San Francisco Chronicle

Twitter exec to be CEO of SoFi

- By Nathaniel Popper and Chad Bray

Embattled online lender SoFi has poached Twitter’s chief operating officer, Anthony Noto, to be its CEO, dealing a blow to Twitter’s turnaround campaign.

SoFi announced Noto’s hiring Tuesday, just four months after Mike Cagney was forced to step down as its chief executive because of sexual harassment claims. Cagney was accused in a lawsuit of having had inappropri­ate relationsh­ips with company employees and questioned over whether he had skirted risk and compliance controls.

In Noto, SoFi has chosen a fast-rising executive in the tech industry. Noto, 49, was one of the most respected bankers at Goldman Sachs before becoming the chief financial officer of the National Football League

and then Twitter.

Since arriving at Twitter, Noto has been perhaps the most trusted deputy to CEO Jack Dorsey, and he has taken on several additional roles. He has recently been leading the company’s interactio­ns with investors and its marketing as well as its revenuegen­erating efforts, especially with its moves into live video.

With Dorsey splitting his time between Twitter and Square, the payments company, Noto is credited with being a calming force as Twitter has faced significan­t employee turnover and doubts about its ability to make money from its enormous audience.

While Twitter’s stock price has fallen steadily over the past three years, in the past few months it has ticked upward. On Tuesday, after Noto’s departure was announced, the company’s shares fell nearly 4 percent before recovering some of the loss to close down 2.5 percent at $22.75.

Twitter said that other employees would assume Noto’s responsibi­lities while it looked for a replacemen­t.

On Twitter, Dorsey wrote: “I’m really sad to see @anthonynot­o leave us, but I’m happy for him and really proud of everything he’s accomplish­ed at Twitter.”

At SoFi, Noto will be responsibl­e for trying to steady a company that was thrown into turmoil by Cagney’s departure.

After co-founding SoFi in 2011, Cagney turned it into one of the few breakout stars among the thousands of online lending startups trying to disrupt the financial industry.

SoFi began by refinancin­g the loans of elite students, but the company then expanded into personal loans, insurance and wealth management, and was making several moves to turn into more of a full-service bank.

After Cagney’s departure, though, SoFi significan­tly trimmed its ambitions, pulling back its applicatio­n to get a bank charter.

Noto suggested Tuesday that he planned to pick up where Cagney had left off.

“SoFi has a significan­t opportunit­y to build on its leadership position in student and personal loans to revolution­ize consumer finance and build a next-generation financial services company,” Noto said in a news release.

Noto will also need to find replacemen­ts for several top executives who left around the same time that Cagney did, including the company’s chief financial officer and chief technology officer.

Noto’s new job, which will start March 1, could put him into competitio­n with his old boss. Dorsey’s second company, Square, has recently been making moves to become more of a consumer bank, as SoFi had looked to do under Cagney.

Since Cagney’s departure, SoFi has been led by the chairman of its board, Tom Hutton. Hutton will return to his former role.

“We are simply thrilled to have found someone of Anthony’s expertise and knowledge to lead SoFi,” Hutton said in a news release. “The SoFi board unanimousl­y agrees that Anthony’s deep understand­ing of technology, consumer and financial businesses make him the perfect fit to be SoFi’s CEO.”

Cagney was one of the highest-profile tech executives to be felled by the wave of sexual harassment claims that have swept corporate America over the last year.

SoFi employees said the inappropri­ately sexualized atmosphere of the company ran deep and extended to the company’s satellite offices.

Unlike some other executives, Cagney did not acknowledg­e that the claims against him were true, though he did announce the start of an internal investigat­ion before his departure.

SoFi has not yet made public the findings of that investigat­ion. The company’s chief human resources officer, Jing Liao, said in December that SoFi was creating two working groups to improve the company’s culture and its approach to inclusion and diversity.

Nathaniel Popper and Chad Bray are New York Times writers.

 ?? Eric Risberg / Associated Press 2014 ?? Twitter had begun to show signs of a turnaround. Anthony Noto’s departure could slow those efforts.
Eric Risberg / Associated Press 2014 Twitter had begun to show signs of a turnaround. Anthony Noto’s departure could slow those efforts.

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