William A. Read - Dillon, Read (http://www.ubs.com/1/ ShowImage/ about/ history/1990_2000/1997/ dillon_read?contentId=26500)

Francis Martin Drexel - founder Drexel & Co. (http://www.picturehistory.com/ images/products/0/5/5/ prod_5571.jpg)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nathanial Thayer II - Kidder, Peabody (http://books.google.com/ books?id=3dKTK-TzGFsC&pg=RA1-PA123&dq=1865+%22Kidder,+ Peabody%22&lr=&as_ brr=0&client= firefox-a&sig=ACfU3U12xH_ 423SurUg9oEC_0VpulpanuA)

Oliver W. Peabody - Kidder, Peabody (http://books.google.com/ books?id= hxJCAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA49&dq= 1865+%22Kidder, +%20Peabody%22&lr= &as_brr=0&client=firefox-a#PPA48-IA1,M1

 

 

 

 

 

 

Edward Francis Hutton - E. F. Hutton Co. (http://upload.wikimedia.org wikipedia/ en/thumb/e/ef/ E.F._Hutton,_c._1920.jpg/180px-E.F._Hutton,_c._1920.jpg)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bear, Stearns, Mayer - Bear Stearns & Co. (http://graphics8.nytimes.com/ images/ 2008/03/17/ business/ 20080317_BEAR_ STEARNS_GRAPH.jpg)

Dean Witter - retail brokerage (http://www.deanwitterfoundation. org/ images/deanwitterportrait.gif)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alfred Lee Loomis - Bonbright and Company)  (http://www.ob-ultrasound.net/project/loomis.jpg)

 

Alexander Brown  (http://bks8.books.google.com/ books?id=PC0vAAAAMAAJ&pg= PA4-IA1&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&sig= ACfU3U1FzZSXbu91C qk0I0Bl5h8us3wsjA&h= 805&w=570)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Clarence Dillon - Dillon, Read  (http://www.ubs.com/1/ ShowImage/ about/history/ 1990_2000/1997/ dillon_read?contentId=26319)

[Anthony J. Drexel], [no date]

Anthony J. Drexel (http://www.library. drexel.edu/ images/Drexelportrait.jpg)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I. W. "Tubby" Burnham (http://www.upenn.edu/almanac/ v49/n01/IWBurnham2.jpg)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gerald Loeb (co-founding partner, E. F. Hutton) (http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/ Images/ areas/adm/media/loeb_gloeb.jpg)

 

 

Albert H. Gordon (rescued Kidder, Peabody in 1931) (http://www.alumni.hbs.edu/ bulletin/2001/october/img/ gordon.jpg)

 

 

Michel David-Weill (Lazard) (http://referentiel.nouvelobs. com/file/293428.jpg)

Andre Meyer (Lazard) (http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/ 0471247413.02.LZZZZZZZ.jpg)

Henry Emanuel and Mayer Lehman (http://content.answers.com/main/ content/ wp/en/8/8b/Lehman_Brothers.jpg)

 

 

 

Charles E. Merrill (http://www.nndb.com/people/383/ 000094101/charlesemerrill01.jpg)

October 7, 1956 Obituary - http://www.nytimes. com/ learning/ general/onthisday/ bday/ 1019.html

Henry S. Morgan - Morgan Stanley (http://cache.viewimages.com/ xc/56578535.jpg?v=1&c= ViewImages&k=2&d= 6129C2E8305357EF 74974F60E534D249284831 B75F48EF45)

Scripophily.com is a name you can TRUST!

William A. Paine (http://www.scripophily.com/ webcart/ vigs/willpaine.gif)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Izaak Walton Killam - Royal Securities (http://www.killamtrusts.ca/ images/photo-iwk.jpg)

INVESTMENT BANKS (BROKERAGE) -  Business History of Firms

Investment banks generate cash: 1) transactions fees  (underwritings, mergers and acquisitions) and 2) commissions (sales and distribution of securities).

1800 - Alexander Brown, Irish immigrant from Ballymena, Northern Ireland, former auctioneer in Belfast linen market, established Alexander Brown & Son, linen import business in Baltimore, MD (changed to Alexander Brown & Sons in 1810 when third son made partner); also known as merchant bankers (dealers in Sterling Exchange, ship owners, issuers of letters of credit to other dry goods merchants for import of goods); 1804 - organized Baltimore Water Co.; 1810 - William Brown, oldest son, sent to England, established business in Liverpool under name William Brown & Co.; October 10, 1818 - John A. Brown (third son) sent to Philadelphia to open John A. Brown & Co., branch office of Alexander Brown & Sons to be closer to customers in Maryland, adjacent states; 1839 - renamed Brown Brothers & Co.; 1825 - William Brown joined by partner, Joseph Shipley; business financed merchants shipping goods between Britain, United States, other parts of Europe and Americas; 1825 - James Brown (youngest son) sent to New York, after opening of Erie Canal made New York center of export/import trade, opened office of Brown Brothers & Co.; 1827 - Alexander Brown helped organize Baltimore & Ohio Railroad; 1837- William Brown & Co. name changed to Brown Shipley & Co. (annual sales exceed 10 million pounds); 1839 - Alex. Brown & Sons became separate banking concern; 1918 - partnership between Brown Shipley, Brown Brothers & Co. ended; January 1, 1931 - W. A. Harriman & Co. merged with Brown Brothers & Co., formed Brown Brothers Harriman; oldest, largest partnership bank in America; 1992 - Brown Shipley & Co. Ltd. acquired by European bank KBL, joined its group of Private Bankers; April 1997 - acquired by Bankers Trust Co. for for $1.7 billion; November 1998 - Bankers Trust acquired by Deutsche Bank; 2005 - KBL European Private Bankers now owned directly by KBC Group NV, one of Europe's largest financial companies.

1819 - Philip Cazenove joined business of John Menet (brother-in-law); 1823 - became partners; 1835 - Menet died, went into partnership with Joseph Laurence and Charles Pearce; branched out on his own; 1854 - formed partnership with his son and nephew; mid 1930s - one of City of London's pre-eminent stockbroking partnerships; April 2001 - firm incorporated; November 5, 2004 - combined with JPMorgan's UK investment banking business, owned jointly, called JPMorgan Cazenove.

