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SIMON HAMILTON


MANAGING DIRECTOR AND PORTFOLIO


MANAGER, BAIRD/ THE WISE INVESTOR GROUP, RESTON


With more than 25 years of experience, Hamilton is one of Baird/Te Wise Investor Group’s three partners, overseeing the team’s portfolio manage- ment department. He specializes in investment policy, security selection, asset allocation and client management decision making. He joined Baird/Te Wise Investor Group in 2007. Prior to that, he was vice president of investments at Smith Barney and in 2003 served in the same role with Baltimore-based investment banking firm Ferris, Baker Watts.


FAVORITE APP: CellarTracker. I’ve started a light wine collection over the past few years and this app helps search and review wines.


FIRST JOB: Busing tables at Phillips Seafood at the Harborplace in Baltimore


FAVORITE SONG: “Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” by The Rolling Stones


HOBBY/PASSION: I have three daughters and I’m heavily involved in supporting their passion for soccer. I’ve coached youth soccer for the past 10 years and have been on the board of Vienna Youth Soccer for seven years.


H. HITER HARRIS III


MANAGING DIRECTOR AND CO-FOUNDER, HARRIS WILLIAMS, RICHMOND


In 1991, Harris co-founded global investment bank- ing firm Harris Williams, which specializes in merger and acquisition advisory services. Harris has assisted clients locate buyers in areas


including consumer products, health care, building products, industrial manufacturing, natural resources and media. Today, Harris Williams has 10 dedicated industry groups and employs more than 350 people in its eight offices in the U.S. and Europe. Aside from his investment work, Harris serves on


the board of petroleum additives giant NewMarket Corp. Te former Hampden-Sydney College football player has served on the board of his alma mater — and instead of pursuing a professional football career, attended Harvard Business School. Harris has also served on boards for many Virginia organizations, including Hampden-Sydney College, the Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges, the University of Richmond and the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Foundation.


CHARLES R. HENDERSON JR.


SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, HAMPTON ROADS MARKET PRESIDENT, BANK OF AMERICA, NORFOLK


Henderson, a West Virginia native who’s lived in Hampton Roads for four decades, has long held his position as president of Bank of America’s Hampton Roads market, and is also in charge of its charitable arm. A graduate of Hampden-Sydney College,


Henderson is a trustee of the Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce and a board member of the Virginia Bankers Association. With $91.2 billion in revenue, 66 million clients


and 210,000 employees worldwide, Charlotte-based Bank of America is the second-largest banking institution in the country and ranks 25th on the Fortune 500.


EDUCATION: Hampden-Sydney College (B.A.), Virginia Bankers School of Retail Management, Stonier Graduate School of Banking


SOMETHING YOU WOULD CHANGE ABOUT VIRGINIA: Encourage more collaboration among municipalities to unleash the enormous potential of our commonwealth


RECENT NEW LIFE EXPERIENCE: The recent birth of my first grandchild


JERMAINE JOHNSON


GREATER WASHINGTON AND VIRGINIA REGIONAL PRESIDENT, PNC FINANCIAL SERVICES GROUP INC., SPRINGFIELD


In August, Johnson started his new position as the head of Greater Washington operations for Pittsburgh-based PNC Financial Services Group Inc. He has big shoes to fill, taking over the post from Richard Bynum, a prominent D.C.-area business leader who this year was promoted to a larger corporate role. Johnson joined PNC in 2005, following positions


at Bank of America and GE Healthcare. In his previous role at PNC as executive vice president and market manager for Corporate Banking in Greater Richmond and Greater Maryland, Johnson led large corporate and government contracting segments. In his new position, Johnson will oversee


community affairs, community development banking and corporate social responsibility, as well as diver- sity and inclusion initiatives. It is his responsibility locally to implement PNC’s $1 billion commitment to end systemic racism and support economic empowerment of African Americans and low- and moderate-income communities. Ranked No. 151 on the Fortune 500, PNC is


the ninth-largest bank in the country by assets, with more than $430 bllion. It has nearly 2,500 branches, more than eight million customers and more than 52,000 employees.


BRIAN R. KAHN


PRESIDENT AND CEO, FRANCHISE GROUP INC., VIRGINIA BEACH


It’s been a transformative year for Franchise Group, which changed its name from Liberty Tax Inc., in September 2019. It signaled a strategic shift for the company, which now focuses on buying and investing in franchises and franchise-able businesses. Kahn, who became CEO a month later, not only


leads Franchise Group (which reported $2.1 billion in 2019 revenue), but also has a stake in it through the Orlando-based equity firm he founded in 1998, Vintage Capital Management, where he serves as managing partner. Vintage Capital invests in the consumer, defense


and manufacturing sectors — and last year report- edly offered more than $460 million to buy Red Robin. Tat didn’t happen, and Vintage has dropped its stock in the burger chain from about 12% to 5%. As for Franchise Group, the company ramped


up for its new direction by acquiring Buddy’s Home Furnishings and announcing a $208 million acquisi- tion of Te Vitamin Shoppe and its more than 750 stores. It also bought Sears Outlet and American Freight stores, rebranding approximately 300 stores this year into American Freight - Furniture, Mattress and Appliance. Kahn, a graduate of Harvard University, also serves as director of Babcock & Wilcox Enterprises.


EVELYN LEE


GREATER WASHINGTON REGION PRESIDENT, TRUIST FINANCIAL CORP., WASHINGTON, D.C.


Lee oversees the D.C. region, including much of Northern Virginia, for Truist. She previously worked at SunTrust for 19 years and served as senior vice president and head of senior living/aging services for the wholesale banking practice. A founding member of the DC International


School, Lee served as board chair and then as treasurer and continues to sit on the public charter school’s finance and facilities committees. She is also past treasurer of the board of the World Affairs Council of D.C. Last year it was announced that Atlanta-based


SunTrust was merging with Winston-Salem, North Carolina-based BB&T to create the nation’s sixth-largest bank in a $66 billion deal. Te merger was completed in December, but operations will continue under the BB&T and SunTrust names until the banking systems are combined, which could take as long as two years. Headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina,


the Fortune 500 company is the nation’s largest finan- cial services holding company, serving approximately 10 million households and operating more than 2,000 branches in 15 states.


www.VirginiaBusiness.com 75


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