Malcolm Johnson is the Founder and CEO of Langdon Park Capital, a real estate investment management company with a differentiated strategy focused on profitable, sustainable, and scalable investment opportunities centered in Black and Latino communities. Johnson directs the firm’s overall strategy and operations.

Johnson was previously an Executive Director in JPMorgan’s Commercial Real Estate Group, where he led a newly created platform that deployed equity into Affordable and workforce housing projects across the United States. Johnson also served as senior coverage banker for JPMorgan’s relationships with Community
Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs), which are private institutions focused on community-based lending. Johnson first joined JPMorgan as the senior coverage banker in the firm’s real estate banking group in Los Angeles, CA, where he underwrote and arranged $3 billion in secured and unsecured debt financing for West Coast-based publicly traded and privately held real estate developers and investment firms.

Prior to joining JPMorgan, he was a Vice President at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, where he led $2.6 billion in financing for a number of prominent Los Angeles-based real estate companies. In 2015, the Los Angeles Business Journal named Johnson one of LA’s “Most Influential Lenders.” In 2010, he was honored with NAIOP’s “Developing Leaders” award. He previously worked as an internal consultant for PNC Bank in the company’s residential mortgage division. Prior to his banking career, Johnson played professional football with the Cincinnati Bengals, New York Jets, and Pittsburgh Steelers from 1999 – 2003.

Johnson serves on the Advisory Board for the Fitzgerald Institute for Real Estate at the University of Notre Dame, the Sustaining Board for UCLA’s Ziman Center for Real Estate, 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. He has been a guest speaker for the UCLA Anderson School of Business, the University of Southern California Marshall School of Business, etc.