1832 - Col. Washington Romeyn Vermilye and George Carpenter formed banking partnership, Carpenter & Vermilye, at 32 Wall St.; 1862 - name changed to Vermilye & Co.; 1877 - William Augustus Read joined firm; 1886 - became partner; 1906 - took over firm, changed bond brokerage firm's name to William A. Read & Company; 1913 - Clarence Dillon (born Clarence Lapowski in Texas; Dillon - mother's maiden name) joined firm; 1916 - became partner, acquired majority interest after Read's death.

1837 - Francis Martin Drexel (46) opened currency brokerage firm in Louisville, KY; 1838 - moved business to Philadelphia, PA; 1846 - U.S. government asked Drexel to underwrite the Mexican War (1846-48) with an issuance of $49 million in war bonds; 1847 - oldest sons made partners, renamed Drexel & Company; 1851 - established banking affiliate, Drexel, Sather & Church in San Francisco (closed in financial panic preceding Civil War); 1868 - Drexel, Harjes & Co. founded in Paris; 1871 - Drexel, Morgan & Co. (J.P. Morgan as junior partner) founded in New York City; 1893 - renamed J. P. Morgan & Co. at Anthony Drexel’s death.

1844 - Henry Lehman, immigrant from Germany, opened small shop in Montgomery, AL; 1850 - joined by brothers Emanuel and Mayer, named business Lehman Brothers; became brokers for buyers, sellers of cotton crop; 1858 - opened office in New York (commodity trading center of the country); expanded commodities business to include sale, trading of securities (railroad bonds); 1887 - acquired seat on NYSE; 1889 - underwrote first public offering (International Steam Pump Company); became financier to emerging retailers (Sears, Roebuck & Company, F.W. Woolworth Company, May Department Stores Company, Gimbel Brothers, Inc., R.H. Macy & Company); 1975 - acquired Abraham & Co.; 1977 - merged with Kuhn, Loeb; 1984 - acquired by American Express, renamed Shearson Lehman/American Express; 1993 - Shearson Lehman divested; 1994 - became independent, renamed Lehman Brothers Holding Inc.; 1999 - surpassed $1 billion in net income.

1848 - Alexandre, Simon and Elie Lazard founded Lazard Freres as a dry goods business in New Orleans; moved San Francisco, opened business selling imported goods, exporting gold bullion; became involved in financial transactions, expanded into banking, foreign exchange businesses. 1852 - opened office in Paris (owned by individual partners, relations of their founders); 1870 - opened office in London (majority-owned by Pearson plc for much of 20th century); 1876 -  concentrated on financial services; 1880 - Alexander Weill, founding brothers’ cousin, assumed control; 1944 - New York House (owned by individual partners, relations of their founders) led by André Meyer; 1956 - Michel David-Weill, descendant of founding families, joined Lazard Frères et Cie. in Paris; 1969 - established asset management business in Paris; 1970 - New York House established Lazard Asset Management (institutional asset management) to complement financial advisory business; 1977 - David-Weill became senior partner; January 3, 2000 - Houses of Lazard merger to form Lazard LLC, single global firm; Pearson sold interests to predecessor of Eurazeo S.A.

November 13, 1858 - Gustav, Charles, Albert, Emil Sutro (relatives of Adolf Sutro) founded Sutro & Co. in San Francisco to engage in general banking; oldest investment banking firm in San Francisco; oldest New York Stock Exchange Member Firm west of Mississippi; largest full-service regional investment firm in California; 1986 - acquired by John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. (part of Freedom Securities Corporation subsidiary); April 2000 - Freedom Securities Corporation name changed to Tucker Anthony Sutro; October 2001 - acquired by Royal Bank of Canada for $600 million, merged into Dain Rauscher unit; ninth largest full-service securities firm in United States (nearly 2,100 retail representatives).

January 1, 1861 - Jay Cooke opened the private banking house of Jay Cooke & Company in Philadelphia.

April 1865 - Henry P. Kidder, Francis H. Peabody, Oliver W. Peabody formed Kidder, Peabody & Co. as  reorganization of J. E. Thayer & Brother (founded 1824); March 1931 - reorganized, new partnership formed: Chandler Hovey, Edwin Sibley Webster Jr., Albert H. Gordon.

1867 - Abraham Kuhn and Solomon Loeb founded Kuhn, Loeb & Co. (formerly successful merchandisers in Cincinnati, OH); January 1, 1875 - Jacob Schiff, Loeb's son-in-law, joined firm; 1977 - merged with Lehman Brothers, formed Lehman Brothers, Kuhn, Loeb Inc.; 1984 - acquired by American Express, renamed Shearson Lehman/American Express; name dropped.

January 20, 1870 - Victoria Woodhull,  Tennessee Claflin (sister ) opened Woodhull, Claflin & Co., nation's first brokerage firm run solely by women (part product of the sisters' friendship with rail baron Cornelius Vanderbilt).

1873 - Charles Barney (Jay Cooke's son-in-law), stockbroker, founded Charles D. Barney & Co. in Philadelphia, PA; successor firm to Jay Cooke & Co.; 1892 -  Edward Smith, investment banker, founded Edward B. Smith & Co.; 1938 - Charles D. Barney & Co., Edward B. Smith & Co. merged, formed Smith Barney & Co.

September 18, 1873 - Surprise collapse of Jay Cooke and Co., due mainly to decision to fund second transcontinental railroad line; one of country's most reputable brokerage houses; thirty-seven banks, two brokerage houses also closed; losses increased, NYSE forced to shut for over a week; Secretary of the Treasury infused economy with $26 million in paper money; Panic (of 1873) did not subside, economy slumped through end of decade.

1879 - Leopold Cahn founded Leopold Cahn & Co. in New York City; 1886 - Jules S. Bache (nephew) made partner; 1892 - Bache took control, renamed company J.S. Bache & Co.; 1944 - name shortened to Bache & Co.; 1966 - $90 million gross revenues vs.$227 million for Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith; 1981- acquired by Prudential Insurance Company of America.

