- founded,
Shearson Hammill & Co.
Among Shearson's most
notable incarnations were
Shearson /
American Express,
Shearson Lehman /
American Express,
Shearson Lehman...
-
stockbroker Shearson back from
American Express for $1
billion ($2,109,191,431 today), and
merged it into
Smith Barney. (Weill had been in
charge of
Shearson Loeb...
-
founded by
Edward Shearson Shearson Hayden Stone, 1974–1981,
formed through the
merger of
Shearson,
Hamill and Hayden,
Stone & Co.
Shearson/American Express...
-
Sanford I. Weill's
Shearson Loeb Rhoades, the second-largest
securities firm in the
United States to form
Shearson/American Express.
Shearson Loeb
Rhoades itself...
-
Edward Shearson (August 3, 1864 -
October 30, 1950) was a banker,
millionaire and
founder of
Shearson,
Hammill & Co.,
which was
among the
largest brokerage...
- and
acquired in 1979 by
Sanford I. Weill's
Shearson Hayden Stone.
Although the firm
would operate as
Shearson Loeb
Rhoades for two years, the firm would...
- 1970;
Hayden Stone, Inc. in 1972;
Shearson Hayden Stone in 1974, when it
merged with
Shearson Hammill & Co.; and
Shearson Loeb
Rhoades in 1979, when it merged...
-
Shearson/American
Express Inc. v. Mc****n, 482 U.S. 220 (1987), is a
United States Supreme Court decision concerning arbitration of
private securities...
-
Wickes was the
title sponsor for two years,
followed by
three with Isuzu.
Shearson Lehman Brothers became the
title sponsors in 1986,
replaced by
Buick in...
- the
combined firms became Shearson Lehman/American Express. From 1983 to 1990,
Peter A.
Cohen was CEO and
chairman of
Shearson Lehman Brothers,
where he...