Goldman CEO Blankfein to Retire in September

President and COO David Solomon will take the reigns.

Lloyd Blankfein



Lloyd Blankfein is retiring from Goldman Sachs after 36 years with the banking behemoth, 12 of them as chief executive officer.

In a memo to Goldman employees, the departing 63-year-old CEO and chairman announced David Solomon, company president and co-chief operating officer, as his replacement at the end of September. When he leaves, Blankfein will support the firm as a senior chair.

“I always knew this day would come. But, of course, the reality of it prompts many thoughts and emotions,” Blankfein wrote, admitting that he’s been grappling with the idea of retirement. “When times are tougher, you can’t leave. And, when times are better, you don’t want to leave.”

He expressed optimism for Goldman’s future, and reflected on his long career with the institution. He thanked his family and all the business’ staff. He called the firm’s employees its “most differentiating strength.”

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“When we have had tough days (or a crisis or two), I could count on you to bear down, help clients and focus on solutions and getting better,” wrote Blankfein. “In better times, I have fed off your excitement, ideas, and passion. And, there were times when your support got me through my own challenges.”

The departing executive called his successor, Solomon, 56, “a terrific partner.” Blankfein touted Solomon’s success as COO and division head. Solomon’s promotion should trigger a series of management changes as he elects his lieutenants. In addition to inheriting a plan to grow the bank by $5 billion in three years, he is a big backer of the firm’s consumer finance initiative and improving gender equality within its ranks.

Blankfein started as a commodities trader, taking the executive reigns in 2006. Since he became CEO, Goldman’s total net profit has been $92 billion, Quartz at Work reports.

The announcement came as Goldman revealed its second-quarter results, where the banking titan reported $9.4 billion in net revenue and $2.57 billion in net earnings.

As of December 31, 2017, Goldman Sachs managed $916 billion in assets.

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Fed Chair Hints He May Ease Off on Rate Boosts

Jerome Powell says Federal Reserve will keep raising them 'for now.'

Is Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell tempering his campaign to raise short-term interest rates? That was the market’s upbeat takeaway from his testimony on Capitol Hill Tuesday.

Appearing before the Senate Banking Committee, Powell spoke of the Fed’s intention to “keep gradually raising the federal funds rate,” the benchmark rate that the central bank controls. Then he added a caveat: “for now.”

The stock market rose on the news, with the S&P 500 closing the day up 0.4%.

In some quarters, there’s a fear that the Fed will raise rates too much, thus touching off a recession. While unemployment is low and economic growth is steaming along, threats like a possible trade war could ruin things.

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For that reason, some are urging the Fed to take a break from its seemingly relentless push for higher short-term rates. Powell wants to tamp down any possible inflation and also give the body room to cut again if the economy weakens.

Since late 2015, the Fed’s policymaking committee has hiked the rate seven times, including two times this year. Committee members indicated that they are split over whether there will be one or two more hikes in 2018. The range for the rate now is 1.75% to 2%.

Right now, the Fed appears to believe that the “neutral rate,” where the level neither supports nor slows the economy, is around 3%. That implies four more increases of a quarter percentage point each, which is the pace the Fed has adopted in the current tightening cycle.

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