Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
Goldman Sachs’ Jim Esposito, one of chief executive David Solomon’s top lieutenants, is leaving the Wall Street firm in a surprise departure.
Solomon told staff in a memo on Monday that 56-year-old Esposito, known to colleagues as “Espo”, was leaving the bank after almost three decades. He was most recently co-head of Goldman’s flagship investment banking and trading business.
“On a personal note, I am grateful for Jim’s counsel, friendship and sense of humour during our many years of collaboration,” wrote Solomon in the memo seen by the Financial Times.
Esposito was made one of three co-heads of Goldman’s investment banking and trading division, alongside Ashok Varadhan and Dan Dees, after the two businesses were merged in 2022. The unit, which will now be run by Varadhan and Dees, generated about two-thirds of Goldman’s revenues last year.
Esposito’s is the latest high-profile departure in recent years, amid a series of reorganisations and strategic changes at the bank.
Esposito was viewed internally as one of a number of candidates who could be in the running to take over from Solomon, who has led the bank since late 2018, although bank president John Waldron is considered the leading contender.
Solomon’s leadership style was the subject of internal criticism last year and there was speculation over how long he could keep his position at the bank. However the FT reported in August that he retained the backing of Goldman’s board of directors. He stands to earn a special stock award if he remains at the bank until 2026.
Esposito joined Goldman in 1995 as a salesperson in its emerging markets debt business and was made a partner in 2006. He had previously been co-head of both Goldman’s investment banking and trading divisions when they were standalone businesses.
“Espo was an individual that led the firm through some difficult times. He was a positive influence, a mentor to many, a top notch professional and his leadership will be missed,” Ricardo Mora, former Goldman partner who retired from the firm last year, told the FT.
Esposito has been one of Solomon’s most powerful deputies and played a major role in combining the investment banking and trading businesses.
But he was also one of a number of people inside Goldman who was sceptical about the firm’s retail banking ambitions, according to two people familiar with the matter. Solomon ultimately pared back the consumer banking business.
In the memo to employees, Solomon said that Esposito had “decided to retire from Goldman Sachs” but would become a senior director.
Read the full article here