall Street Journal
  + stars: | 2023-11-03 | by ( Jeff Horwitz | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Jeff HorwitzJeff Horwitz is a technology reporter for The Wall Street Journal based in San Francisco, where he covers Meta and social-media platforms. His work on the Facebook Files won a George Polk Award, a Gerald Loeb Award and the Chris Welles Memorial Prize, among other recognitions. Previously he was a financial and enterprise reporter for the Associated Press in Washington, D.C. Jeff has also worked for American Banker, Legal Times, the San Bernardino Sun and the Washington City Paper.
Persons: Jeff Horwitz Jeff Horwitz, George Polk, Gerald Loeb, Chris Welles, Jeff Organizations: Wall, Journal, Facebook, George, Associated Press, American Banker, Legal Times, San Bernardino Sun, Washington City Locations: San Francisco, Washington ,
In the fall of 2021 a consultant named Arturo Bejar sent Meta Platforms Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg an unusual note. “I wanted to bring to your attention what l believe is a critical gap in how we as a company approach harm, and how the people we serve experience it,” he began. Though Meta regularly issued public reports suggesting that it was largely on top of safety issues on its platforms, he wrote, the company was deluding itself.
Persons: Arturo Bejar, Mark Zuckerberg, , , Meta Organizations: Meta
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Authorities in Tennessee have settled a First Amendment lawsuit for $125,000, the plaintiff's attorneys said Monday. The suit was filed by a man who said he was arrested over a disparaging social media post about a law enforcement officer killed in the line of duty. Garton's attorneys filed a federal lawsuit in Nashville, saying their client's First Amendment right to free speech was violated. Garton's post was captioned, “Just showing my respect to deputy Daniel Baker from the #dicksoncountypolicedepartment.”The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation was called in at the request of District Attorney Ray Crouch. A Tennessee Bureau of Investigation spokesperson declined to comment.
Persons: Joshua Andrew Garton, Daniel Baker, , Attorney Ray Crouch, Garton, ” Garton's, Daniel Horwitz, , Crouch, Horwitz, , David Rausch, “ incarcerating Organizations: , Tennessee Bureau, Investigation, Attorney, Investigators, Tennessee, of Investigation, Tennessee Bureau of Locations: Tenn, Tennessee, Dickson County, Nashville, Dickson
The headquarters of Meta Platforms. Lawsuits say the company misled the public about the dangers of its platforms for young people. Photo: CARLOS BARRIA/REUTERSA coalition of 41 states and the District of Columbia are filing lawsuits alleging that Meta Platforms has intentionally built its products with addictive features that harm young users of its Facebook and Instagram services. The lawsuits, in federal and state courts, say Meta misled the public about the dangers of its platforms for young people. The states are seeking to force Meta to change product features that they say pose dangers to young users.
Persons: CARLOS BARRIA, Meta Organizations: Meta, REUTERS, District of Columbia, Facebook
Meta Platforms has been wrestling with how to enforce its rules in the midst of the Israel-Hamas war. Photo: Mohammed abed/Agence France-Presse/Getty ImagesAfter Hamas stormed Israel and murdered civilians on Oct. 7, hateful comments from the region surged through Instagram. Meta Platforms managers cranked up automatic filters meant to slow the flood of violent and harassing content. But still the comments kept appearing—especially from the Palestinian territories, according to a Meta manager. So Meta turned up its filters again, but only there.
Persons: Mohammed abed, Meta Organizations: Agence France, Hamas, Instagram, Meta Locations: Israel
Some parents are sending their kids off to college with a hired helper — and it comes at a price. One company charges about $450 to be a mom away from mom for college students. Parents trust the campus "moms" to step in and provide a nurturing presence without infantilizing their adult-age kids, Brooks told Insider. They also serve as "local experts on the ground," Brooks told Insider. Brooks told Insider that the goal is to be a bridge between parents and students for those who need the extra support.
Persons: , mindyKnows, Shari Brooks, Mindy Horwitz, They've, Brooks, St . Louis, Zers Organizations: Service, Street Journal, Services, Students, Washington University, Student Locations: Wall, Silicon, snowstorms, St .
