Jacob Pruitt named president of Fidelity Charitable

Jacob Pruitt named president of Fidelity Charitable
He succeeds Pamela Norley, who is retiring after a 25-year career at Fidelity.
OCT 05, 2021

Fidelity Charitable, the nation’s largest grantmaker, has named Jacob Pruitt its president, succeeding Pamela Norley, effective Oct. 18.

Prior to joining Fidelity Charitable, Pruitt was vice president and head of T. Rowe Price Charitable, leading the asset manager’s charitable giving strategy and donor-advised fund program. Pruitt also led the Colorado regional strategy for T. Rowe Price and was a member of the company’s Diversity and Inclusion Operating Council.

Pruitt succeeds Pamela Norley, who is retiring after leading Fidelity Charitable for five years, following more than 20 years spent in various leadership roles across Fidelity Investments.

Latest News

Q1 annuity sales top $105B amid persistent economic worries: Limra
Q1 annuity sales top $105B amid persistent economic worries: Limra

Limra data shows RILAs and variable annuities outperforming, while fixed-rate deferred sales lag their 2024 highs.

Stocks continue historic winning streak as trade hopes, jobs data drive rebound
Stocks continue historic winning streak as trade hopes, jobs data drive rebound

The S&P 500's longest rally in more than 20 years came amid evidence of labor market resilience in the immediate wake of April's Liberation Day tariffs.

Americans' longevity illiteracy puts retirement at risk, finds new research
Americans' longevity illiteracy puts retirement at risk, finds new research

With membership in the "century club" expected to quadruple in three decades, joint studies from Nationwide and the TIAA Institute shed new light on people's planning blind spots.

Tariff reactions split along political lines, advisors say
Tariff reactions split along political lines, advisors say

The Watchman Group's Andrew Herzog has noticed his more left-leaning clients have been "looking to get out of the stock market, perhaps do more fixed income or go to cash" while his right-leaning clients are more comfortable keeping assets as they have them.

In periods of volatility, don’t lose sight of clients’ long-term goals
In periods of volatility, don’t lose sight of clients’ long-term goals

As you work with clients to navigate the current markets, stay grounded in their values and priorities.

SPONSORED The evolution of private credit

From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.

SPONSORED Compliance in real time: Technology's expanding role in RIA oversight

RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.