Peng Zhao

Chinese-American financial services businessman From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peng Zhao

Peng Zhao (Chinese: 赵鹏; pinyin: Zhào Péng, born 1982 or 1983)[1] is a Chinese-American businessman who is the CEO of market making firm Citadel Securities. Peng Zhao was born in Beijing, China.

Quick Facts Born, Education ...
Peng Zhao
赵鹏
Thumb
Peng Zhao, May 2013
Born1982 or 1983 (age 42–43)[1]
Beijing, China[2]
EducationPeking University (BA)
University of California, Berkeley (MA, PhD)
OccupationBusinessman
Years active2006-present
EmployerCitadel Securities
TitleCEO (2017-present)
Board member ofThe Asian American Foundation[3]
National Committee on United States–China Relations
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Education

Zhao was a student of the Talented Children Training Program at Beijing No.8 High School from 1993 to 1997. He earned a bachelor's degree in applied mathematics from Peking University in 2001[4] and a PhD in statistics from University of California, Berkeley in 2006.[2]

Career

Peng Zhao was a summer associate at Lehman Brothers and was a quantitative researcher at Evnine & Associates before joining Citadel.[5]

Peng Zhao joined Citadel Securities in 2006 as a quantitative researcher.[6]

In July 2016, Citadel Securities announced that then Microsoft COO, B. Kevin Turner, was joining the firm as CEO.[7] At this time a new role, chief scientist, was created specifically for Peng Zhao who was then the global head of market making.[7]

Five months after joining, Kevin Turner left Citadel Securities, and on January 27, 2017, at age 34, Peng Zhao was promoted to CEO.[1][7]

Affiliations

Zhao is a director of the National Committee on U.S. China Relations.[8] He is a founding board member of the non-profit advocacy and anti-discrimination group The Asian American Foundation (TAAF), established in 2021.[9][10][11]

In 2019, Zhao was named on Fortune's 40 Under 40 list.[2]

Philanthropy

Zhao and his wife organized a one million surgical mask donation to Chicago's first responders during the coronavirus pandemic in 2020.[12] The couple also supports Kartemquin Films, a non-profit documentary filmmaking organization, in its efforts to fund filmmakers from the AAPI community through the Zhao-Chen AAPI Voices Fund.[13] They were co-executive producers of the award-winning documentary Finding Yingying, which was released by Kartemquin Films.[14] The couple also funds the Victor Wong Fellowship, a program associated with Chicago's Second City, to train and mentor aspiring comedians from the AAPI community.[15][16] Peng and other founding board members of TAAF committed $125 million to support AAPI organizations and causes at launch. According to The New York Times, it was the single largest philanthropic gift devoted to Asian Americans.[9]

See also

References

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