Keefe, Bruyette & Woods

Keefe, Bruyette & Woods
Subsidiary
Industry Investment Banking
Founded 1962 (1962)
Headquarters AXA Equitable Center
New York, New York, United States
Key people
Thomas B. Michaud, President & CEO
Andrew M. Senchak, Chairman
Revenue Increase $425.9 million (2010)[1]
Increase $26.6 million (2010)[1]
Total assets Increase $699.7 million (2010)[1]
Number of employees
585 (2010)[1]
Parent Stifel Financial
Website www.kbw.com

Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. is an investment banking firm headquartered in New York City, specializing exclusively in the financial services sector. KBW's primary business lines include Research, Corporate Finance, Equity Sales and Trading, Fixed Income Sales and Trading, Equity Capital Markets, Debt Capital Markets, and Asset Management.

The firm provides a broad range of services to corporate clients such as banking companies, insurance companies, real estate and REITs, broker-dealers, mortgage banks, asset management companies, and specialty finance firms as well as to the institutional investor community. KBW's research analysts cover more than 600 companies in the financial services industry globally.[2]

The company, which was founded in 1962, currently has eight offices in the United States as well as offices in London, Hong Kong and Tokyo. In 2012, KBW was acquired by Stifel Financial, a financial services holding Company, for $575 million.[2]

History

The firm was founded in 1962 by Harry Keefe Jr., Gene Bruyette and Norbert Woods. The three founders previously had worked together at Tucker, Anthony & R. L. Day.[3] Beginning in the 1950s, Keefe had been one of the first Wall Street research analysts to focus on bank stocks, which later became the specialty of the firm he co-founded.[3] Norbert Woods died in 1972 and the firm was led by Keefe and Bruyette through the 1970s and 1980s.[4]

Under Harry Keefe, the firm advised on several mergers that helped form large regional banks in the 1980s. The firm advised on a series of deals that created the Bank of New England out of smaller banks in Massachusetts and Connecticut. KBW also advised on the creation of SunTrust Bank from a group of Florida and Georgia based banks. In 1985, KBW negotiated the merger of Wachovia and First National Bank of Atlanta.[5] More recently, in 2005, the firm was sole adviser to Bank of America in their takeover of MBNA.

Harry Keefe left the firm in 1989 after a business dispute with his associates and founded his own money management and consulting firm.[3] By 1990, KBW had transitioned management of the firm from the original founders to a new group including Charles Lott and James McDermott.[6] Gene Bruyette retired from the firm in 1991. James McDermott was later convicted of violating insider trading rules in 2000 by providing stock tips to a girlfriend.[7]

In November 2006, KBW completed a $100 million initial public offering of stock.[8] The firm is traded on the NYSE under the ticker 'KBW'.[9] As of the end of 2010, KBW employees owned approximately one-third of the stock in the company.[1]

Impact of September 11

The company's prior New York headquarters was located on the 85th, 88th, and 89th floors of the World Trade Center's South tower at the time of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Out of the firm's 172 New York employees, 67 died as a result of the attack when the South tower collapsed.[10] Among the employees killed in the attack were the firm's co-CEO Joseph Berry, CFO Jeffrey Fox, as well as several notable research analysts Christopher W. Murphy, David Berry, Dean Eberling and Thomas Theurkauf.[11]

Prior to September 11, the firm had been engaged in discussions with BNP about a possible acquisition.[11] The firm has held an annual 9/11 memorial service and also maintains a charitable fund it set up to help victims' families.[11]

Controversies

On December 8, 1999, Keefe Bruyette & Woods Inc had a lawsuit for being the Life Financial's lead underwriter in the offering, while the financial statements of Life Financial improperly included earnings amounts arrived at in violated of SFAS No. 125,[12] and paid 75000 dollars for settlement.

See also

References

External links

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