Gus Levy

Gus Levy
Born Gustave Levy
(1910-05-23)May 23, 1910
New Orleans, Louisiana
Died November 3, 1976(1976-11-03) (aged 66)
New York City
Nationality United States
Occupation Investment banker
Employer Goldman Sachs

Gustave "Gus" Levy (May 23, 1910– November 3, 1976) was senior partner of Goldman Sachs from 1969 until his death in 1976, succeeding the renowned Sidney Weinberg.[1]

Life and career

Levy was born on May 23, 1910 in New Orleans, one of three children of Sigmund and Bella Levy. Levy briefly attended Tulane University before dropping out, moving to New York City, working various jobs in the financial sector, and then joining Goldman Sachs in 1933 to head the one-man trading department for a salary of $27.50 a week. He remained at Goldman Sachs for rest of his career and rose to senior partner in 1969. Levy was known for his tremendous energy, short temper, intelligence, and generosity.

Between 1933 and 1969, Levy headed Goldman Sachs' trading department and pioneered new trading strategies such as block trading. Being from the trading department, he was naturally banking-oriented. Upon retiring in 1969, the highly banking-oriented Sidney Weinberg had some reservations about leaving Levy in charge but ultimately decided to appoint Levy as senior partner but also introduced the eight-man "management committee" system (filled with seven older, experienced senior banking partners) to supervise Levy.

During Levy’s reign as senior partner from 1969–76, Goldman Sachs experienced tremendous growth, arguably more so than during Weinberg's reign, but also encountered some major controversies, such as the Penn Central bankruptcy commercial paper scandal,[2] which tarnished the firm's reputation for several years to follow and cost the firm's partners tens of millions in litigation and legal settlements.

Levy was senior partner until he had a major stroke in October 1976 in which he fell into a coma and never recovered. He died in Mount Sinai Hospital at the age of 66. Levy never publicly declared a successor, but it was presumed that John Whitehead and John Weinberg (son of Sidney Weinberg) were to be his successors. The "two Johns" began their reign as co-senior partners in 1976.

References

  1. "The Goldman Sachs Group Inc.".
  2. Hahn, Thomas K. "Commercial Paper". In Timothy Q. Cook and Robert K. Laroche editors. Instruments of the Money Market (PDF) (Seventh ed.). Richmond, Virginia: Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond. Retrieved 2007-01-17.
Business positions
Preceded by
Sidney Weinberg
Chairman, Goldman Sachs
1969–1976
Succeeded by
John C. Whitehead and John Weinberg


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.