Carlyle Group unveils new leadership as founders step
back
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[October 25, 2017]
By Greg Roumeliotis
(Reuters) - Carlyle Group LP said on
Wednesday that Glenn Youngkin and Kewsong Lee would become its co-chief
executives, in the U.S. private equity firm's biggest shakeup since it
was founded by David Rubenstein, William Conway and Daniel D'Aniello 30
years ago.
The move makes Carlyle the latest buyout firm to take steps toward a
generational change, after peer KKR & Co LP <KKR.N> said in July it
would promote Joseph Bae and Scott Nuttall to co-presidents and co-chief
operating officers, setting them up as successors to its founders Henry
Kravis and George Roberts.
Unlike with KKR, however, Carlyle is giving Youngkin and Lee, both aged
51, its top jobs, making it the first among the private equity
industry's publicly traded pioneers, that also include Blackstone Group
LP <BX.N> and Apollo Global Management LLC <APO.N>, to hand over the
reins.
Rubenstein and Conway, both 68, will give up their roles as Carlyle
co-CEOs to become co-executive chairmen of the Washington, D.C.-based
firm's board, while D'Aniello, 71, will transition from chairman to
chairman emeritus, Carlyle said in a statement. The changes will become
effective in January.

"Glenn and Kewsong will work together on all issues related to leading
Carlyle, and will have full responsibility, authority and accountability
for the firm's performance," Rubenstein, Conway and D'Aniello said in a
statement.
Youngkin is currently Carlyle's president and chief operating officer. A
23-year veteran of the firm, he is credited with building many of
Carlyle's businesses, including its energy investing practice and its
fund-of-funds division.
Lee, currently Carlyle's deputy chief investment officer for private
equity and head of its global market strategies segment, joined Carlyle
just four years ago from Warburg Pincus LLC, another private equity
firm, where he led investments in the consumer, industrial and services
sectors.
Lee beat other Carlyle insiders for the top job thanks to his reputation
as a problem solver, having helped rebuilt Carlyle's credit investing
business after several missteps.
The transition takes place after Carlyle reshaped its portfolio to exit
from unprofitable businesses, such as hedge funds. Its shares are now
hovering around a two-year high thanks to the strong performance of its
private equity funds, which have been buoyed by a stock market rally and
are returning on average 2.2 times its investors' money.

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David Rubenstein, Co-Founder and Co-CEO of the Carlyle Group, speaks
at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills,
California, U.S., May 2, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo

MORE DIVERSE FIRM
Carlyle, whose investments over the years have included car rental company Hertz
Global Holdings Inc <HTZ.N>, photo agency Getty Images Inc and consumer
headphones maker Beats Electronics LLC, is a much more diverse and global
investment firm since its launch in 1987.
Rubenstein, Conway and D'Aniello, worth about $2.9 billion each according to
Forbes, have built it into a manager of more than $170 billion of assets across
almost 300 funds and investment vehicles, spanning private equity, credit
investments and real estate. It employs more than 1,550 people in 31 offices
across six continents.
Even though they have been serving in senior roles already, Youngkin and Lee
will have big shoes to fill, as the three founders are identified closely in the
minds of many fund investors and Carlyle shareholders with the firm's investment
acumen and strategy.
Conway, a prolific dealmaker, will retain his role as Carlyle's chief investment
officer. He will be joined by Peter Clare, who was deputy chief investment
officer for private equity alongside Lee and has now been named co-chief
investment officer.
In total, Rubenstein, a former deputy assistant to U.S. President Jimmy Carter
for domestic policy, Conway, a former chief financial officer of U.S.
telecommunications company MCI Communications, and D'Aniello, a former vice
president for finance and development at Marriott International Inc <MAR.O>, own
close to half of Carlyle, which has a market capitalization of $7.9 billion.
They said in the statement they would continue to be substantial investors in
Carlyle's funds "for years to come."

Blackstone, Carlyle's biggest rival, has not yet formally named a successor to
its CEO and co-founder Stephen Schwarzman, 70, though the head of its real
estate business Jonathan Gray, 47, is widely recognized as his heir apparent.
Apollo faces a less pressing succession issue given that 66-year-old CEO Leon
Black's co-founding partners, Marc Rowan and Joshua Harris, are 55 and 52,
respectively.
(Reporting by Greg Roumeliotis in New York; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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