Blackstone co-founder Peter Peterson dies, aged 91

FAN Editor
FILE PHOTO - Peter Peterson speaks at the 2011 Fiscal Summit on Solutions for America's future in Washington
FILE PHOTO – Peter Peterson speaks at the 2011 Fiscal Summit on Solutions for America’s future in Washington, May 25, 2011. REUTERS/Jason Reed

March 20, 2018

By Joshua Franklin

(Reuters) – Billionaire Wall Street financier Peter Peterson, who co-founded private equity firm Blackstone <BX.N> and served as U.S. President Richard Nixon’s commerce secretary, died on Tuesday of natural causes, his family said. He was 91.

“As a first-generation American born in Kearney, Nebraska, Pete exceeded all of his expectations in becoming a successful businessman, statesman and philanthropist,” the Peterson family said in a statement.

The son of Greek immigrants who operated a diner in Kearney, Peterson founded Blackstone in 1985 with Stephen Schwarzman, with an initial investment of $200,000.

The firm, which is still led by 71-year-old Schwarzman, now manages more than $400 billion in assets and went public in 2007. Forbes estimated Peterson’s net worth at $2 billion.

Peterson and Schwarzman settled on the Blackstone name by combining the German meaning of ‘schwarz’, which is black, with the meaning of ‘petros’ in Greek, which translates as stone.

Peterson received an undergraduate degree from Northwestern University in 1947 and an MBA from the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business in 1951.

He joined the Nixon administration in 1971, serving as assistant to the president for international economic affairs and then commerce secretary from 1972-73.

From Washington he went to Wall Street and was chairman and chief executive at investment bank Lehman Brothers, where he worked until 1983.

In his later years, Peterson focused more on philanthropy and in 2008 established the Peter G. Peterson Foundation.

In 2010, he signed The Giving Pledge, an initiative by investor Warren Buffett and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates to encourage the world’s billionaires to give away at least 50 percent of their wealth to charity.

Peterson is survived by his wife, five children and nine grandchildren.

(Reporting by Joshua Franklin in Boston, Editing by Rosalba O’Brien)

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