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CNBC is now accepting nominations for our second annual Changemakers list. The list recognizes women transforming business and philanthropy, female leaders who have accomplished a meaningful achievement in 2024. Changemakers are taking novel approaches to old business problems and identifying new business opportunities. The list will be announced next year, and our second annual Changemakers Summit is set for next spring. Submit a nomination for the 2025 Changemakers list.
Persons: Dina Powell McCormick, Donald Trump, Marcela Miguel Berland, Tory Burch, Burch, Emma Carrasco, Corporate Affairs Srikant Datar, Harvard Business School Dean Karen Finerman, Ken Frazier, Desiree Gruber, Oscar Munoz, Laurene Powell Jobs, Emerson, Merline Saintil, Sheryl Sandberg, Stacy Smith, Spencer Stuart Organizations: CNBC, Fortune, Global Client Services, U.S . Deputy National, Tory, NBCUniversal, Corporate Affairs, Harvard Business School, Metropolitan Capital, Catalyst's Health, Merck, United Airlines, OptionB.org, Annenberg, LeanIn, McKinsey
The lack of female leadership in the financial industry is nothing new, but many companies have been making strides. But as I watch senior women continue their exodus from Goldman, I'm not sure the company actually wants to change. While many companies have modernized to embrace hybrid and remote work, Goldman has not. Rather than changing its "be in the office every day and grind it out" culture to better suit women, Goldman puts the onus on us to change ourselves to fit the model. But Goldman leadership seems to want the benefits of gender diversity without the hard work of supporting diverse leadership styles.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, , Dina Powell McCormick, Beth Hammack, Stephanie Cohen, Goldman, I'd, It's, it's, Morgan Stanley, Jamie Dimon, David Solomon, I'm, hadn't, Julia Boorstin, — Goldman, I've, she's, Asahi Pompey, Yassaman Salas, Rebecca Anderton, Davies, Lindsay MacMillan Organizations: Street Journal, Goldman, Citi, JPMorgan, International Workplace, McKinsey, LinkedIn, CNBC, Deloitte, Asahi Locations: Canada, London, New York
The pay bumps could help win over some employees who balked at smaller bonuses last year that they blamed on losses from the retail operations. The firm's allocation for bonuses fell by as much as 40% in 2022, according to another source, after earnings slid 48%. Wall Street pay varies widely based on performance and market conditions, and bonuses account for a large share of compensation - in some cases more than double an employee’s annual salary. Goldman was involved in several major transactions in recent months that spurred optimism about a nascent market recovery. WALL STREET BONUS SLIDEThe potential compensation gains contrast with expectations for a broader industry slide.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Stephen Biggar, Goldman, David Solomon, hasn't, we're, We're, Julian Salisbury, Dina Powell McCormick, They've, Christopher Connors, WALL, Thomas DiNapoli, Sheffield, Banks, Natalie Machicao, Lananh Nguyen, Saeed Azhar, Megan Davies, Matthew Lewis Organizations: Argus Research, Wall, Goldman, Sixth, MSD Partners, Bloomberg, Natural Resources, Exxon Mobil, Arm Holdings, Johnson Associates, York, Sheffield Haworth, Thomson Locations: Biggar, Sheffield Haworth, New York
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailDina Powell McCormick: G20 manufacturing corridor is 'clear message' U.S. working on checks on ChinaRaymond McGuire, Lazard president, and Dina Powell McCormick, BDT & MSD Partners vice chairman, join CNBC's Delivering Alpha 2023 to discuss geopolitics in relation to energy and entrepreneurship, U.S.-China industrial relations and more.
Persons: Dina Powell McCormick, Raymond McGuire, Lazard Organizations: BDT, MSD Partners, CNBC's Locations: China
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailLazard's Raymond McGuire: Deglobalization will be the reindustrialization of AmericaRaymond McGuire, Lazard president, and Dina Powell McCormick, BDT & MSD Partners vice chairman, join CNBC's Delivering Alpha 2023 to discuss geopolitics in relation to energy and entrepreneurship, U.S.-China industrial relations and more.
Persons: Lazard's Raymond McGuire, Deglobalization, Raymond McGuire, Lazard, Dina Powell McCormick Organizations: BDT, MSD Partners, CNBC's Locations: China
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailLazard's McGuire: AI supercomputing will increase demand on the power gridRaymond McGuire, Lazard president, and Dina Powell McCormick, BDT & MSD Partners vice chairman, join CNBC's Delivering Alpha 2023 to discuss geopolitics in relation to energy and entrepreneurship, U.S.-China industrial relations and more.
