'First Boston Corporation' was a New York-based
investment bank, founded in 1932 and acquired by
Credit Suisse in 1988, when it became 'CS First Boston'. Globally referred to as
Credit Suisse First Boston after 1996, the First Boston part of the name was phased out in 2006.
Founding
First Boston Corporation was created in 1932 as the investment banking arm of the
First National Bank of Boston. It became an independent firm after passage of the
Glass-Steagall Act, which required commercial banks to divest securities businesses in the wake of the
1929 stock market crash. First National Bank of Boston continued as a commercial bank, ultimately becoming part of
Bank of America. The young First Boston investment bank was cobbled together from the investment banking arms of major commercial banks. For example, several key members of
Chase Harris Forbes Corporation, the securities affiliate of
Chase National Bank, joined the new investment bank in 1934.
==Joining the
Bulge Bracket==
In 1946, Mellon Securities Corporation, the former investment banking arm of
Mellon Bank, merged into the First Boston Corporation. Mellon's franchise with industrial and governmental clients led to some major deals: initial public debt offerings for the
World Bank and
Hydro-Québec, and a share offering for
Gulf Oil Corporation in 1948 (the largest IPO to date). By 1947, the First Boston Corporation surpassed $1 billion in new capital issues, and in 1959 it reintroduced the credit of Japan to the American markets with the first offerings by its government since 1930. As of 1970, First Boston was considered to be part of the bulge bracket along with
Morgan Stanley,
Dillon Read and
Kuhn Loeb.
[1]
The Seventies
By 1970, the Firm was raising more than $10 billion in new capital annually for underwriting clients. In 1971, The First Boston Corporation listed on the New York Stock Exchange developed its equity, sales, research, and trading operations. In 1978, First Boston began its highly successful London operations in partnership with
Credit Suisse (see “Relationship with Credit Suisse” below) and became a leading
Eurobond trader and underwriter.
The Eighties
First Boston sat at the top of merger and acquisition league tables in the 1980s, thanks to the team led by
Bruce Wasserstein and
Joe Perella, which orchestrated such transactions as the leveraged buyout of
Federated Stores, which earned First Boston $200 million in fees
[2], and
Texaco’s hostile takeover of
Getty Oil. A 1985 Fortune Magazine article called First Boston “the archetypal deal factory”, a year in which it did $60 billion in M&A deals placing it second after Goldman Sachs.
[3] By 1987, M&A advisory work contributed half of First Boston's profit and Wasserstein asked the management committee to divert resources to his unit from bond trading. After being rebuffed, Wasserstein and Perella quit and set up their own firm,
Wasserstein Perella & Co.
==Relationship with
Credit Suisse==
Credit Suisse’s relationship with First Boston began in 1978, when
White Weld & Co. was bought by
Merrill Lynch. As a result, White Weld dropped out of its London-based investment banking partnership with Credit Suisse. First Boston stepped in, creating ''Financiére Crédit Suisse-First Boston'', a 50-50 joint venture widely known as
Credit Suisse First Boston. Ironically, First Boston was not Credit Suisse's first choice for the partnership. When White Weld stepped out, Credit Suisse had unsuccessfully approached
Dillon Read[4], which a couple decades later was acquired by Credit Suisse archrival
UBS AG to form the core of that firm's U.S. investment banking business.

First Boston logo 1988-1996
Back in the United States, Credit Suisse acquired a 44% stake in First Boston in 1988 and its name was changed to CS First Boston. The investment bank acquired its shares held by the public and the company was taken private. In 1989, the
junk bond market collapsed, leaving CS First Boston unable to redeem hundreds of millions it had lent for the leveraged buyout of Ohio Mattress Company, maker of
Sealy mattresses.
[5] Credit Suisse bailed them out and acquired a controlling stake in 1990. Although such an arrangement was arguably illegal under the Glass Steagall Act, the
Federal Reserve, the U.S. bank regulator, concluded that the integrity of the financial markets was better served by avoiding the bankruptcy of a significant investment bank like First Boston even though it meant a de facto merger of a commercial bank with an investment bank.
The Nineties
The success of Credit Suisse First Boston, or CSFB, in London began creating problems for Credit Suisse. CS First Boston in New York and CSFB in London had their own management teams, with competing salesmen in each other’s territory and in the Pacific region. In 1996, Credit Suisse purchased the remaining stake of CS First Boston from its management and rebranded the U.S. investment bank as Credit Suisse First Boston, making CSFB one global brand. CSFB also beefed up its London operations by purchasing significant portions of the investment banking business of
Barclays Bank, Barclays de Zoete Wedd.
At the same time, the newly global CSFB became a leading high tech banker, acting as lead (or co-lead) underwriter in the IPOs of
Amazon.com and
Cisco Systems, as well as one time high fliers such as
Silicon Graphics,
Intuit,
Netscape and
VA Linux Systems. CSFB also did significant deals for
Apple Computer,
Compaq and
Sun Microsystems among others. In 2000, at the height of the tech boom, technology deals generated $1.4 billion in revenue for CSFB. The head of CSFB’s tech group,
Frank Quattrone, reportedly made $200 million in bonuses between 1998 and 2000.
[6]
Acquisition of DLJ in 2001
The bank spent $13 billion to buy
Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette (DLJ) in 2000 as stock markets were peaking. By the time the acquisition closed in 2001, stock markets were down significantly. The deal led to a culture clash that triggered the departures of key bankers. In order to keep top bankers, CSFB handed them three-year guaranteed contracts, swelling costs relative to revenue and leading to two years of losses at the investment bank.
Restructuring
After the collapse in technology shares in 2001, Credit Suisse replaced CSFB’s CEO
Allen Wheat with
John Mack, who was charged with turning around the investment bank. Mack fired 10,000 employees, or one-third of CSFB's workforce, although many former DLJ bankers continued to collect guaranteed pay long after they were gone. Also in 2001, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the Justice Department began investigating how CSFB allocated IPOs of technology companies. The probe led to the conviction of Frank Quattrone in 2004, who was found guilty of urging employees to destroy documents after he learned about the investigation. He was ultimately acquitted of substantially all charges upon appeal in 2006.
[7]
The end of the First Boston name
Credit Suisse retired the First Boston name on January 16, 2006, in order to “allow Credit Suisse to communicate as an integrated organization to clients, employees and shareholders.” The move led some to speculate that the name change reflected the diminished luster of the once great First Boston name as a result of years of mismanagement and scandal.
[8] However, its strategy is consistent with that of other large, international financial conglomerates.
Citigroup has eliminated the
Salomon Brothers name from its investment banking business, and
UBS AG has done the same with the
SG Warburg,
Dillon Read and
Paine Webber names.
Cites
1. Ron Chernow, "The House of Morgan (Simon & Schuster, 1990)"
2. New York Times, “Books and Business: Chain Store Massacre” (Nov. 3, 1991)
3. Fortune Magazine. “Merger Fees that Bend the Mind” (January 1986).
4. The Spectacular rise and fall of CSFB, by Ian Kerr (Financial News Online - 11 Jul 2005). See http://www.financialnews-us.com/?page=ushome&contentid=540299
5. The amount lent, 7 million, was 40 percent of First Boston’s equity capital. See May 1990 article “The Burning Bed” in Business Week
6. “Inside Frank Quattrone's Money Machine: The rise and fall of the high-tech investment banker who was an architect of Silicon Valley's financial culture,” Business Week October 2003.
7. "Frank Quattrone 2.0" (Fortune Magazine, September 7, 2006). See http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2006/09/18/8386190/index.htm?postversion=2006090706
8. See Ian Kerr article.