Stephen Schwarzman, the co-founder and chief executive of global investment firm Blackstone, is preparing to transfer most of his estimated $48 billion personal fortune into a philanthropic foundation, according to documents reviewed by the Wall Street Journal. If implemented, the plan would significantly expand the Stephen A. Schwarzman Foundation and could place it among the world’s largest charitable organisations. Schwarzman has said his philanthropic focus is centred on artificial intelligence, education and preparing societies for rapid technological change.
Stephen Schwarzman’s plans for large-scale philanthropy
The Wall Street Journal reported that Schwarzman and his team are planning a major expansion of the Stephen A. Schwarzman Foundation, which reported $65 million in total assets in 2024. Internal documents reviewed by the newspaper said the foundation recently hired an executive director to oversee future growth and long-term strategy. Neither Blackstone nor the foundation responded to requests for comment.Schwarzman is a signatory to the Giving Pledge, which encourages the world’s wealthiest individuals to donate most of their fortunes to charitable causes. His net worth is estimated at about $47.8 billion by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. If nearly all of that wealth is eventually transferred to the foundation, it would place it alongside major global philanthropies such as the Gates Foundation and the Wellcome Trust.In his Giving Pledge letter, Schwarzman said advances in artificial intelligence and computing could reshape employment, education and global competitiveness. He described an urgent need for societies to prepare for these changes and said these concerns had already led him to fund large-scale initiatives linked to AI, research and education.Schwarzman has also cited family influences on his approach to giving. He has said his grandfather regularly sent medical supplies to children overseas, while his father extended credit to newly arrived immigrants while running a small business in Philadelphia. He has described these experiences as shaping his view of philanthropy as both a responsibility and a privilege.
From Wall Street to global philanthropy
Schwarzman began his career at Lehman Brothers in 1972 after earning an MBA from Harvard Business School. He rose to become a managing director before leaving in 1985 to co-found Blackstone with Peter G. Peterson. The firm launched with $400,000 and later grew into one of the world’s largest asset managers. Today, Blackstone oversees more than $1.3 trillion across private equity, real estate, private credit and infrastructure.Beyond domestic giving, Schwarzman has supported global education initiatives. In 2013, he founded the Schwarzman Scholars programme at Tsinghua University in Beijing, which funds a one-year master’s degree in global affairs and is often compared to the Rhodes Scholarship.In 2018, Schwarzman donated $350 million to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to establish the Schwarzman College of Computing. The gift was the largest in the university’s history. MIT said the funding was aimed at advancing artificial intelligence research while integrating ethical and societal considerations into computing education.In recent interviews, Schwarzman has said he now defines his legacy by what he is building for the future rather than past financial achievements, with philanthropy, education and technology at the centre of that long-term vision.


