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Ms. Friedman will be leaving her post as chief financial officer of the Carlyle Group, within the next month, to become president of the Nasdaq OMX Group, where she began her career on Wall Street.
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In something of a surprise move, Adena Friedman has relinquished her post as chief financial officer of the Carlyle Group, effective immediately to return as President of the Nasdaq OMX Group, the company where her career on Wall Street began more than twenty years ago.
Overall Nasdaq has brought as part of a management re-shuffle, which, according to industry observers, will place Ms. Friedman strongly in position as a potential replacement for the company’s current CEO Robert Greifeld, who found himself in the hot seat last summer, when a series of technical glitches caused the exchange to temporarily suspend trading. Greifeld’s contract is due to expire on February 2017.
Adena Friedman’s decision to leave Carlyle, the Washington based, privately owned equity giant is being accepted with a brave face, despite it coming as a complete surprise, according to reports. Ms. Friedman joined Carlyle hired from Nasdaq just three years ago, becoming the first woman to reach the status of being a member of the multi-billion firm’s management committee.
Commenting on Adena’s resignation, David M. Rubenstein, co-chief executive of Carlyle stated that the while the company was sad to see Adena go, the understanding that she was presented with a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to serve as president of such an important body as Nasdaq OMX as well as to be the leading candidate to some day become CEO really was an offer that she could not refuse.
By quitting Carlise, Ms. Friedman is reportedly leaving behind what is potentially lucrative opportunity with the company, after having been offered and accepting a specially tailored compensation program, which would have seen her pick up share options tied to Carlyle’s investment profits.
Welcoming Ms. Frideman to her new position at the company, current CEO Robert Greifeld said in a statement that the company was honored and privileged to have Adena rejoin our organization. “She started her career at Nasdaq and played a major role in shaping the strategy that guides many of our actions today.” Greifeld summed up.
Announcing her decision to re-join Nasdaq, Adena Friedman explained that having the ability to have influence and create change and drive the strategy of an organization is really what excites me, and the reason that my decision was based on. “ “I am thrilled to be back at Nasdaq OMX, working for one of the most interesting and innovative companies in financial services, which under Bob Greifeld’s leadership has built an extremely effective and diversified business that is delivering record performance.” Ms. Friedman went on to add.
Ms. Friedman will officially take up her post at Nasdaq on June 12th, sharing the title of president with Hans-Ole Jochumsen, formerly head of the Copenhagen Stock Exchange who came to Nasdaq when they acquired OMX in 2008. Ironically, as head of corporate strategy at Nadaq, Adena was responsible for overseeing a number of prominent acquisitions, in particular the 2007 takeover of OMX, who operate seven Nordic and Baltic stock exchanges. By acquiring OMX, Nasdaq gained a foothold in the European stock and derivatives trading market. .
In her new role, Adena Friedman is expected to take responsibility for information services, technology solutions and the corporate client group, while Jochumsen will be in charge of overseeing global trading and market services for the group.
Adena Friedman graduated with a B.A. in Political Science from Williams College in Massachusetts, USA, later going on to earn an M.B.A., with honors, from Owen Graduate School of Management, Vanderbilt University, in Nashville.