Robert E. Grady
Robert E. Grady is an American venture capitalist, private equity investor, and former public official. He has worked at such leading investment firms as Robertson Stephens, The Carlyle Group, and Gryphon Investors, and for a number of elected officials, including former President George H.W.Bush and New Jersey Governors Tom Kean and Chris Christie.
Early life and education
Grady was born in New Jersey and grew up in Livingston, New Jersey, where he attended Livingston High School, graduating as part of the class of 1975. He graduated cum laude from Harvard College, where he was an editor of the Harvard Crimson. Grady earned a Master of Business Administration from the Stanford Graduate School of Business, where he later served on the faculty for over a decade as a Lecturer in Public Management.Career
Business
Grady is currently a partner at Gryphon Investors, a middle-market private equity firm, where he heads the firm's Industrial Growth Group. He has been cited in the press as having led Gryphon's investments in Pacur, Potter Electric Signal Corporation, Transportation Insight, Nolan Transportation Group, and Washing Systems, which was sold to Japan's Kao Corporation in 2018.Prior to joining Gryphon, he was a partner at the private equity fund-of-funds Cheyenne Capital, which invested in private equity funds and in private transactions for the State of Wyoming’s Permanent Funds. For nearly a decade before that, he was a prominent partner at The Carlyle Group, where he served as Managing Director, member of the Management Committee, and head of Venture and Growth Capital. He was a director of several Carlyle companies, including Blackboard Inc., AuthenTec, Wall Street Institute, eScreen, and Viator. During his tenure at Carlyle, Grady also served for six years as a Director and as Chairman of the National Venture Capital Association, which represents more than 400 U.S. venture capital firms. In that role, Grady argued that the United States needed to adopt a strategy to enhance competitiveness, as the previously successful system of investing in higher education, allowing immigration for talented foreign born nationals, and ensuring access to the U.S. capital markets for growing companies was crumbling. In 2011, he gave a TEDx talk on “The Care and Feeding of the Innovation Ecosystem”.
In the 1990s, Grady was a Managing Director and member of the Management Committee at Robertson Stephens, an investment bank focused on growth companies in technology and healthcare, that was acquired by Bank of America and subsequently by BankBoston.
Politics
Grady began his career as Legislative Assistant and later Administrative Assistant for former U.S. Representative Millicent H. Fenwick. He went on to serve as Director of Communications for former New Jersey Governor Thomas H. Kean. Grady was the chief speechwriter and a senior policy advisor for the George H. W. Bush 1988 presidential campaign, and later served in White House as Associate Director of the Office of Management and Budget for Natural Resources, Energy and Science, Executive Associate Director of the OMB, and Deputy Assistant to the President. He was widely known for advising Bush in the crafting of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990.He also was one of the President’s top advisors on science and technology, research and development, energy and natural resources, and budget issues,
Noted early in his career by Newsweek as “one of three thirty-somethings to watch” and the “polished No. 2” at the Office of Management and Budget in George H. W. Bush administration, Grady has emerged over the years as an adviser to various leading Republican candidates and public officials. Grady served as an economic adviser to George W. Bush, Mitt Romney, California Governors Pete Wilson and Arnold Schwarzenegger, Chris Christie of New Jersey, and Matt Mead of Wyoming.
In 2001, President George W. Bush appointed Grady to be a member of the Advisory Committee on Trade and Policy Negotiations, and he was later appointed by the Administrator of NASA to be a member of the NASA Advisory Council's Task Force on the Cost and Management of the International Space Station.
Grady served as a volunteer adviser to his childhood friend Chris Christie during Christie’s tenure as Governor of New Jersey and in the Chris Christie 2016 presidential campaign. Grady served as co-chairman and member of Christie's Transition Task Force on Budget and Taxes, as the author of his Inaugural Address and his annual state-of-the-state and budget addresses to Joint Sessions of the Legislature, as Chairman of the New Jersey State Investment Council, which oversees the state's $80 billion pension plan, and as a debate coach, policy advisor and speechwriter for his campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. When Governor Christie began his run for the Presidency, Grady was reported as having coached Christie for the presidential debates as well as being the author of detailed and well-received policy speeches on economic growth, entitlement reform and energy given by Christie.
At the end of his service as chair of the New Jersey Investment Council, and after Governor Christie announced his candidacy for the Presidency, Grady became the focus of multiple articles in 2014 written by former Democratic activist, David Sirota. The reporting noted that the New Jersey Investment Council voted to invest $300 million with The Carlyle Group. Grady was formerly employed at Carlyle but had recused himself in writing from the investment decision. Writing in Fortune magazine, Dan Primack, a leading expert on private equity, called Sirota's article a “smear” and pointed out that Grady “has no economic interests in any Carlyle investments made since his departure from the firm” and New Jersey had already invested in two different Carlyle funds before Grady even arrived at the New Jersey Investment Council. Grady retired from the volunteer position on the New Jersey Investment Council in November 2014 to care for an ailing family member, after staying on longer than the agreed four years to ensure a smooth transition between CIOs.
In more recent years, in Wyoming, Grady has become increasingly active as a speaker on the economy, mentor to start-up companies, and organizer of economic growth initiatives. He was a volunteer economic advisor to Wyoming Governor Matt Mead. Today, he is a member of the Wyoming State Banking Board, a Director of the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, past Chairman of the St. John’s Hospital Foundation, and a member of the Investment Committees of both the Community Foundation of Jackson Hole and of the Daniels Fund.