Lloyd Blankfein

@Ceo of Goldman Sachs, Family and Childhood

Lloyd Blankfein is the Chairman and CEO of Goldman Sachs

Sep 15, 1954

New YorkAmericanHarvard UniversityBusiness PeopleCEOsVirgo Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: September 15, 1954
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Ceo of Goldman Sachs, Harvard University, Business People, CEOs
  • City/State: New Yorkers
  • Spouses: Laura Jacobs Blankfein (m. 1983)
  • Known as: Lloyd Craig Blankfein
  • Childrens: Alex Blankfein, Jonathan Blankfein, Rachel Blankfein

Lloyd Blankfein born at

New York City, New York, United States

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Birth Place

Lloyd Blankfein is married to Laura Jacobs who is an attorney by profession. The couple has one daughter, Rachel, and two sons, Jonathan and Alexander.

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Personal Life

In 2015, he underwent diagnostic assays which confirmed that he had lymphoma following which he received chemotherapy as a treatment. He is cured and healthy as of 2017.

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Personal Life

Blankfein lives with Laura in Manhattan and also own homes in Bridgehampton and Sagaponack hamlets in Suffolk County in the state of New York.

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Personal Life

Lloyd Blankfein was born on 15th September 1954 in The Bronx borough of New York City to Jewish parents. He spent the first three years of his life in South Bronx and afterwards his family shifted to Linden Houses complex in East Brooklyn in quest of a quality life.

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Childhood & Early Life

Blankfein remembers his father, Seymour Blankfein, being sacked from his job as a bakery truck driver, following which he started working in the post office close to their home, segregating mail. His father did the night shift as the late shift paid a 10% higher salary.

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Childhood & Early Life

Lloyd’s mother contributed to the family income by working as a receptionist in a company that sold burglar alarms. He and his grandmother shared a bedroom while his older sister, a divorcee, lived with her son in the adjacent bedroom, and his parents stayed in another room.

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Childhood & Early Life

Blankfein, as a kid, attended a primary school—the Hebrew school at B’nai Israel—situated near the Linden Housing Complex. Later on when he moved to Brooklyn, he started attending Thomas Jefferson High School. He excelled in swimming in high school and was voted the valedictorian since he topped the class of 1971.

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Childhood & Early Life

To pay his way through high school as well as to make some money for his personal expenses, he sold soda and hot dogs at Yankee Stadium and also served as a lifeguard. He was a natural choice when Harvard academicians visited Thomas Jefferson for recruiting meritorious pupils.

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Childhood & Early Life

After receiving his J.D. certification, Lloyd Blankfein applied to several law firms for an entry-level position; notable amongst them were his applications to ‘Proskauer Rose LLP’ and ‘Donovan, Leisure, Newton & Irvine.’ He had a stint with Proskauer Rose, a global law firm with its headquarters in New York City, before joining Donovan Leisure in 1982.

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Professional Career

He worked as an associate in Donovan Leisure for four years and gradually realized that his calling lay not in a legal career but in Wall Street—the Holy Grail of budding financial executives. Unfortunately, his applications to Goldman Sachs, Dean Witter, and Morgan Stanley were turned down.

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Professional Career

He saw a flicker of hope when he received a job offer from J. Aron & Commodities‘—a relatively unknown commodities trading firm—which Goldman Sachs had acquired in November 1981. He moved to London towards the end of 1982 to trade in commodities from J. Aron’s bullion sales desk.

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Professional Career

When Goldman had taken over J. Aron, the latter had been steadily losing money. After Lloyd joined, he labored hard and was played a key role in turning around J. Aron’s fortunes by clinching an impressively profitable deal supervising a $100 million hedge fund for a client.

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Professional Career

Lloyd gradually worked his way up at J. Aron and became the co-manager of the ‘Currency and Commodities Division’ of Goldman Sachs in 1994. Later he was promoted to the position of vice-chairman, helming the ‘Equities Division’ and the ‘Fixed Income, Currency, and Commodities Division’.

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Professional Career

Lloyd Blankfein’s perspective about his political affiliation mirrors an ambivalent stand as he is registered as a Democrat but is remarkably orthodox on fiscal matters like Rockefeller Republicans or Liberal Republicans. He has donated largely to candidates of Democratic Party, including a $4,600 contribution to Hillary Clinton in 2007.

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Political Forays

Blankfein has served the Human Rights Campaign as its spokesperson, advocating strongly in support of gay marriages. He visited the White House on multiple occasions in his official capacity and donated to Roy Blunt and Rob Portman, both Republicans, during their Senate reelection runs.

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Political Forays

He kindled a huge controversy towards the end of 2009, when he told an interviewer of a periodical that he was “doing God’s work” as an investment banker. Later on, he, as the chief executive of Goldman tendered an apology publicly for his off-the-cuff and irreverent remark.

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Political Forays

In 2009 when the global economic crisis was at its peak, Goldman Sachs made an announcement that the investment banking firm was pledging $500 million to entrepreneurs for establishing startups.

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Political Forays