Goldman Sachs partners are leaving — some 202 during David Solomon's five years as CEO by Insider's calculation. In particular, before Solomon, Goldman nurtured many fiefs and then spread the wealth from the most successful ones across the firm. Of the former Goldman executives that Insider interviewed, here are the most cited reasons they gave for leaving Goldman. When both men struggled, senior partners left, and Goldman stumbled in its efforts to wind down its balance-sheet investments. Goldman Sachs partners are paid well by any standard: $950,000 in base salary and often multiples of that in annual bonuses.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, David Solomon's, Solomon, Goldman, David Solomon, John Waldron, Goldman's, Adebayo Ogunlesi, Mike Mayo, Andrew Toth, Devin Ryan, Ryan, Waldron, Tony Fratto, Mike Blake, Eric Lane, Julian Salisbury, Lane, Luke Sarsfield, Sarsfield, Marc Nachmann, he's, Fratto, Stephanie Cohen, Cohen, Kathy Ruemmler, Charles Dharapak, Barack Obama's, Kenneth Lay, Jeffrey Skilling, Ruemmler, Unbeknown, Jeffrey Epstein, dealmaking, David S, Holloway, Mayo, David doesn't, GreenSky, Brendan McDermid, It's, Alison Mass, Hank Paulson, Russell Horwitz, David, it's, Emmalyse Brownstein Organizations: Wall, JPMorgan, Wells, Wells Fargo Securities, Investors, Goldman, AWM, Sarsfield, BAE Systems, Justice Department, Street Journal, Bloomberg, Employees, Partners, Federal Reserve, United Capital Financial Partners, Reuters, GreenSky Locations: New York, Wells Fargo, Salisbury, Manhattan, Texas, Plano, London, Paris, Chicago
September 13 - Robbie Grossman hit a two-run home run and the visiting Texas Rangers defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 6-3 on Tuesday night. The Rangers (80-64) have won the first two games of the four-game series to move a half-game ahead of the Blue Jays (80-65) in the American League wild-card race. Toronto left-hander Hyun Jin Ryu (3-3) allowed three runs on five hits with one walk and five strikeouts in six innings. The Rangers took a 2-0 lead in the fourth on their first two hits of the game. Biggio took third on pinch hitter Santiago Espinal's double, and a run scored on pinch hitter Ernie Clement's groundout.
Persons: Robbie Grossman, Corey Seager, Davis Schneider, Hyun Jin Ryu, Max Scherzer, Seager, Grossman, Mitch Garver's, Jonah Heim's, Jose Leclerc, Yimi Garcia, Leody Taveras, Josh H, Smith, Tim Mayza, Spencer Horwitz, Leclerc, Brock Burke, Biggio, Santiago Espinal's, Ernie Clement's groundout, Chris Stratton, Burke, Trevor Richards, Travis Jankowski's, Aroldis Chapman, Schneider's Organizations: Texas Rangers, Toronto Blue Jays, Texas, The Rangers, Blue Jays, American League, Toronto, Rangers, Cavan Biggio's, Thomson Locations: Toronto, Texas, Scherzer
John Rogers, who joined Goldman in 1994 and served as chief of staff to four of the bank's CEOs, is giving up that role next month, Solomon said in the employee memo. For decades, Rogers, 67, wielded outsized influence at Goldman, an institution sometimes called "Government Sachs" because former executives have gone on to presidential administration roles. While Rogers is ceding his chief of staff responsibilities to Russell Horwitz, a former deputy of his who was most recently global affairs chief of Citadel, he is retaining other roles. As incoming chief of staff, Horwitz, who spent 16 years at Goldman before departing in 2020, will oversee corporate communications and government and regulatory affairs. "Please join me in thanking John for his long and impactful tenure as chief of staff, as well as his continued commitment to Goldman Sachs in his other firmwide responsibilities, and in welcoming Russell back to Goldman Sachs," Solomon said.
Persons: John Rogers, Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, Goldman, Solomon, Rogers, Sachs, Hank Paulson, Russell Horwitz, Horwitz, John, Russell Organizations: Securities Industry, Financial, Washington , D.C, Goldman, The New York Times, Citadel Locations: Washington ,
Goldman makes a big executive changeThe man who has been perhaps the most influential executive inside Goldman Sachs for more than a generation has begun to hand over some of his responsibilities. John Rogers, who over his quarter-century at the Wall Street bank has been known as a board and C.E.O. whisperer, will give his role as chief of staff to Russell Horwitz, his onetime deputy, Andrew and DealBook’s Lauren Hirsch are first to report. Rogers has an outsized influence and an intentionally understated public profile. He also wielded considerable influence outside the firm, helping Paulson become Treasury secretary in 2006.
Persons: Goldman, Goldman Sachs, John Rogers, Russell Horwitz, Andrew, DealBook’s Lauren Hirsch, Rogers, David Solomon, Reagan, George H.W, Bush, ” Rogers, Jon Corzine, Hank Paulson, Lloyd Blankfein, Solomon, Paulson Organizations: Goldman Locations: Washington
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