Julian Salisbury, head of the special situations group, will add oversight of real estate lending and investing activities firmwide.
Goldman Sachs's Rich Friedman, who has run the private investing business now known as the merchant bank since 1991, will give up day-to-day management responsibilities to become chairman. Friedman will remain a member of the management committee and spend more time working with CEO David Solomon on strategy, according to an internal memo signed by Solomon and two lieutenants. Friedman will continue as chairman of the merchant bank's investment committees.
The unit will now be run by Sumit Rajpal and Andrew Wolff, who will principally oversee the private equity business, with Tom Connolly continuing to run the private credit business. Wolff has been running the international operations of the merchant bank, while Rajpal is credited with helping Friedman come up with the idea for Goldman's digital consumer bank Marcus and other successful financial-services investments.
Julian Salisbury, head of the special situations group and also a member of the management committee, will take on added responsibility for the real estate investing activities across the merchant bank, the special situations group and the consumer and investment management division, the memo said., which detailed his 35-year career, the influence he's had over Goldman's corporate strategy and some of his most spectacular investment wins and losses.
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