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Morgan Stanley Wealth Management

Morgan Stanley Wealth Management is an American multinational financial services corporation specializing in retail brokerage. It is the wealth & asset management division of Morgan Stanley. On January 13, 2009, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup announced that Citigroup would sell 51% of Smith Barney to Morgan Stanley, creating Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, which was formerly a division of Citi Global Wealth Management. The combined brokerage house has 17,646 financial advisors and manages $2 trillion in client assets.[1] Clients range from individual investors to small- and mid-sized businesses, as well as large corporations, non-profit organizations and family foundations.

Morgan Stanley Wealth Management
Company typeLimited liability company
IndustryFinancial services
Founded2009; 15 years ago (2009)
FounderHenry S. Morgan, Harold Stanley, Charles D. Barney, Edward B. Smith
Headquarters,
U.S.
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
James P. Gorman (Chairman)
ProductsRetail brokerage, asset management, investment banking
RevenueUS$17,242 billion (2018)
US$4,521 billion (2018)
US$3,472 billion (2018)
AUMUS$2.05 trillion (2014)
Number of employees
17,646 (2011)
ParentMorgan Stanley
Websitewww.morganstanleyindividual.com

On September 25, 2012, Morgan Stanley announced that its U.S. wealth management business was renamed "Morgan Stanley Wealth Management". The broker-dealer designation for Morgan Stanley Wealth Management will remain "Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC".[2]

History edit

 
Smith Barney & Co. logo

Smith Barney & Co. was formed in 1938 through the merger of Charles D. Barney & Co. and Edward B. Smith & Co. Charles D. Barney & Co., a New York and Philadelphia based firm, was founded by Charles D. Barney in 1873 following the failure of its predecessor Jay Cooke & Company. Edward B. Smith & Co., founded in 1892 became a significant player in securities underwriting in 1934 when the firm absorbed the professionals from the securities business of Guaranty Trust Company, following the passage of the Glass Steagall Act.[3]

In 1975, Smith Barney merged with Harris, Upham & Co. to form Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co., which, in 1977, was placed under SBHU Holdings, a holding company. In 1982, SBHU Holdings was renamed Smith Barney Inc.[4] During the 1980s, the company was known for its television commercials featuring actor John Houseman, with the catchphrase, "They make money the old-fashioned way. They earn it."[5] After Houseman stepped down, the campaign continued with various actors, such as Leo McKern, Joel Higgins and George C. Scott.

 
Smith Barney Shearson logo following the purchase of the brokerage business of Shearson Lehman Hutton from American Express

In the late 1980s, the retail brokerage firm Smith Barney was owned by Sanford I. Weill's Primerica Corporation. Commercial Credit purchased Primerica in 1988, for $1.5 billion ($3,711,592,572 today). In 1992, they paid $722 million ($1,505,636,234 today) to buy a 27% share of Travelers Insurance and in 1993 acquired Shearson (which included the legacy business of E.F. Hutton) from American Express. By the end of 1993, the merged company was known as Travelers Group Inc.[citation needed] although the brokerage business continued to operate under the Smith Barney brand.

In 1993, Weill bought stockbroker Shearson back from American Express for $1 billion ($2,025,800,507 today), and merged it into Smith Barney.[6][7] (Weill had been in charge of Shearson Loeb Rhoades and sold it to American Express in 1981.[8]) Weill offered Joe Plumeri the presidency of Smith Barney, and he became the President of the merged company that year.[6][9][10] He only lasted a year, as he experienced conflicts with existing Smith Barney managers.[6]

In September 1997, Travelers acquired Salomon Inc. (parent company of Salomon Brothers Inc.), for over $9 billion ($16,406,716,418 today) in stock, and merged it with its own investment arm to create Salomon Smith Barney.[11] In April 1998 Travelers Group announced an agreement to undertake a $76 billion ($136,452,429,563 today) merger between Travelers and Citicorp, creating Citigroup, which at the time of the merger was the largest single financial services company in the world.

