Lee's first job after graduation from Harvard was at consulting firm, McKinsey & Company.[1][6] He spent two years there before leaving in 1988 to attend Harvard Business School.[1][6]
Lee did a summer internship at Goldman Sachs in 1989 but ultimately decided to return to McKinsey & Company in 1990 after graduating from Harvard Business School.[1][6]
In 1992, Lee joined private equity firm, Warburg Pincus.[1][6] He would spend 21 years at the firm where he became a Partner as well as a member of the Executive Management Group.[7][3] While at Warburg, Lee was involved in transactions that included companies such as Neiman Marcus, Aramark, TransDigm and MBIA.[3][8]
From 2009 to 2017, Lee was a lead director at Arch Capital Group as well as a board member for other firms such as Transdigm and Aramark.[7]
The Carlyle Group
In 2013, Lee joined The Carlyle Group as deputy chief investment officer for corporate private equity.[2][3][8] In 2016, Lee also assumed the role of leading the global credit unit; by April 2021, Carlyle's credit assets under management had doubled to $56 billion.[9][10]
In October 2017, the firm announced that its founders would remain executive chairmen on the board of directors but would step down as the day-to-day leaders of the firm. They named Lee and Glenn Youngkin to succeed them as co-chief executive officers, effective January 1, 2018.[11] As co-chief executive officers, Lee oversaw the firm's corporate private equity and global credit businesses and Youngkin oversaw Carlyle's real estate, energy, infrastructure businesses, and investment solutions businesses.[12][13] Lee and Youngkin also joined the firm's board of directors when they became co-chief executive officers.[14]
There was an alleged power struggle between Lee and Youngkin during their time together at Carlyle where Lee eventually won out. This was largely due to Lee being given control of the corporate private equity and global credit units at the onset, which were bigger and more profitable than the others.[16][17] In July 2020, Youngkin stepped down from his role at Carlyle, making Lee the sole chief executive officer of the firm.[16]
While serving as CEO, Lee was credited with simplifying Carlyle's fund structure, organizing the firm into three distinct business units: private equity, credit and investment solutions.[10]
On August 8, 2022, Lee stepped down from his role as CEO due to a dispute in negotiations regarding his contract renewal.[18] Lee proposed a $300 million pay package.[19] Co-founder William E. Conway Jr. was announced to act as interim leader of the Carlyle Group while the firm searched for a new CEO.[18]
Personal life
Lee is married to Zita Ezpeleta and they have two children.[7] Lee and Ezpeleta met in Lowell House at Harvard College when they were undergraduates.[20] Ezpeleta is an attorney who previously practiced at Sidley Austin.
^Lee, Hak Chong (1967) "Organizational Impact of Computers," Management Services: A Magazine of Planning, Systems, and Controls: Vol. 4: No. 3, Article 6.