July 1879 - Charles Cabot Jackson and Laurence Curtis opened brokerage office on Congress Street in Boston, MA; June 9, 1942 - merged with Paine Webber, formed Paine, Webber, Jackson & Curtis (22 branch offices); 1963 - moved headquarters to New York; 1970 - incorporated; 1972 - went public; 1977 - Mitchell Hutchins, Inc., leading equities research boutique; 1979 - acquired Blyth, Eastman Dillon & Co.; 1995 - acquired Kidder, Peabody Group from General Electric Company.

1880 - William A. Paine, Wallace G. Webber, formerly clerks at Boston's Blackstone National Bank, established Paine & Webber, brokerage firm, at 48 Congress St. in Boston; May 1881 - admitted Charles H. Paine as partner, changed name to PaineWebber & Company; June 29, 1942 - merged with Jackson & Curtis, formed Paine, Webber, Jackson & Curtis; November 3, 2000 - merged with UBS AG.

1882 - Jules Bache renamed uncle's brokerage operations J. S. Bache & Co.; 1945 - renamed Bache & Co.; 1981 - acquired by Prudential Insurance.

1887 - Gen. Albert Gallatin Edwards retired from post of assistant secretary of the Treasury for Sub-Treasury bank in St. Louis (appointed made by President Abraham Lincoln); founded A.G. Edwards & Son Stock and Bond Traders with his son, Benjamin Franklin Edwards, in St. Louis, MO; May 31, 2007 - agreed to be acquired for $6.8 billion by Wacovia Corp. (3,300 brokerage locations nationwide, $1.1 trillion in client assets, 15,000 stockbrokers).

1904 - Edward F. Hutton, Franklyn Laws Hutton (brother), Gerald M. Loeb founded E. F. Hutton & Co. in San Francisco, CA; 1970 - Bob Fomon became CEO; 1980 - revenue of $1.1 billion, profits totaled $82 million, employed 6000 brokers; May 2, 1985 - pled guilty to 2000 counts of mail and wire fraud associated with over-drafting checking accounts costing banks millions of dollars; company agreed to pay fine of $2 million, compensate government $750,000 for its investigation expenses, make restitution to defrauded banks; December 1987 - acquired by Shearson for $29.25 per share.

1910 - With $5,000 in savings and a small family loan, Arthur, Herbert and Percy Salomon started Salomon Brothers; joined forces with Morton Hutzler, established firm with seat on the New York Stock Exchange, to form Salomon Brothers & Hutzler; registered with the Treasury,  became one of first primary dealers in U.S. government securities; November 1963: Billy Salomon became first managing partner; 1970 - firm renamed Salomon Brothers, Inc.; 1981 - merged with Philbro Corp., became PhilbroSalomon Inc.; 1986 - renamed Salomon Brothers; 1997 - acquired by Travelers Group Inc. for $9.2 billion, merged Smith Barney unit.

1912 - Arthur James Nesbitt (former dry goods salesman, then employee of Lord Beaverbrook's Royal Securities Corporation) and Peter Thomson (former pickle salesman for the Canadian arm of the H. J. Heinz) formed Nesbitt, Thomson and Company in Toronto; simultaneously, opened offices on St. James Street in Montreal, Hamilton, Ontario; provided financing for mining, natural resource industries; underwrote stock, bond issues for many new electric power generating companies; 1925 - established Power Corporation of Canada as holding company for their substantial equity interests in number of major electric utilities; 1927 - acquired Ogilvy department store in Montreal (son James Aird ran for more than fifty years); 1954 - Arthur Dean Nesbitt (son) took helm of brokerage/investment business.

January 6, 1914 - Charles Merrill formed Charles E. Merrill & Co., brokerage firm ,which Edmund C. Lynch joined; May 19, 1914 - opened office at 7 Wall Street; October 15, 1915 - name changed to Merrill Lynch & Co.; 1930 -  sold retail brokerage business and branches to E. A. Pierce & Co. [founded 1885]; 1940 - merged with E.A. Pierce & Cassatt; 1941 - mergeed with Fenner & Beane (offices in 92 U. S. cities); 1958 - name of Winthrop H. Smith, Sr., chairman, added to firm's name: Merrill Lynch, Pierce Fenner & Smith; June 23, 1971 - went public.

1921 - Clarence Dillon changed name of William A. Read & Company to Dillon, Read & & Co.; 1924 - organized United States and Foreign Securities Company (US&FS), most prominent closed-end investment company in 1920s; 1928 - organized second investment company, United States and International Securities Corporation (US&IS); April 1981 - Sequoia Ventures (Bechtel family) acquired interests of C. Douglas Dillon (son); 1985 - reacquired Bechtel stake; 1986 - acquired by Travelers Corporation; 1991 - acquired by Barings PLC (40% for $78 million) and management (60% for 39 million); March 1995 - Barings PLC acquired by Internationale Nederlanden Groep NV (ING); May 1995 - Dillion Read management repurchased 15% of Barings's 40% stock for $30 million; May 15, 1997 - announced agreement to be acquired by Swiss Bank Corporation (SBC) for approximately $600 million; integrated into SBC Warburg Division, renamed SBC Warburg Dillon Read.

1923 - Joseph A. Bear, Robert B. Stearns, Harold C. Mayer founded Bear Stearns & Co. with $500,000 in capital as equity-trading firm; 1933 - hired Salim B. Lewis to manage institutional bond trading (later became CEO, chairman); opened first regional office in Chicago; 1955 - opened first international office in Amsterdam; 1978 - Alan "Ace" Greenberg named chairman; 1985 - Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. formed as holding company; went public; 2001 - James E. Cayne succeeded Greenberg as Chairman.

