Full Name
Malcolm Johnson
Job Title
CEO
Company
Langdon Park Capital, LLC
Speaker Bio
Malcolm Johnson is the Founder and CEO of Langdon Park Capital, a real estate investment
manager focused on creating lasting social impact in historically underserved Black and Latino
communities, while generating strong returns for its investors. Johnson directs the firm’s overall
strategy and operations.
Johnson has nearly two decades of experience in the commercial real estate industry. Previously, he
was an Executive Director in JPMorgan’s Commercial Real Estate group, where he led the firm’s
efforts on a new platform that deployed equity into affordable and workforce housing projects in
markets across the country. Johnson joined JPMorgan in 2012 as the senior coverage banker in the
firm’s Real Estate Banking group in Los Angeles, where he underwrote and arranged $3 billion in
debt financing for institutional real estate developers and investment firms. From 2006—2012,
Johnson was a vice president in the Commercial Real Estate Banking group at Bank of America
Merrill Lynch. Prior to his banking career, Johnson played professional football with the Cincinnati
Bengals, New York Jets and Pittsburgh Steelers from 1999—2003.
Johnson has been a guest lecturer for the Tepper School of Business at Carnegie Mellon University,
UCLA Anderson School of Business, University of Southern California Marshall School of Business,
the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, the National Football League and numerous
schools and non-profit organizations in South Los Angeles and his native Washington, DC.
Johnson serves on the Advisory Board for the Fitzgerald Institute for Real Estate at the University of
Notre Dame, the Board of Trustees for the Marlborough School and the Corporate Advisory Board for
The Brotherhood Crusade, a non-profit organization supporting low-income South Los Angeles
residents.
Johnson received his Masters in Business Administration from the Tepper School of Business at
Carnegie Mellon University and his Bachelors of Business Administration from the University of Notre
Dame Mendoza College of Business.
Malcolm Johnson