BLACK ENTERPRISE Announces List of 75 Most Powerful Blacks on Wall Street

Publication's Fourth Compilation of Wall Street Power Brokers Highlights Billion-Dollar Money Makers in Asset Management, Investment Banking, Private Equity, and Sales/Trading

BLACK ENTERPRISE Announces List of 75 Most Powerful Blacks on Wall Street

NEW YORK, Sept. 19 /PRNewswire/ -- BLACK ENTERPRISE (BE) today announced its "75 Most Powerful Blacks on Wall Street," as featured in the October 2006 cover story. The list includes 30 top-tier professionals, including cover subjects Raymond McGuire, managing director & co-head, global investment banking, Citigroup; and William M. Lewis Jr., managing director & co-chairman, investment banking, Lazard Freres & Co., L.L.C. Another 33 are entrepreneurs who head the largest black-owned investment banks, asset management companies, and private equity firms. Whether they are heading major departments, managing core businesses, or running their own firms, the executives highlighted have a significant impact on their companies' bottom lines.

BE's editorial team spent six months conducting extensive research to identify the members of this financial elite. This year's list outnumbers the previous three, topping out at 75, including seven professionals who have appeared on all three of the previous lists: Citigroup's James F. Haddon and Raymond J. McGuire, Bear Stearns' William H. Hayden, Lazard Freres' William M. Lewis Jr., Merrill Lynch's E. Stanley O'Neal, Utendahl Capital Partners' John O. Utendahl, and Morgan Stanley's George L. Van Amson. One reason for the expanded list is the growth of the private equity sector, the area in which 18 of the executives operate.

In 1992 and 1996, only two women made the most powerful on Wall Street list -- Michelle L. Collins, principal of William Blair, was one of them. In 2002, six women made our roster. This year's list features 11 women, including Collins, who resurfaced as co-founder of private equity firm Svoboda, Collins L.L.C., and newcomer Amy Ellis-Simon, head of multiproduct sales for Merrill Lynch. Ellis-Simon appeared on our "Up and Coming African Americans on Wall Street" list in 2002.

Although the impact of the "75 Most Powerful Blacks on Wall Street" is undeniable, the number of African American financial managers with such a significant influence remains relatively small. "African American movement within the industry has seen slow and steady progress, with incremental increases in minority recruitment," says P. Michelle Holton, manager of inclusion at Edward Jones and chairwoman of the Securities Industry Association's Diversity Committee. And movement within the pipeline into senior management has remained inert. According to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, representation of African American officials and managers is highest in the areas of banking/credit (7.0%) and lowest in the securities industry (4.4%).

Wall Street is still viewed as an exclusive club -- a bastion of white male privilege. But John W. Rogers Jr., chairman and CEO of Ariel Capital Management L.L.C. says it's not that African Americans are intentionally being kept out of the industry, but that, "when deals are being cut, we just aren't even thought about." Still, BE continues to recognize those African Americans who have excelled in the ultra competitive financial industry, showing how they have achieved success in the epicenter of the global economy.

The selection criteria for the "75 Most Powerful Blacks on Wall Street," along with comprehensive profiles, is available in the October 2006 issue of BLACK ENTERPRISE, available on newsstands September 26, 2006.

BLACK ENTERPRISE, your ultimate guide to financial empowerment, is the premier business, investing, and wealth-building resource for African Americans. Since 1970, BE has provided essential business information and advice to professionals, corporate executives, entrepreneurs, and decision makers. Every month, BLACK ENTERPRISE magazine provides 3.9 million readers with information on entrepreneurship, careers, and financial management. A multimedia company, BE also produces radio and television programming, business and lifestyle events, Web content, and digital media. BLACK ENTERPRISE is the definitive source of information for and about African American business markets and leaders, and the authority on black business news and trends.

Website: http://www.blackenterprise.com/



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