Persons: Lazard's McGuire, Raymond McGuire, Lazard, Dina Powell McCormick Organizations: supercomputing, BDT, MSD Partners, CNBC's Locations: China
Dave McCormick, Republican U.S. Senate candidate from Pennsylvania , greets supporters during a campaign event with Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, at Lehigh Valley Sporting Clays in Coplay, Pa., on Tuesday, January 25, 2022. The last time McCormick ran for Senate, his chief rival in the Republican primary was TV host Dr. Mehment Oz. Christian Ferry, who previously worked for Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham and late GOP Sen. John McCain, said, "Every cycle these totals continue to go up." McCormick has reportedly been promised the support of the Senate Leadership Fund, a super PAC aligned with Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. Burch paid approximately $16 million for the estate, according to Newsday.
Persons: Dave McCormick, Sen, Ted Cruz, Dave McCormick's, Tory Burch, McCormick, Goldman Sachs, Lloyd Blankfein, Steven Mnuchin, Gary Cohn, David Solomon, Bob Steel, Perella Weinberg, Mnuchin, Donald Trump, Cohn, Bob Casey, Paul Singer, Steve Schwarzman, Burch, Mnuchin Cohn, Singer, Schwarzman, Steel, Dave, agains Casey, Dina Powell McCormick, Dina, Democrat John Fetterman, Mehment Oz, OpenSecrets . Oz, Donald Trump . Oz, Casey, Oz, Alex Conant, Republican Sen, Marco Rubio, It's, Lindsey Graham, GOP Sen, John McCain, Mitch McConnell of Organizations: Republican U.S, Lehigh Valley, U.S, Senate, Bridgewater Associates, Democratic, Elliot Investment Management, Blackstone, CNBC, Steel, NBC News, Associated Press, McCormick, Keystone, Bush, Treasury, Pennsylvania Senate, Democrat, Republican, GOP, PAC, Bridgewater, Pennsylvania Democratic Party, Fund, Prosperity, that's, Koch Industries, Hamptons, Newsday Locations: Republican, Pennsylvania, Texas, Coplay, Pa, Connecticut, Pittsburgh, Trump, OpenSecrets ., Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Southampton, Long, , New York, Palm Beach
Insider Today: Ex-Goldman partners dish
  + stars: | 2023-09-20 | by ( Dan Defrancesco | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +8 min
This post originally appeared in the Insider Today newsletter. In today's big story, former Goldman Sachs partners explain what led them to leave their prestigious positions within the bank. A recent Insider investigation by Dakin Campbell and Emmalyse Brownstein found that at least 202 partners have left the firm during CEO David Solomon's volatile five-year tenure. And while Solomon's strategic missteps were a key talking point for many, not all the former partners bashed the CEO. The Insider Today team: Dan DeFrancesco, senior editor and anchor, in New York City.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, it's, Goldman, David Solomon, Dakin Campbell, Emmalyse Brownstein, David Solomon's, Dakin, It's, Julian Salisbury, Dina Powell McCormick, Fred Baba, Solomon, Lloyd Blankfein, Apoorva Mehta, Instacart, Daniel Sundheim, Michael Moritz, Here's, Instacart's, Beck, Apoorva, Mehta, Tyler Le, Steve Squeri, Squeri, AEW, Tony Khan, Lauren Boebert, Anna Moneymaker, General Merrick Garland, Kim Kardashian, General Mills, Getty, Dan DeFrancesco, Naga Siu, Hallam Bullock, Lisa Ryan Organizations: Service, D1 Capital Partners, Sequoia, Getty, Sequoia Capital, Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management's, American Express, Wrestling, WWE's, Fed, U.S, FedEx, General Locations: Wall, Silicon, What's, , ChatGPT, Cerebral, Colorado, Mostar, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Greece, Bulgaria, Moldova, New York City, San Diego, London, New York
Russell Horwitz has been named David Solomon's new chief of staff at a difficult time for the CEO. Russell Horwitz, a partner and former chief of staff to CEO Lloyd Blankfein, is returning to the firm after roughly two years away. Another, Jake Siewert, left Goldman for Warburg Pincus in June 2021. Horwitz left soon after. He has Washington experienceLike Rogers, Horwitz also has a past working in Washington DC.
