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Goldman says to name Blankfein as top boss

Goldman Sachs intends to elect Lloyd C. Blankfein as its next chairman and CEO after the investment banking company’s current head, Henry M. Paulson Jr., moves to the U.S. Treasury.
/ Source: The Associated Press

The board of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. announced Friday that it intends to elect Lloyd C. Blankfein as its next chairman and chief executive officer after the investment banking company’s current head, Henry M. Paulson Jr., moves to the U.S. Treasury.

The board said in a statement that the election of Blankfein, who is 52, will occur after Paulson is confirmed by the U.S. Senate for the Treasury post.

Paulson, 60, was selected Tuesday by President Bush as the next Treasury secretary. He will succeed John Snow, the former head of CSX Corp., who indicated he wanted to return to the private sector.

Goldman Sachs, which is headquartered in New York, is a leading global investment banking, securities and investment management company.

Blankfein has been its president and chief operating officer since January 2004 and a director since April 2003, Goldman Sachs said.

He has been an executive at the company since 1994, when he was head of the currency and commodities division. He later advanced to the rank of vice chairman with responsibility for fixed income, currency and commodities as well as the equities division.

Blankfein is not on the board of any public company other than Goldman Sachs, his corporate biography says. He does have associations with nonprofit groups, including as a trustee of the New York Historical Society and an overseer of the Weill Medical College of Cornell University. He is also a director of the Partnership for New York City and a director of The Robin Hood Foundation.

Founded in 1869, Goldman Sachs is one of the oldest and largest investment banking companies with offices in New York, London, Frankfurt, Tokyo, Hong Kong and other major cities.