Early career After graduating from business school in 1969, Altman began working at
Lehman Brothers, where he grew close to chairman
Peter G. Peterson. In 1974, he was made general partner at the age of 28—the youngest in Lehman's history. He left Lehman in 1977 to serve as
Assistant Secretary for Domestic Finance in the
U.S. Treasury from 1977 to 1981 under President
Jimmy Carter, for whom he had fundraised when Carter was
Governor of Georgia, and campaigned for in 1976, as well as working on his transition team. During the Reagan-Bush years, he fundraised for Democratic politicians such as Vice President
Walter F. Mondale, Massachusetts governor
Michael S. Dukakis, and Arkansas governor
Bill Clinton. He also advised two New York City mayors,
Ed Koch and
David N. Dinkins. Once on the job, Altman was viewed as "the favorite to succeed the 73-year-old Treasury Secretary," and he played a large role in some of the Clinton administration's biggest legislative victories, such as the passage of the
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 and the "approval of the
North American Free Trade Agreement." However, he resigned in 1994, after it was revealed that Altman had notified the Clinton White House of the criminal referrals made by the
Resolution Trust Corporation. After nearly 15 hours of testimony in February 1993 before the
House and
Senate Banking Committees, he submitted his resignation in August 1994, saying that he hoped his resignation would "help to diminish the controversy." He was succeeded by
Frank N. Newman, who was the Under Secretary for Domestic Finance at the time. he co-founded Evercore, an "independent
investment banking advisory firm" in
New York City, and currently serves as its chairman. By 2014, Evercore was "a major player," and its investment management arm had more than $14 billion in
assets under management, with its investment banking advisory arm boasting $1.5 trillion in "announced transactions." Evercore advised
General Motors through its
bankruptcy, and was paid $46 million by GM pre-bankruptcy. However, when it asked for a $17.9 million "success fee," a U.S. bankruptcy trustee called the fees "staggering," "inordinately large," and "clearly [exceeding] the bounds of reasonableness" given that "Evercore had no success at finding a purchaser or funder for the Debtors." Politically, Altman continued to stay in the loop. He advised two presidential candidates—
John Kerry in 2004, and
Hillary Clinton in 2008. In 2010, President
Barack Obama interviewed him as a potential candidate to replace
Larry Summers as his
National Economic Council director, ==Other activities==