Los Angeles Times

Twitter operations chief quits to be SoFi’s CEO

His departure could slow the social media giant’s momentum.

- By Julie Verhage, Selina Wang and Sonali Basak Verhage, Wang and Basak write for Bloomberg.

Twitter Inc. Chief Operating Officer Anthony Noto has resigned to be chief executive at financial technology company Social Finance Inc.

Noto is to assume the post at SoFi in March. His departure comes at a pivotal time for Twitter, which is finally showing results from its turnaround efforts. Since the San Francisco company beat Wall Street’s estimates in late October, at least six analysts have upgraded the company, citing more user engagement and improvemen­ts in Twitter’s live video advertisin­g.

Noto’s take-action attitude has been an important balancing presence to Chief Executive Jack Dorsey’s introverte­d leadership style, according to people familiar with the matter. Losing him may deal a blow to the company’s momentum.

Twitter hired Noto, 49, as CFO in 2014 — with a stock award worth more than $60 million — after his career in banking at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., where he helped Twitter go public. He served as the social media company’s finance head before taking over as chief operating officer in 2016. Noto has played a leading role in directing the company’s product vision, especially in shaping the platform’s future around live video streaming.

“He has been a reassuring force for investors even amidst the stock’s volatile performanc­e over the past several years,” Anthony DiClemente, an analyst at Evercore ISI, wrote in a note. “Investors may not ascribe similar confidence in a replacemen­t lacking the unique combinatio­n of establishe­d track record within Twitter [and] previous Wall Street experience.”

Twitter shares fell as much as 3.9% early Tuesday, their biggest intraday drop since Nov. 29, before recovering somewhat. They closed at $22.75, down 2.4%.

Noto comes into the role at closely held SoFi facing a number of questions, including the direction of the online lending firm. San Francisco-based SoFi — one of the most valuable fin-tech start-ups — lost its cofounder and CEO, Mike Cagney, last fall amid company turmoil, including allegation­s of sexual harassment and fraudulent actions by managers. Other highrankin­g executives also have departed, leaving SoFi without a permanent finance chief or revenue chief.

Cagney had envisioned building SoFi into a bank of the future, targeting millennial­s with products including insurance, mortgages and wealth management. With Cagney gone, those plans have been slowed or put on hold.

SoFi Executive Chairman Tom Hutton has served as interim CEO since Cagney stepped down. He will become nonexecuti­ve chairman of the board.

Noto’s responsibi­lities for Twitter’s business operations and revenue-generating operations will be assumed by other members of the company’s leadership team, Twitter said. Matt Derella, Twitter’s vice president of global revenue and operations, will continue to lead the company’s advertisin­g sales efforts.

 ?? Drew Angerer Getty Images ?? ANTHONY NOTO had a leading role in directing Twitter’s product vision.
Drew Angerer Getty Images ANTHONY NOTO had a leading role in directing Twitter’s product vision.

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