Persons: Russell Horwitz, David Solomon's, Horwitz, Goldman, John F, Rogers, Goldman Sachs, Lloyd Blankfein, David Solomon, John Rogers, Jon Corzine, Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford, Joshua Roberts, Solomon, John Waldron, Fiona Carter, Carter, Dina Powell McCormick, Gregg Lemkau, Byron Trott, Jake Siewert, Warburg Pincus, Blankfein, He's, Ken Griffin, John, David, Pablo Salame, Umesh Subramanian, Arthur Levitt Organizations: Goldman, The New York Times, Reuters, BDT, MSD Partners, Miami . Partners, Citadel, Citadel Horwitz, Washington DC, Securities and Exchange Commission, Clinton Locations: Miami, Citadel's, Washington
NEW YORK, Aug 7 (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs' (GS.N) global head of commodities research Jeff Currie, a prominent analyst who accurately predicted a surge in commodity prices in the 2000s, is retiring, according to a memo seen by Reuters. Julian Salisbury, chief investment officer of its asset and wealth management arm, is departing to join investment firm Sixth Street, according to an announcement last month. His forecast was borne out in what would become known as the commodities supercycle, during which crude oil surged to record highs in 2008. More recently, Currie revived his prediction for another supercycle fuelled by pandemic stimulus measures and rebounding economic activity. Currie joined Goldman in 1996 and was promoted to managing director in 2002, then partner in 2008.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Jeff Currie, Currie, Julian Salisbury, Jan Hatzius, Goldman, Dina Powell McCormick, Lisa Opoku, Saeed Azhar, Lananh Nguyen, Sam Holmes Organizations: Reuters, Sixth, Reuters Commodities Summit, University of Chicago's Energy Policy Institute, Goldman, Thomson
It's been a busy summer for Goldman Sachs' partner departures. Two more farewell memos went out on Tuesday, including for Lisa Opoku and David Rusoff. Just weeks after reporting a 58% drop in profit, the Goldman Sachs CEO was hit with a wave of high-profile defections that bring the number of partners who have left under Solomon to 90. Opoku worked as global head of the Goldman Sachs Partner Family Office, which oversees the firm's wealth management offerings for current and retired Goldman Sachs partners, managing directors, and alumni. In her current role, Lisa oversees the firm's wealth management offerings for current and retired Goldman Sachs partners, managing directors and alumni.
Persons: It's, Goldman Sachs, Lisa Opoku, David Rusoff, Julian Salisbury, Takashi Murata, David Solomon, Solomon, Goldman, — Lisa Opoku, David Rusoff —, pare, Tammy Kiely, Frederick Baba, Dina Powell McCormick, Opoku, Marc Nachmann, Kathryn Ruemmler, Rusoff, Ken Griffin's, Peng Zhao, David Thomas, Goldman's, Thomas, Shawn Fagan, Lisa Organizations: Asia Pacific, Global Banking, Markets, Citadel Securities, Citadel, Engineering, Securities Division, Commodities Bank, Black Network, Advisors, Black Economic Alliance, Firmwide Locations: Hong Kong, Asia, New York, London, Americas
July 28 (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs (GS.N) executive Julian Salisbury will join investment firm Sixth Street as a partner and co-chief investment officer early next year, his incoming firm said, marking yet another high-profile exit from Goldman. Salisbury will reunite with Goldman alums in his new role, including Sixth Street CEO Alan Waxman. Salisbury became a partner in 2008 and previously served as global co-head of the asset management unit before it was combined with wealth management under Marc Nachmann last year. Goldman's asset management division has promoted 11 partners and hired nine new managing directors focused on investing this year, a company spokeswoman said. Salisbury has "done a great job putting together all these asset management businesses over the last few years," Nachmann said in an interview.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Julian Salisbury, Salisbury, Goldman alums, Alan Waxman, Marc Nachmann, Julian, Waxman, Dina Powell McCormick, Gregg Lemkau, Katie Koch, Goldman, Nachmann, It’s, David Solomon, Lloyd Blankfein, Manya Saini, Niket, Lananh Nguyen, Vinay Dwivedi, Matthew Lewis Organizations: Sixth, Goldman, MSD Partners, TCW, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Goldman, Salisbury, London, Moscow, New York, Russia, China, Bengaluru, Lananh
What the heck is going on at Goldman Sachs
  + stars: | 2023-06-23 | by ( Matt Turner | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
It's been non-stop negativity over at Goldman Sachs recently. The bad news just keeps rolling in over at Goldman Sachs. The Economist put a fine point on this earlier this year when it ran a cover story titled "The humbling of Goldman Sachs." But Goldman Sachs' historic partnership model has given it a distinct culture, where these kinds of things matter. Whatever the truth is, it's clear that Goldman Sachs and David Solomon are going to remain in the headlines for some time.