At the time of the September 11, 2001, attacks, it was the largest tenant in 7 World Trade Center, occupying 1,202,900 sq ft (111,750 m2) (64 percent of the building) which included floors 28–45.[12][13]

Sale to Morgan Stanley edit

During the major financial crisis beginning in late 2008, Citigroup suffered large losses in its retained collateralized debt obligation exposure (loans that Citi underwrote but was not able to sell), and had to be rescued by the U.S. federal government. They decided to sell or close "non-core" businesses in order to raise money. On January 13, 2009, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup announced the merger of Smith Barney with Morgan Stanley's Global Wealth Management Group, with Morgan Stanley paying $2.7 billion cash upfront to Citigroup for a 51% stake in the joint venture. The joint venture operates as Morgan Stanley Smith Barney.[14] Morgan Stanley itself was in a financially cash-strapped position like Citigroup during that time, but they were helped by the $9 billion that Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group had paid in 2008 for a 21% stake in Morgan Stanley.[15][16][17]

On June 1, 2009, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup announced they closed early on the launch of their joint venture that combines Morgan Stanley's wealth management unit (including many former Dean Witter assets) with Citi's Smith Barney brokerage division. The new venture, called Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, was supposed to launch during the third quarter. The combined entity generates about $14 billion in net revenue, has 18,500 financial advisors, 1,000 locations worldwide and serves about 6.8 million households.[18]

Citigroup disclosed on September 17, 2009, they would sell their remaining shares in the group to partner Morgan Stanley.[19]

Acquisition history edit

The following is an illustration of the company's major mergers and acquisitions and historical predecessors (this is not a comprehensive list):[20]

Acquisition history
Morgan Stanley
Smith Barney

(merged 2009)
Morgan Stanley
(merged 1997, formerly Morgan Stanley Dean Witter)

Morgan Stanley
(est. 1935)

Dean Witter Reynolds
(merged 1978)

Dean Witter
(est. 1924)

Reynolds Securities
(est. 1931)

Smith Barney Shearson
(merged 1993)
Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co.
(acq. 1985)

Primerica Corporation
(later acq. by Commercial Credit)

Smith Barney & Co.
(merged 1938)

Edward B. Smith & Co.
(est. 1892)

Charles D. Barney & Co.
(est. 1873)

Harris, Upham & Co.
(est. 1929, acq. 1975)

Shearson Lehman Hutton
(merged 1988)
Shearson Lehman Brothers
(merged 1984)
Shearson/American Express
(merged 1981)

American Express
(est. 1850)

Shearson Loeb Rhoades
(acquired 1981)
Shearson Hayden Stone
(merged 1973)
Hayden Stone, Inc. (formerly CBWL-Hayden Stone, merged 1970)

Cogan, Berlind, Weill & Levitt
(formerly Carter, Berlind, Potoma & Weill, est. 1960)

Hayden, Stone & Co.

Shearson, Hammill & Co.
(est. 1902)

Loeb, Rhoades, Hornblower & Co.
(merged 1978)
Loeb, Rhoades & Co.
(merged 1937)

Carl M. Loeb & Co.
(est. 1931)

Rhoades & Company
(est. 1905)

Hornblower, Weeks, Noyes & Trask
(merged 1953–1977)

Hornblower & Weeks
(est. 1888)

Hemphill, Noyes & Co.
(est. 1919, acq. 1963)

Spencer Trask & Co.
(est. 1866 as Trask & Brown)

Paul H. Davis & Co.
(est. 1920, acq. 1953)

Robinson Humphrey Co. (acq. 1982)

Foster & Marshall (acq. 1982)

Balcor Co. (acq. 1982)

Chiles, Heider & Co. (acq. 1983)

Davis, Skaggs & Co. (acq. 1983)

Columbia Group (acq. 1984)

Financo (founded 1971, acq. 1985)

L. Messel & Co. (acq. 1986)

Lehman Brothers Kuhn Loeb
(merged 1977)

Lehman Brothers
(est. 1850)

Kuhn, Loeb & Co.
(est. 1867)

Abraham & Co.
(est. 1938, acq. 1975)