1924 - Dean G. Witter, Guy Witter (brother), Jean and Ed Witter (cousins), Fritz Janney (brother-in-law) founded Dean Witter & Company, retail brokerage firm in San Francisco, CA; 1938 - established national research department; 1945 - one of first retail securities firms to formally train account executives; 1962 - became first firm to use electronic data processing; 1969 - about 80 branches in U.S., Canada; largest investment firm on West Coast; 1978 - merged with Reynolds & Co.; renamed Dean Witter Reynolds; 1981 - acquired by Sears Roebuck for $661 million; 1986 - launched Discover Card (credit card); 1993 - 20% of company spun off, 80% distributed to shareholders; renamed Dean Witter, Discover and Company; May 31, 1997 - merged with Morgan Stanley Group Inc. in $10 billion deal; largest U.S. securities firm measured in terms of market value; renamed , Dean Witter, Discover & Company; 1998 - renamed Morgan Stanley Dean Witter.

1932 - First National Bank of Boston formed investment banking division; became independent firm after passage of Glass-Steagall Act ( February 27, 1933); first publicly-owned major investment banking firm; 1946 - Mellon Securities Corporation, former investment banking arm of Mellon Bank, merged with First Boston Corporation; 1978 - began London operations with 50-50 investment banking joint venture with Financière Crédit Suisse (known as Credit Suisse First Boston); 1988 - Credit Suisse acquired 44% stake in First Boston; name changed to CS First Boston; 1989 - bailed out First Boston after collapse of junk bond market; 1990 - acquired controlling interest; 1996 - acquired remaining stake of CS First Boston from management; January 1, 1997 - renamed investment bank Credit Suisse First Boston (CSFB, one global brand); parent company renamed Credit Suisse Group; 2001 - acquired Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette for $13 billion; January 16, 2006 - First Boston name dropped.

1935 - I. W. "Tubby" Burnham founded Burnham & Company with $100,000 in capital ($96,000 borrowed from his grandfather, founder of I.W. Harper, Kentucky distillery); 1967 - merged with Drexel & Co.; former Drexel Burnham; 1976 - merged with Lambert Brussels Witter (controlled by Belgian Bank Brussels Lambert); renamed Drexel Burnham Lambert, Inc.

September 16, 1935 - Henry S. Morgan, Harold Stanley, former partners in J. P. Morgan & Co.; opened Morgan Stanley on 19th floor of 2 Wall Street; 1936 - managed $1.1 billion in public offerings, private placements in first year (24% market share); 1942 - joined NYSE; 1971 - entered sales, trading business, established M&A division; 1975 - formed Morgan Stanley International in London; 1977 - merged with Shuman, Agnew & Co., entered retail stock brokerage; December 12, 1980 - led Apple's IPO (5 million shares offered at $22/share), largest IPO since 1964; 1986 - listed on NYSE; 1996 - acquired Van Kampen American Capital mutual funds; February 5, 1997 - merged with Dean Witter, Discover & Co.; April 2004 - acquired Barra (leading global provider of benchmark indices, risk management analytics); August 2004 - co-managed $1.9 billion Google IPO (largest Internet IPO to date, largest auction-based IPO in history); July 2006 - represented HCA in $33 billion sale to Bain Capital, KKR, Merrill Lynch (largest LBO to date); July 2006 - completed $10.4 billion OJSCOC Rosneft IPO (Russia's largest state-owned oil and gas company, Firm's largest IPO to date).

1940 - Former Drexel partners Edward Hopkinson, Jr., Thomas S. Gates, Jr., several associates, acquire rights to Drexel name, founded investment bank with initial capital investment of $1 million; 1965 - merged with Harriman, Ripley and Company, formed Drexel Firestone Inc.; 1967 - merged with Burnham and Company; formed Drexel Burnham; 1976 - merged with Lambert Brussels Witter (controlled by Belgian Bank Brussels Lambert); renamed Drexel Burnham Lambert, Inc.; 1981 - issued bonds for leveraged buyouts; 1982 - Frederick Joseph, formerly head of company's corporate finance department, took over as president; 1982-1983 - major underwriter of debt in country, of all industrial companies; 1986 - made most profits in one year of any Wall Street firm in history -$545.5 million; May 1986 - Securities and Exchange Commission charged Drexel Burnham Lambert managing director, Dennis Levine, with insider trading; 1987 - 49 percent market share of junk bond market, 78% drop in firm's earnings; December 1988 - pleaded guilty to six felony charges of illegal trading, paid $650 million in fines; February 13, 1990 - declared bankruptcy.

1963 - Chuck Schwab and two other partners launched Investment Indicator, an investment advisory newsletter (3,000 subscribers paid $84 a year at its height); May 1, 1975 - created discount brokerage firm; 1977 - opened office in Seattle, first branch outside of California; began offering seminars for customers; 1979 - invested in the BETA mainframe system, automated transaction and record keeping system; 1983 - acquired by Bank of America for $57 million; 1985 - one millionth customer account opened; 1987 - reacquired by management for $280 million; went public.

February 5, 1997 - Investment bank Morgan Stanley announced a $10 billion merger with Dean Witter.

September 25, 1997 - Travelers Group acquired Salomon Brothers for $9 billion.

December 20, 2002 - The nation's 10 biggest brokerages agreed to pay $1.44 billion and fundamentally change the way they did business to settle allegations they'd misled investors by hyping certain stocks.

October 24, 2007 - Merrill Lynch announced $8.4 billion fourth-quarter loss, most associated with losses in subprime mortgage market; biggest in its 93-year history, biggest known loss in Wall Street history; October 30, 2007 - CEO, E. Stanley O'Neal, 'retired' from company; December 24, 2007 - agreed to sell less than 10% stake: 1) $5 billion in new stock (at a discount) to Temasek Holdings (Singapore's sovereign investment company controlled by finance ministry), 2) $1.2 billion (discounted stock) to Davis Selected Advisers (Tucson, AZ), 3) will sell most of Merrill Lynch Capital, commercial finance business, for $1.3 billion to General Electric; January 17, 2008 - reported $9.8 billion fourth-quarter loss (almost matched loss reported for period by Citigroup, company three times Merrill’s size); exceeded analysts’ forecasts, reflected $16.7 billion of write-downs on mortgage-related investments, leveraged loans.

