By Ryan Dezember And Kimberly S. Johnson 

Michael J. Cavanagh, who stunned Wall Street last year when he left J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. for a private-equity firm, is joining Comcast Corp. as chief financial officer after less than a year at Carlyle Group LP.

Mr. Cavanagh, a James Dimon protégé who was considered a possible successor to the J.P. Morgan chief executive, comes to Comcast as the cable giant looks to regroup after the collapse of its $45.2 billion bid to acquire Time Warner Cable Inc.

In a statement Monday, Mr. Cavanagh said the opportunity at Comcast, the nation's largest cable-TV and broadband provider and owner of the NBCUniversal family of TV networks, was "something I could not pass up." He is expected to start in his new role by July 6, and his employment agreement is effective through 2019, according to a regulatory filing. Mr. Cavanagh is succeeding Michael J. Angelakis, who will lead a $4.1 billion investment company with Comcast and become a senior adviser to the company.

Mr. Cavanagh, 49 years old, joined Carlyle last summer as co-president and co-chief operating officer alongside longtime Carlyle deal-maker Glenn Youngkin. The two men jointly ran the Washington, D.C., firm's day-to-day operations. He was one of several executives expected to lead the private-equity firm when its three founders--all in their 60s--step down.

His move is yet another example of high-profile Wall Street executives leaving for jobs outside of the finance industry.

In March, Google Inc. said Morgan Stanley CFO Ruth Porat would become its next finance chief. And last week, Spanish-language broadcaster Univision Communications Inc. tapped a Goldman Sachs Group Inc. managing director to be its new finance chief.

Mr. Cavanagh's appointment comes after Comcast's deal to buy Time Warner Cable fell apart last month under pressure from regulators. Some analysts have speculated that Comcast could attempt another major tie-up as it seeks new sources of growth--for example, by making a push into the wireless business or looking overseas for targets such as cable operators or TV-channel owners.

The appointment of a senior Wall Street executive to Comcast's top ranks is unlikely to damp such speculation. After he held the job of CFO at J.P. Morgan during the financial crisis, Mr. Cavanagh served as co-chief executive of the bank's sprawling corporate and investment bank, which, among other things, advises on and helps fund mergers and acquisitions. J.P. Morgan advised Comcast on the aborted Time Warner Cable deal.

Carlyle executives were surprised when Mr. Cavanagh told them on Friday he was leaving to take the Comcast job, according to people familiar with the matter. Carlyle, which went public in 2012, has been transparent about its succession planning and made it clear that Mr. Cavanagh was on a short list of the firm's next generation of leaders.

Likewise, Mr. Cavanagh's decision to leave J.P. Morgan last year shocked many at the bank. "This was hands-down the hardest decision I've ever had to make," he said in an internal memo at the time. Mr. Dimon called it "a regrettable loss for our company."

Mr. Cavanagh is facing a number of challenges as Comcast's finance chief. The cable company and its rivals are grappling with a rapidly shifting industry landscape, with more consumers dropping their pay-TV connections. That, and the need to keep costs down amid such pressure, is likely to be another focus for Mr. Cavanagh in his new role.

Mr. Cavanagh's total compensation for 2015 could top $39.5 million in cash, bonuses, restricted stock and deferred compensation at Comcast.

His 2015 base salary will be $1.8 million and he is eligible for a cash bonus valued at three times that salary. He'll also receive a $10 million signing bonus made up of performance-based stock that vests in 13 months, as well as $2.5 million in restricted shares that vest over three years. Mr. Cavanagh is also due another $10 million in deferred compensation that is subject to clawback should he leave within a year, and Comcast said it would also pay him $9.8 million for compensation he left behind at Carlyle.

Carlyle rolled out a lucrative pay package for Mr. Cavanagh, whose 2014 compensation at the firm was valued at $31.2 million. But in leaving Carlyle after less than a year, he is forfeiting much of it, including about two-thirds of $32 million in payments intended to compensate him for J.P. Morgan stock that he left on the table when he quit the bank, according to people familiar with the matter.

In all, he received about $14 million in cash and stock from Carlyle, according to securities filings and people familiar with the matter.

Mr. Cavanagh's departure follows that of another senior executive. Adena Friedman last year returned to Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. as co-president after a three-year stint as Carlyle's finance chief.

"Mike is going from one great company to another," a Carlyle spokesman said on Monday. "We have a deep bench of talent."

Write to Ryan Dezember at ryan.dezember@wsj.com and Kimberly Johnson at kimberly.johnson@wsj.com

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