E. F. Hutton & Co.
(est. 1904)

References edit

  1. ^ Kapner, Suzanne; Lucchetti, Aaron (February 22, 2012). "Citigroup Faces Smith Barney up from 546$Billion in november 2007 Hit". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved May 20, 2012.
  2. ^ "Morgan Stanley Smith Barney is Now Morgan Stanley Wealth Management" (Press release). Morgan Stanley. Sep 25, 2012. Retrieved October 16, 2012.
  3. ^ . TIME Magazine, December 20, 1937
  4. ^ Grant, Tina (ed.) (1996) International Directory of Company Histories (volume 14) St. James Press, Detroit, p. 464, ISBN 1-55862-218-7
  5. ^ Elliott, Stuart (August 25, 1995). "THE MEDIA BUSINESS: ADVERTISING; Smith Barney summons the ghost of a haughty John Houseman in a revival of its 'timeless' ads". The New York Times.
  6. ^ a b c Bianco, Anthony (March 30, 1998). "Joe Plumeri: The Apostle of Life Insurance". Business Week. Archived from the original on December 9, 2012. Retrieved July 15, 2010.
  7. ^ Rob Wells, "American Express Sells Shearson Unit to Primerica", The Dispatch, March 13, 1994, accessed July 16, 2010
  8. ^ "American Express to Buy Shearson as Takeovers Transform Wall St". The New York Times.
  9. ^ "Plumeri next Willis CEO; Former Citigroup executive to succeed Reeve". Business Insurance. October 2, 2000. Archived from the original on September 10, 2012. Retrieved July 15, 2010.
  10. ^ "Willis chief discusses changes in financial services. (Willis Group Ltd. CEO Joseph J. Plumeri)(Interview)". Business Insurance. January 15, 2001. Retrieved July 15, 2010.[dead link]
  11. ^ Ben Duronio (June 12, 2012). "Morgan Stanley Is Killing 'Smith Barney' — Here's The Story Of How It Died". Business Insider.
  12. ^ Gilsanz, Ramon; Edward M. DePaola; Christopher Marrion; Harold "Bud" Nelson (May 2002). "WTC7 (Chapter 5)". World Trade Center Building Performance Study (PDF). FEMA. (PDF) from the original on March 5, 2008. Retrieved February 17, 2008.
  13. ^ "Building: 7 World Trade Center". CNN. 2001. from the original on October 13, 2007. Retrieved September 12, 2007.
  14. ^ (PDF). Citigroup. January 13, 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-02-06. Retrieved January 13, 2009.
  15. ^ "Morgan Stanley Completes Mitsubishi Deal". The New York Times. 29 September 2008. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
  16. ^ Ellis, David (22 September 2008). "Morgan Stanley to sell stake to Japan's MUFG". cnn. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
  17. ^ "Breakingviews - Morgan Stanley has paid off smartly for MUFG". reuters. 15 May 2018. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
  18. ^
  19. ^ Rieker, Matthias (September 17, 2009). "Citi Plans to Shed Stake in Smith Barney". The Wall Street Journal.
  20. ^ "Salomon Smith Barney" from Gambee, Robert. Wall Street. W. W. Norton & Company, 1999. p. 73