December 18, 2007 - Morgan Stanley posted fourth-quarter loss of $3.6 billion, or $3.61 a share (far surpassed analysts' expectations of $0.39 per share), first-ever quarterly loss in its 72-year history, after taking additional $5.7 billion write-down related to subprime mortgages (value reduced by $9.4 billion, one of largest devaluations on Wall Street); said would sell a $5 billion stake to China Investment Corporation (China's sovereign wealth fund), to shore up its capital = 9.9% stake; chief executive, John J. Mack, took full responsibility, said would forego bonus for 2007.

December 19, 2007 - Bear Stearns reported a steep fourth-quarter loss, the first ever in its 84-year history; lost about $854 million ($6.90 a share) for fourth quarter, compared to profit of $563 million ($4 a share) for same time last year (analysts had expected loss of $1.82 a share); wrote down $1.9 billion related to holdings in mortgages, mortgage-based securities, up from $1.2 billion anticipated last month; October 22, 2007 - Citic Securities, China’s largest investment bank (founded in 1995), invested $1 billion in Bear Stearns (6% stake), Bear took similar position in Citic;

January 8, 2008 - James E. Cayne, CEO and 6% shareholder of Bear Stearns, retired as an employee of the firm.

January 15, 2008 - Subprime Cash Infusions from Foreign Investors (2007-2008)

(http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2008/01/16/business/16capital_graph.jpg)

2008 - Compensation costs for six of seven largest brokerage firms in first half of 2008 declined by total of $9.5 billion (vs. 2007); implies aggregate decline in pay,  benefits (including bonuses - usually at least 75% of annual income for investment bankers, traders), of more than $18 billion for full year (state comptroller estimated  $33 billion paid in Wall Street bonuses in 2006 and 2007); could be biggest single-year decline in pay on Wall Street in history; bonuses for employees based in New York (about 178,000 people) could shrink by $10 billion or more (total bonuses declined by $6.5 billion in 2001); equals about $10 billion less in taxable income, several billion dollars less to be spent on apartments, furniture, cars, clothing, services; financial-services industry provides almost 25% of all income earned in New York City (= about 10%  of city’s tax revenue, about 20% of state’s tax revenue, estimated to drop by about $700 million in 2008 fiscal year);

(http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2008/07/26/nyregion/paygraph190.jpg)

(Bankers Trust Australia), Gideon Haigh (1999). One of a Kind: The Story of Bankers Trust Australia, 1969-1999. (Melbourne, AU: Text Pub., 499 p.). Bankers Trust Australia; Investment banking; Investment banking -- Australia -- History.

(Bonbright and Company), Jennet Conant (2002). Tuxedo Park: A Wall Street Tycoon and the Secret Palace of Science That Changed the Course of World War II. (New York, NY: Simon & Schuster, 330 p.). Granddaughter of James Conant, President of Harvard. Loomis, Alfred L. (Alfred Lee), 1887-1975; Physicists--United States--Biography; Atomic bomb--United States--History--20th century; Research--New York (State)--Tuxedo Park--History--20th century; World War, 1939-1945--Science--United States. 

(Alex. Brown), Frank R. Kent (1950). The Story of Alex. Brown & Sons. Issued on the One Hundred and Fiftieth Anniversary of the Foundation of the House in 1800. (Baltimore, MD: The Company, 2 vols.). Alex. Brown & Sons; Banks and banking--Maryland--Baltimore.

(Alex. Brown), Frank R. Kent (1975). The Story of Alex. Brown & Sons, 1800-1975. (Baltimore, MD: Alex Brown & Sons, 259 p.). Alexander Brown and Sons -- History; Banks and Banking -- Maryland -- Baltimore.

(Alex. Brown), Edwin J. Perkins (1975). Financing Anglo-American Trade: The House of Brown, 1800-1880. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 323 p.). Alex. Brown & Sons; Banks and banking -- United States -- History -- Case studies; International finance.

(K. J. Brown Company), E. Bruce Geelhoed (1982). Bringing Wall Street to Main Street: The Story of K.J. Brown and Company, Inc., 1931-1981. (Muncie, IN: Bureau of Business Research, College of Business, and Dept. of History, 59 p.). K. J. Brown and Company--History.

(Cantor Fitzgerald), Howard Lutnick and Tom Barbash (2002). On Top of the World: Cantor Fitzgerald and 9/11: A Story of Loss and Renewal. (New York, NY: HarperCollins, 282 p.). Chairman of Firm. Cantor Fitzgerald (Firm)--History; World Trade Center (New York, N.Y.); Stockbrokers--New York (State)--New York--History; September 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001.

(James Capel), M.C. Reed (1975). A History of James Capel & Co. (London, UK: James Capel & Co., 129 p.). James Capel & Co.; Stock Exchange (London, England).

(Cazenove), David Kynaston (1991). Cazenove & Co: A History. (London, UK: Batsford, 359 p.). Cazenove & Co. -- History; Stockbrokers -- England -- London -- History.

(City Securities), E. Bruce Geelhoed (1985). Indiana's Investment Banker: The Story of City Securities Corporation (Muncie, IN: Bureau of Business Research, College of Business : Dept. of History, College of Sciences and Humanities, 150 p.). City Securities Corporation--History; Investment  Banking--Indiana--History. 

(Coutts & Co.), Ernest Hartley Coleridge (1920). The Life of Thomas Coutts, Banker. (New York, NY: John Lane Company, 2 vols.). Coutts, Thomas, 1735-1822; Coutts family.

(Coutts & Co.), Ralph M. Robinson (1929). Coutts, The History of a Banking House. (London, UK: J. Murray, 180 p.). Coutts, Thomas, 1735-1822; Coutts & co., bankers.

(Coutts & Co.), Edna Healey (1992). Coutts & Co. 1692-1992: The Portrait of a Private Bank. (London, UK: Hodder & Stoughton, 488 p.). Coutts & co.; Banking -- private -- Great Britain. Tercentenary history of Coutts & Co.

