This article outlines the history of Wells Fargo & Company from its merger with Norwest Corporation and beyond. The new company chose to retain the name of "Wells Fargo" and so this article is about the history after the merger.
Acquisitions in 1999–2000
Continuing the Norwest tradition of making numerous smaller acquisitions each year, Wells Fargo acquired 13 companies during 1999 with total assets of $2.4 billion. The largest of these was the February purchase of Brownsville, Texas-based Mercantile Financial Enterprises, Inc., which had $779 million in assets. The acquisition pace picked up in 2000, with Wells Fargo expanding its retail banking into two more states: Michigan, through the buyout of Michigan Financial Corporation ($975 million in assets), and Alaska, through the purchase of National Bank of Alaska, with $3 billion of assets.[1] Wells Fargo also acquired First Commerce Bancshares, Inc. of Lincoln, Nebraska, which had $2.9 billion in assets, and a Seattle-based regional brokerage firm, Ragen MacKenzie Group Incorporated. In October 2000, Wells Fargo made its largest deal since the Norwest-Wells Fargo merger when it paid nearly $3 billion in stock for First Security Corporation, a $23 billion bank holding company based in Salt Lake City, Utah, and operating in seven western states. Wells Fargo thereby became the largest banking franchise in terms of deposits in New Mexico, Nevada, Idaho, and Utah; as well as the largest banking franchise in the West overall. Following completion of the First Security acquisition, Wells Fargo had total assets of $263 billion with some 140,000 employees.
2000–present
In 2001, Wells Fargo acquired H.D. Vest Financial Services for $128 million, but sold it in 2015 for $580 million.[2]
Acquisitions in 2007 and early 2008
In January 2007, Wells Fargo acquired Placer Sierra Bank.[3] In May 2007, Wells Fargo acquired Greater Bay Bancorp, which had $7.4 billion in assets, in a $1.5 billion transaction.[4][5] In June 2007, Wells Fargo acquired CIT's construction unit.[6] In January 2008, Wells Fargo acquired United Bancorporation of Wyoming.
See also
- List of Wells Fargo directors
- List of Wells Fargo presidents
Bibliography
- Anderson, Harold P. "The Corporate History Department: The Wells Fargo Model." The Public Historian 3.3 (1981): 25–29..
- Beebe, Lucius Morris, and Charles Clegg. US West, the saga of Wells Fargo (1949).
- Chandler, Robert J. "Integrity amid Tumult: Wells, Fargo & Co.'s Gold Rush Banking." California History 70#3 (1991): 258–277.
- Fradkin, Philip L. Stagecoach: Wells Fargo and the American West (2002).
- Hungerford, Edward. Wells Fargo: advancing the American frontier (1949).
- Jackson, W. Turrentine. "Wells Fargo: Symbol of the Wild West?." Western Historical Quarterly 3#2 (1972): 179–196..
- Jackson, W. Turrentine. "Wells Fargo Stagecoaching in Montana Trials and Triumphs." Montana: The Magazine of Western History 29#2 (1979): 38–53.
- Jackson, W. Turrentine. "A New Look at Wells Fargo, Stage-Coaches and the Pony Express." California Historical Society Quarterly 45#4 (1966): 291–324. in JSTOR
- Loomis, Noel M. Wells Fargo. New York: Clarkson N. Potter, Inc., 1968.
- Moody, Ralph. Stagecoach West. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company, 1967.
- Nevin, David. The Expressmen. New York: Time-Life Books, 1974.
External links
References
- Wells Fargo to buy NBA Juneau Empire, December 22, 1999, retrieved April 15, 2016^
- H.D. Vest to be acquired by Internet company Blucora for $580 million Investment News, October 15, 2015^
- Placer Sierra Bancshares Agrees to Join Wells Fargo