External links edit

  • Morgan Stanley Wealth Management website
  • Smith Barney

morgan, stanley, wealth, management, american, multinational, financial, services, corporation, specializing, retail, brokerage, wealth, asset, management, division, morgan, stanley, january, 2009, morgan, stanley, citigroup, announced, that, citigroup, would,. Morgan Stanley Wealth Management is an American multinational financial services corporation specializing in retail brokerage It is the wealth amp asset management division of Morgan Stanley On January 13 2009 Morgan Stanley and Citigroup announced that Citigroup would sell 51 of Smith Barney to Morgan Stanley creating Morgan Stanley Smith Barney which was formerly a division of Citi Global Wealth Management The combined brokerage house has 17 646 financial advisors and manages 2 trillion in client assets 1 Clients range from individual investors to small and mid sized businesses as well as large corporations non profit organizations and family foundations Morgan Stanley Wealth ManagementCompany typeLimited liability companyIndustryFinancial servicesFounded2009 15 years ago 2009 FounderHenry S Morgan Harold Stanley Charles D Barney Edward B SmithHeadquartersPurchase New York U S Area servedWorldwideKey peopleJames P Gorman Chairman ProductsRetail brokerage asset management investment bankingRevenueUS 17 242 billion 2018 Operating incomeUS 4 521 billion 2018 Net incomeUS 3 472 billion 2018 AUMUS 2 05 trillion 2014 Number of employees17 646 2011 ParentMorgan StanleyWebsitewww wbr morganstanleyindividual wbr comOn September 25 2012 Morgan Stanley announced that its U S wealth management business was renamed Morgan Stanley Wealth Management The broker dealer designation for Morgan Stanley Wealth Management will remain Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Sale to Morgan Stanley 2 Acquisition history 3 References 4 External linksHistory edit nbsp Smith Barney amp Co logoSmith Barney amp Co was formed in 1938 through the merger of Charles D Barney amp Co and Edward B Smith amp Co Charles D Barney amp Co a New York and Philadelphia based firm was founded by Charles D Barney in 1873 following the failure of its predecessor Jay Cooke amp Company Edward B Smith amp Co founded in 1892 became a significant player in securities underwriting in 1934 when the firm absorbed the professionals from the securities business of Guaranty Trust Company following the passage of the Glass Steagall Act 3 In 1975 Smith Barney merged with Harris Upham amp Co to form Smith Barney Harris Upham amp Co which in 1977 was placed under SBHU Holdings a holding company In 1982 SBHU Holdings was renamed Smith Barney Inc 4 During the 1980s the company was known for its television commercials featuring actor John Houseman with the catchphrase They make money the old fashioned way They earn it 5 After Houseman stepped down the campaign continued with various actors such as Leo McKern Joel Higgins and George C Scott nbsp Smith Barney Shearson logo following the purchase of the brokerage business of Shearson Lehman Hutton from American ExpressIn the late 1980s the retail brokerage firm Smith Barney was owned by Sanford I Weill s Primerica Corporation Commercial Credit purchased Primerica in 1988 for 1 5 billion 3 711 592 572 today In 1992 they paid 722 million 1 505 636 234 today to buy a 27 share of Travelers Insurance and in 1993 acquired Shearson which included the legacy business of E F Hutton from American Express By the end of 1993 the merged company was known as Travelers Group Inc citation needed although the brokerage business continued to operate under the Smith Barney brand In 1993 Weill bought stockbroker Shearson back from American Express for 1 billion 2 025 800 507 today and merged it into Smith Barney 6 7 Weill had been in charge of Shearson Loeb Rhoades and sold it to American Express in 1981 8 Weill offered Joe Plumeri the presidency of Smith Barney and he became the President of the merged company that year 6 9 10 He only lasted a year as he experienced conflicts with existing Smith Barney managers 6 In September 1997 Travelers acquired Salomon Inc parent company of Salomon Brothers Inc for over 9 billion 16 406 716 418 today in stock and merged it with its own investment arm to create Salomon Smith Barney 11 In April 1998 Travelers Group announced an agreement to undertake a 76 billion 136 452 429 563 today merger between Travelers and Citicorp creating Citigroup which at the time of the merger was the largest single financial services company in the world At the time of the September 11 2001 attacks it was the largest tenant in 7 World Trade Center occupying 1 202 900 sq ft 111 750 m2 64 percent of the building which included floors 28 45 12 13 Sale to Morgan Stanley edit During the major financial crisis beginning in late 2008 Citigroup suffered large losses in its retained collateralized debt obligation exposure loans that Citi underwrote but was not able to sell and had to be rescued by the U S federal government They decided to sell or close non core businesses in order to raise money On January 13 2009 Morgan Stanley and Citigroup announced the merger of Smith Barney with Morgan Stanley s Global Wealth Management Group with Morgan Stanley paying 2 7 billion cash upfront to Citigroup for a 51 stake in the joint venture The joint venture operates as Morgan Stanley Smith Barney 14 Morgan Stanley itself was in a financially cash strapped