(Dillon Read), Robert Sobel (1991). The Life and Times of Dillon Read. (New York, NY: Dutton, 420 p.). Academic (Hofstra University). Dillon, Reed & Co.--History; Investment banking--United States--History.

(Drexel), Dan Rottenberg (2001). The Man Who Made Wall Street: Anthony J. Drexel and the Rise of Modern Finance. (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press. Drexel, Anthony J. (Anthony Joseph), 1826-1893; Bankers--United States--Biography; Capitalists and financiers--United States--Biography; Bankers--Biography.

(Drexel Burnham), Connie Bruck (1989). The Predators' Ball: The Inside Story of Drexel Burnham and the Rise of the Junk Bond Raiders. (New York, NY: Penguin, 399 p.). Milken, Michael; Drexel Burnham Lambert Incorporated; Consolidation and merger of corporations--United States; Junk bonds--United States; Stockbrokers--United States.

(Drexel Burnham), Dan G. Stone (1990). April Fools: An Insider's Account of the Rise and Collapse of Drexel Burnham. (New York, NY: D.I. Fine, 249 p.). Drexel Burnham Lambert Incorporated; Drexel Burnham Lambert Incorporated--Employees--Dismissal of; Stockbrokers--New York (State)--New York; Securities fraud--New York (State)--New York.

(Drexel Burnham), Fenton Bailey; with an introduction by Alan Dershowitz (1992). Fall From Grace: The Untold Story of Michael Milken. (Seacaucus, NJ: Carol Pub. Group, 330 p.). Milken, Michael; Drexel Burnham Lambert Incorporated; Stockbrokers--United States--Biography; Junk bonds--United States; Securities industry--Corrupt practices--United States.

(Drexel Burnham), Benjamin Stein (1992). A License to Steal: The Untold Story of Michael Milken and the Conspiracy to Bilk the Nation. (New York, NY: Simon & Schuster, 219 p.). Milken, Michael; Drexel Burnham Lambert Incorporated; Stockbrokers--United States--Biography; Junk bonds--United States; Securities industry--Corrupt practices--United States.

(Drexel Burnham), Harlan D. Platt (1994). The First Junk Bond: A Story of Corporate Boom and Bust. (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 236 p.). Milken, Michael; Drexel Burnham Lambert Incorporated; Securities industry--Corrupt practices--United States; Junk bonds--United States.

(Drexel Burnham), Daniel R. Fischel (1995). Payback: The Conspiracy to Destroy Michael Milken and His Financial Revolution. (New York, NY: HarperBusiness, 332 p.). Professor of Corporate Law (University of Chicago). Milken, Michael; Drexel Burnham Lambert Incorporated; Junk bonds--United States; Insider trading in securities--United States.

(Fimagest), The Company (1996). La Revolution du Marche Financier Francais, 1978-1995: Naissance d’un Acteur Fimagest, Profession Gestionnaire. (Paris, FR: Public Histoire: A. Michel, 188 p.). Fimagest (Firm)--History; Securities industry--France--History--20th century.

(Gardner Rich & Co.), Chris Gardner with Quincy Troupe (2006). The Pursuit of Happyness: From The Mean Streets to Wall Street. (New York, NY: Amistad, 320 p.). CEO (Gardner Rich). Gardner, Chris (Chris P.); Gardner Rich & Co.; Stockbrokers--United States--Biography. From working poor single parent, living in an Oakland homeless shelter with his infant son to self-made millionaire.

(Robert Garrett & Sons), Harold A. Williams (1965). Robert Garrett & Sons Incorporated: Origin and Development - 1840-1965. (Baltimore, MD: Press of Schneidereith & Sons, 102 p.). Garrett, Robert & Sons. (firm); Investment banking.

(Gillett Brothers Discount Company Ltd.), R. S. Sayers (1968). Gilletts in the London Money Market 1867-1967. (Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press, 204 p.). Gillett Brothers Discount Company, ltd., London--History; Bills of exchange--England--London--History; Finance--England--London--History.

(Goldman, Sachs - origins to 1869 when Marcus Goldman opened an office), LIsa Endlich (1999). Goldman Sachs: The Culture of Success. (New York, NY: Knopf, 319 p.). Former Goldman, Sachs Foreign Exchange Trader. Goldman, Sachs & Co.; Investment banking--United States; Going public (Securities).

(Goldman Sachs), Nils Lindskoog (1999). Long-Term Greedy: The Triumph of Goldman Sachs. (Appleton, WI: McCrossen Pub., 192 p. [2nd ed.]). Goldman, Sachs & Co.; Investment banking--New York (State)--New York; Financial leverage--New York (State)--New York.

(E. F. Hutton), Mark Stevens (1989). Sudden Death: The Rise and Fall of E.F. Hutton. (New York, NY: New American Library, 298 p.). E.F. Hutton & Company; Stockbrokers--United States; Securities--United States.

(E. F. Hutton), Donna S. Carpenter and John Feloni (1989). The Fall of the House of Hutton. (New York, NY: Holt, 322 p.). E. F. Hutton & Company; Stockbrokers--United States.

(E. F. Hutton), James Sterngold (1990). Burning Down the House: How Greed, Deceit, and Bitter Revenge Destroyed E.F. Hutton. (New York, NY: Summit Books, 305 p.). E.F. Hutton & Company--History; Stockbrokers--United States--History.

(Keefe Bruyette & Woods), John Duffy and Mary S. Schaeffer (2001). Triumph over Tragedy: September 11 and the Rebirth of a Business. (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 228 p.). Duffy, John; Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc.; Chief executive officers--Biography; Investment advisors--New York (State)--New York; September 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001.

(Kidder Peabody), Vincent P. Carosso (1979). More Than a Century of Investment Banking: The Kidder, Peabody & Co. Story. (New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 212 p.). Kidder Peabody & Co.

(Kidder Peabody), S. Melvin Rines (1999). Al Gordon of Kidder, Peabody. (Weston, MA: Southport Press, 145 p.). Gordon, Al (Albert Hamilton), 1901- ; Kidder, Peabody & Co.; Investment bankers--United States--Biography.