Persons: It's, Goldman Sachs, David Solomon's, Dakin Campbell, grumbling, Solomon, Goldman, David Solomon, it's, Dina Powell McCormick, Gregg Lemkau, Stephen Scherr, Eric Lane, Katie Koch, Fred Baba, he's, he'd, John Rogers, Tony Fratto Organizations: Goldman, Wall Street, The New York Times, Silicon Valley Bank, DJ, Discovery Land Company, New York Times, Air Mail Locations: California
As if all that wasn't enough, the leadership at Goldman Sachs had another cross to bear on Tuesday: two of its high-profile partners exiting the bank. (In fact, he made our annual list of rising stars on Wall Street in 2020.) That begs the question: Has Goldman Sachs' partnership lost some of its luster? And here's a running list of partners who have left Goldman Sachs under David Solomon. According to The Wall Street Journal, many of the industry's power players aren't looking forward to Biden-Trump part II.
Persons: Dan DeFrancesco, I'm, we've, Wall Streeter, Goldman Sachs, Sayonara, Goldman, Fred Baba, Dina Powell McCormick, Baba, George Floyd, Jane Street, Powell McCormick, Donald Trump, She's, Goldman alums, Byron Trott, Gregg Lemkau, David Solomon, Jane, Powell, Fred Baba's, Steve Cohen, Point72, Beth Abramson, Jeffrey Cane, Nathan Rennolds Organizations: JPMorgan, Bloomberg, Wall Street, Goldman, MSD Partners, Street, Biden, Trump, Financial Times, Nvidia, Netflix, LinkedIn Locations: NYC, Australia, New York, London
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News broke Tuesday of two high-profile Goldman Sachs partners leaving the bank. It hasn't been smooth sailing at Goldman Sachs in recent months. As if all that wasn't enough, the leadership at Goldman Sachs had another cross to bear on Tuesday: news breaking of two of its high-profile partners exiting the bank. The exits come amidst a difficult few months for Goldman Sachs, which has seen a change in strategy, a reorg, disappointment over bonuses, and layoffs. Which begs the question: Has Goldman Sachs' partnership lost some of its luster?
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Fred Baba, Dina Powell McCormick, David Solomon, Baba, George Floyd, Jane Street, Powell McCormick, Donald Trump, She's, Goldman alums, Byron Trott, Gregg Lemkau, Jane, Goldman, Powell Organizations: Morning, Goldman, Bloomberg, Wall Street, MSD Partners, Street
David Solomon has been Goldman Sachs' CEO for over four years since succeeding Lloyd Blankfein. There's been a lot of talk about the morale at Goldman Sachs. Solomon said there were fewer "partner transitions at Goldman Sachs" in 2022 than any year "going back to 2014." Meanwhile, Solomon's expensive foray into consumer banking raised the ire of some longtime Goldman partners, as Insider has previously reported. The fresh faces among the Goldman Sachs executives who took the stage at the bank's investor day highlight the leadership changes under Solomon.
Frederick Baba is leaving Goldman Sachs months after becoming a partner, Bloomberg reports. The Goldman Sachs executive who spoke out about his experience as a Black trader on Wall Street is leaving the firm, according to a new report. Goldman Sachs declined to comment. After graduating in 2010, he went to work for the Global Electronic Trading Co., known on Wall Street as GETCO. That's part of the virtuous ecosystem of Goldman Sachs," he added.
Dina Powell, former deputy U.S. national security advisor, speaks during the Saudi-U.S. CEO Forum in New York, U.S., on Tuesday, March 27, 2018. Goldman Sachs executive Dina Powell McCormick has been named chair of the Robin Hood Foundation, a nonprofit backed by Wall Street executives and other business leaders that aims to combat poverty. McCormick, who was the group's vice chair, was elevated by the board to chair on Wednesday, the foundation announced in a statement. "For 35 years, Robin Hood has been fighting to elevate New Yorkers out of poverty. Being elected chair by her peers is a powerful recognition of Dina's history of service, leadership, and commitment to our mission," Robin Hood CEO Richard R. Buery, Jr. said in a statement.
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