position like Citigroup during that time but they were helped by the 9 billion that Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group had paid in 2008 for a 21 stake in Morgan Stanley 15 16 17 On June 1 2009 Morgan Stanley and Citigroup announced they closed early on the launch of their joint venture that combines Morgan Stanley s wealth management unit including many former Dean Witter assets with Citi s Smith Barney brokerage division The new venture called Morgan Stanley Smith Barney was supposed to launch during the third quarter The combined entity generates about 14 billion in net revenue has 18 500 financial advisors 1 000 locations worldwide and serves about 6 8 million households 18 Citigroup disclosed on September 17 2009 they would sell their remaining shares in the group to partner Morgan Stanley 19 Acquisition history editThe following is an illustration of the company s major mergers and acquisitions and historical predecessors this is not a comprehensive list 20 Acquisition historyMorgan StanleySmith Barney merged 2009 Morgan Stanley merged 1997 formerly Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Morgan Stanley est 1935 Dean Witter Reynolds merged 1978 Dean Witter est 1924 Reynolds Securities est 1931 Smith Barney Shearson merged 1993 Smith Barney Harris Upham amp Co acq 1985 Primerica Corporation later acq by Commercial Credit Smith Barney amp Co merged 1938 Edward B Smith amp Co est 1892 Charles D Barney amp Co est 1873 Harris Upham amp Co est 1929 acq 1975 Shearson Lehman Hutton merged 1988 Shearson Lehman Brothers merged 1984 Shearson American Express merged 1981 American Express est 1850 Shearson Loeb Rhoades acquired 1981 Shearson Hayden Stone merged 1973 Hayden Stone Inc formerly CBWL Hayden Stone merged 1970 Cogan Berlind Weill amp Levitt formerly Carter Berlind Potoma amp Weill est 1960 Hayden Stone amp Co Shearson Hammill amp Co est 1902 Loeb Rhoades Hornblower amp Co merged 1978 Loeb Rhoades amp Co merged 1937 Carl M Loeb amp Co est 1931 Rhoades amp Company est 1905 Hornblower Weeks Noyes amp Trask merged 1953 1977 Hornblower amp Weeks est 1888 Hemphill Noyes amp Co est 1919 acq 1963 Spencer Trask amp Co est 1866 as Trask amp Brown Paul H Davis amp Co est 1920 acq 1953 Robinson Humphrey Co acq 1982 Foster amp Marshall acq 1982 Balcor Co acq 1982 Chiles Heider amp Co acq 1983 Davis Skaggs amp Co acq 1983 Columbia Group acq 1984 Financo founded 1971 acq 1985 L Messel amp Co acq 1986 Lehman Brothers Kuhn Loeb merged 1977 Lehman Brothers est 1850 Kuhn Loeb amp Co est 1867 Abraham amp Co est 1938 acq 1975 E F Hutton amp Co est 1904 References edit Kapner Suzanne Lucchetti Aaron February 22 2012 Citigroup Faces Smith Barney up from 546 Billion in november 2007 Hit The Wall Street Journal Retrieved May 20 2012 Morgan Stanley Smith Barney is Now Morgan Stanley Wealth Management Press release Morgan Stanley Sep 25 2012 Retrieved October 16 2012 Business Marriage of Convenience TIME Magazine December 20 1937 Grant Tina ed 1996 International Directory of Company Histories volume 14 St James Press Detroit p 464 ISBN 1 55862 218 7 Elliott Stuart August 25 1995 THE MEDIA BUSINESS ADVERTISING Smith Barney summons the ghost of a haughty John Houseman in a revival of its timeless ads The New York Times a b c Bianco Anthony March 30 1998 Joe Plumeri The Apostle of Life Insurance Business Week Archived from the original on December 9 2012 Retrieved July 15 2010 Rob Wells American Express Sells Shearson Unit to Primerica The Dispatch March 13 1994 accessed July 16 2010 American Express to Buy Shearson as Takeovers Transform Wall St The New York Times Plumeri next Willis CEO Former Citigroup executive to succeed Reeve Business Insurance October 2 2000 Archived from the original on September 10 2012 Retrieved July 15 2010 Willis chief discusses changes in financial services Willis Group Ltd CEO Joseph J Plumeri Interview Business Insurance January 15 2001 Retrieved July 15 2010 dead link Ben Duronio June 12 2012 Morgan Stanley Is Killing Smith Barney Here s The Story Of How It Died Business Insider Gilsanz Ramon Edward M DePaola Christopher Marrion Harold Bud Nelson May 2002 WTC7 Chapter 5 World Trade Center Building Performance Study PDF FEMA Archived PDF from the original on March 5 2008 Retrieved February 17 2008 Building 7 World Trade Center CNN 2001 Archived from the original on October 13 2007 Retrieved September 12 2007 Morgan Stanley and Citi to Form Industry Leading Wealth Management Business Through Joint Venture PDF Citigroup January 13 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 02 06 Retrieved January 13 2009 Morgan Stanley Completes Mitsubishi Deal The New York Times 29 September 2008 Retrieved 4 November 2020 Ellis David 22 September 2008 Morgan Stanley to sell stake to Japan s MUFG cnn Retrieved 4 November 2020 Breakingviews Morgan Stanley has paid off smartly for MUFG reuters 15 May 2018 Retrieved 4 November 2020 BusinessWeek Rieker Matthias September 17 2009 Citi Plans to Shed Stake in Smith Barney The Wall Street Journal Salomon Smith Barney from Gambee Robert Wall Street W W Norton amp Company 1999 p 73External links edit nbsp New York City portal nbsp Companies portalMorgan Stanley Wealth Management website Smith Barney Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Morgan Stanley Wealth Management amp oldid 1195188099, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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