(Kidder Peabody), Joseph Jett with Sabra Chartrand (1999). Black and White on Wall Street: The Untold Story of the Man Wrongly Accused of Bringing Down Kidder Peabody. (New York, NY: Morrow, 387 p.). Jett, Joseph; Kidder, Peabody & Co.--Employees--Biography; Insider trading in securities--United States; Securities industry--Corrupt practices--United States.

(Lazard Freres), Anne Sabouret (1987). MM Lazard Frères et Cie: Une Saga de la Fortune. (Paris, FR: O. Orban, 285 p.). Lazard Frères & Co.--History; Banks and banking--France--History; Bankers--France--Biography.

(Lazard Freres), Didier Lazard (1988). Simon Lazard, 1828-1898: Emigré à Seize Ans, Pionnier du Far-West, Fondateur de la Banque Lazard: Les Origines de la Banque Lazard. (Paris, FR: Editions du Félin, 161 p.). Lazard, Simon, 1828-1898; Lazard, Simon, 1828-1898 --Journeys--United States; Bankers--France--Biography; Bankers--United States--Biography; United States--Description and travel.

(Lazard Freres), Cary Reich (1997). Financier, The Biography of André Meyer: A Story of Money, Power, and the Reshaping of American Business. (New York, City: Wiley, 392 p.). Meyer, André, 1898-1979; Capitalists and financiers--United States--Biography; Investment banking--United States--History.

(Lazard Freres), enquête de Laurent Chemineau (1998). L'Incroyable Histoire de Lazard Frères, La Banque Qui Règne sur le Monde des Affaires. (Paris, FR: Editions Assouline, 141 p.). Lazard Frères & Co.--History; Banks and banking--France--History.

(Lazard LLC), Martine Orange (2006). Ces Messieurs de Lazard. (Paris, FR: Albin Michel, 345 p.). Lazard Freres & Co.--History; Banks and banking--France--History; Bankers--France--Biography; Banks and banking--New York (State)--New York--History; Bankers--New York (State)--New York--Biography. 1980s - arranged more than 70% of all the corporate mergers, acquisitions in France; 1998 - arranged less than one-third; 2002 - recruited Bruce Wasserstein; killed 'old firm', created new investment bank.

(Lazard LLC), William D. Cohan (2007). The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Freres & Co. (New York, NY: Doubleday, 752 p.). Six Years at Lazard Frères, Later Managing Director at JP Morgan Chase. Lazard Freres & Co.--History; Banks and banking--New York (State)--New York--History; Bankers--New York (State)--New York--Biography; Banks and banking--France--History; Bankers--France--Biography. Portrait of Wall Street through tumultuous history of this company - Michel David-Weill, Felix Rohatyn, Steve Rattner, Bruce Wasserstein.

(Lehman Brothers), Ken Auletta (1986). Greed and Glory on Wall Street: The Fall of the House of Lehman. (New York, NY: Random House, 253 p.). Lehman Brothers; Wall Street; Stockbrokers--United States.

(Lehman Brothers), David Neal Keller (1993). Edwin L. Kennedy: Reinvesting in Education. (Athens: OH: Ohio University Press,, 236 p.). Kennedy, Edwin Lust, 1904- ; Businesspeople--United States--Biography; Benefactors--United States--Biography; Philanthropists--United States--Biography; Universities and colleges--United States--Finance. Kennedy - Senior Partner, Lehman Brothers.

(Levesque, Beaubien), Jules Belanger (1998). Jean-Louis Levesque: A Biography. (Westmount, QU: R. Davies Multimedia, 312 p.). Levesque, Jean-Louis; Capitalists and financiers--Canada--Biography. 

(Mediobanca S.p.A), Giandomenico Piluso, (2005). Mediobanca: Tra Regole e Mercato. (Milano, IT: Egea, 229 p.). Mediobanca--History; Investment banking--Italy--History--20th century.

(Merrill Lynch), Donald T. Regan (1972). A View from the Street. (New York, NY: New American Library, 220 p.). Wall Street.

(Merrill Lynch), edited by Henry R. Hecht (1985). A Legacy of Leadership: Merrill Lynch, 1885-1985. (New York, NY: Merrill Lynch, 151 p.). Merrill Lynch & Co. (1973- )--History; Stockbrokers--United States--History.

(Merrill Lynch), Edward J. Perkins (1999). Wall Street to Main Street: Charles Merrill and Middle-Class Investors. (New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 283 p.). Merrill, Charles, 1885-1956; Merrill Lynch & Co. (1973- )--History; Capitalists and financiers--United States--Biography. History of Merrill Lynch and founder Charles Merrill.

(Montgomery Securities), Richard Brandt with contributions by Thomas Weisel (2002). Capital Instincts: Life as an Entrepreneur, Financier, and Athlete. (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 336 p.). Weisel, Thomas; Capitalists and financiers--United States--Biography; Businesspeople--United States--Biography. 

(Moody's), John Moody (1975). The Long Road Home: An Autobiography. (New York, NY: Arno Press, 263 p. [orig. pub. 1933]). Moody, John, 1868-1958; Capitalists and financiers--United States--Biography.

(Morgan Stanley), Patricia Beard (2007). Blue Blood & Mutiny: The Fight for the Soul of Morgan Stanley. (New York, NY: Morrow, 352 p.). Morgan Stanley. Leadership battle at Morgan Stanley - fight for dominance between two competing business cultures: 1) collegial meritocracy from days of J. P. Morgan, 2) cold, contemporary corporate model.

(Mullens & Co.), David Wainwright (1990). Government Broker: The Story of an Office and of Mullens & Co. (East Molesey, UK: Matham, 160 p.). Mullens & Co.; Securities markets Business History Great Britain.

(Nesbitt Thomson Inc.), A.R.Deane Nesbitt (1989). Dry Goods & Pickles: The Story of Nesbitt, Thomson. (Toronto, Canada: The Author, 144 p.). Grandson of Founder. Nesbitt, Thomson Inc.--History; Nesbitt, Arthur James.

