Lloyd Blankfein to Step Down as CEO of Goldman Sachs

The chief executive of Goldman Sachs, Lloyd Blankfein, plans to step down ‎as soon as the end of this year, ending a controversional 12-year tenure ‎with the investment bank, the New York Times reported on Friday.‎

Goldman intends to replace Blankfein, 63, with its co-president David Solomon, ‎the newspaper said, citing people familiar with the matter that it didn’t name. ‎

Mr. Blankfein, who is Goldman’s chairman and chief executive, was ‎appointed to his roles in June 2006. In addition, he successfully led ‎his bank through the 2008 global economic and financial crisis ‎without any major mishaps.‎

Speculations of his stepping down as the CEO have been rife after ‎Blankfein publicly revealed two years ago that he had a highly curable form of lymphoma.‎

However, he wasn’t the first Wall Street CEO to receive a cancer diagnosis. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon also revealed in 2014 that he had been undergoing treatment for throat cancer.

Shares of Goldman closed down 0.88 percent on Friday.‎

Earlier this month, the bank was hit by a $110 million fine from New York ‎regulator and Federal Reserve in an antitrust lawsuit alleging that the its traders ‎routinely manipulated the forex market for their profit.‎

The DFS said had insufficient oversight and controls over ‎its FX traders, who allegedly discussed trading positions with competitors, ‎using electronic chatrooms. The traders frequently tried to trade ahead of ‎big foreign-exchange transactions by their clients, a practice known as front-‎running.‎

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