(Nomura), Albert J. Alletzhauser (1990). The House of Nomura: The Inside Story of the Legendary Japanese Financial Dynasty. (New York, NY: Arcade Pub. Co., 343 p.). Nomura Sh¯oken Kabushiki Kaisha--History; Stockbrokers--Japan; Securities industry--Japan.

(Paine Webber), Paine Webber Inc. (1930). Paine, Webber & Company, 1880-1930. A National Institution. (Boston, MA: Oxford-Print, 75 p.). Brokers -- United States.

(Prudential-Bache), Jeffrey Taylor (1994). The Pru-Bache Murder: The Fast Life and Grisly Death of a Millionaire Stockbroker. (New York, NY: HarperCollins, 293 p.). Prozumenshikov, Michael, 1953-1991; Prudential-Bache Securities, Inc.--Case studies; Murder--Minnesota--Minneapolis--Case studies; Stockbrokers--Malpractice--Minnesota--Minneapolis--Case studies.

(Prudential-Bache), Kurt Eichenwald (1995). Serpent on the Rock. (New York, NY: HarperBusiness, 480 p.). Prudential-Bache Securities, Inc., Securities Fraud.

(Prudential-Bache), Kathleen Sharp (1995). In Good Faith. (New York, NY: St. Martin's Press, 256 p.). Prudential-Bache Securities, Inc.--Corrupt practices; Securities fraud--United States--Case studies.

(Royal Securities Corporation), Douglas How (1986). Canada's Mystery Man of High Finance: The Story of Izaak Walton Killam and His Glittering Wife Dorothy. (Hantsport, NS: Lancelot Press, 173 p.). Killam, Izaak Walton, 1885-1955; Killam, Dorothy Johnston, 1899-1965; Capitalists and financiers -- Canada -- Biography.

(Royal Securities Corporation), Gregory P. Marchildon (1996). Profits and Politics: Beaverbrook and the Gilded Age of Canadian Finance. (Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press, 348 p.). Beaverbrook, Max Aitken, Baron, 1879-1964; Royal Securities Corporation--History; Consolidation and merger of corporations--Canada--History; Business and politics--Canada--History; =Canada--Economic conditions--1867-1918.

(Salomon Brothers), Robert Sobel (1986). Salomon Brothers, 1910-1985: Advancing to Leadership. (New York, NY: Salomon Brothers, 240 p.). Salomon Brothers--History; Investment banking--New York (State)--New York--History.

(Salomon Brothers), Martin Mayer (1993). Nightmare on Wall Street: Salomon Brothers and the Corruption of the Marketplace. (New York, NY: Simon & Schuster, 272 p.). Salomon Brothers; Government securities--Marketing--Corrupt practices--United States.

(Schwab), John Kador (2002). Charles Schwab: How One Company Beat Wall Street and Reinvented the Brokerage Industry. (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 324 p.). Schwab, Charles; Charles Schwab Corporation--History; Stockbrokers--New York (State)--New York--History.

(Seligman - founded 1864), Ross L. Muir and Carl J. White (1964). Over the Long Term; The Story of J. & W. Seligman & Co. (New York, NY: J. & W. Seligman, 172 p.). Seligman, J. & W., & Co., New York.

(Muriel Siebert & Co.), Muriel Siebert, with Aimee Lee Ball (2002). Changing the Rules: Adventures of a Wall Street Maverick. (New York, NY: Free Press,     p.). Founder (Muriel Siebert & Co., Inc.). Siebert, Muriel; New York Stock Exchange--History--20th century; Stockbrokers--New York (State)--New York--Biography; Businesswomen--New York (State)--New York--Biography. 

(Slater Walker Securities), Charles Raw (1977). A Financial Phenomenon: An Investigation of the Rise and Fall of the Slater Walker Empire. (New York. NY: Harper & Row, 368 p.). Slater, Jim, 1929-; Walker, Peter Edward, 1932-; Slater, Walker Securities, Ltd.; Capitalists and financiers--Great Britain--Biography.

(Standard & Poor's), Alfred D. Chandler, Jr. (1956). Henry Varnum Poor, Business Editor, Analyst, and Reformer. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 362 p.). Poor, Henry Varnum, 1812-1905; Railroads--United States--History.

(Sutro & Co.), Louis H. Cahen and Edward I. Fitzpatrick (1928). The Empire of the Golden Gate, 1858-1928, Prepared for Sutro & Co. at the Moment of Their Seventieth Year of Activity. (San Francisco, CA: H.S. Crocker Company, Inc., 53 p.). Sutro & Co., San Francisco; San Francisco Stock Exchange (1927-1957); San Francisco (Calif.)--History.

(Julia Walsh & Sons), Julia Montgomery Walsh in collaboration with Anne Conover Carson (1996). Risks and Rewards: A Memoir. (McLean, VA: EPM Publications, 216 p.). Walsh, Julia Montgomery; Stockbrokers--United States--Biography; Women in finance--New York (State)--New York--Biography.  

(Weeden & Co.), Donald E. Weeden (2002). Weeden & Co.: The New York Stock Exchange and the Struggle Over a National Securities Market. (New York, NY: Donald E. Weeden, 224 p.). Weeden, Donald E.; Weeden & Co.; United States. Securities and Exchange Commission; Securities --United States; Securities industry --United States. Whether a stock exchange is a place or a concept.

Charles R. Geisst (2001). The Last Partnerships: Inside the Great Wall Street Dynasties. (New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 338 p.). Wall Street--History; Securities industry--Mergers--New York (State)--New York--Case studies; Stockbrokers--Mergers--New York (State)--New York--Case studies; Partnership--New York (State)--New York--Case studies; Business failures--New York (State)--New York--Case studies; Securities industry--United States--History; Stockbrokers--United States--History.

Roy C. Smith and Ingo Walter (1997). Street Smarts: Linking Professional Conduct with Shareholder Value in the Securities Industry. (Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 351 p.). Securities industry--United States.


KIPnotes.com

We Bring the Library 2 U  
Copyright (c) 2001
646-229-3439
kipz@aol.com