U.S. Bancorp
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| It has been suggested that Firstar Corporation be merged into this article or section. (Discuss) |
| This article or section needs copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone or spelling. You can assist by editing it now. A how-to guide is available.(May 2007) |
| U.S. Bancorp | |
|---|---|
| Image:US Bancorp logo.png | |
| Type | Public (NYSE: USB) |
| Founded | Portland, Oregon (1890) |
| Headquarters | Minneapolis, Minnesota |
| Key people | Jerry Grundhofer, Chairman of the Board Richard K. Davis, President, CEO |
| Industry | Finance and Insurance |
| Products | Financial Services |
| Employees | 49,684 2006 [1] |
| Slogan | Other Banks Promise Great Service, U.S. Bank Guarantees It. |
| Website | www.usbank.com |
U.S. Bancorp (NYSE: USB) is a financial services holding company, headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Its retail division is U.S. Bank, the sixth-largest bank in the United States based on holdings.
U.S. Bancorp was number 131 in the Fortune 500 list of major U.S. companies for 2006.
Contents |
[edit] History
The present day U.S. Bancorp developed from a number of mergers, beginning with Firstar Corporation's (formerly First Wisconsin National Bank) merger with Star Bank (formerly First National Cincinnati) of Cincinnati, Ohio in 1999. Five months later, Firstar acquired Mercantile Bancorporation of St. Louis, Missouri. The final major acquisition was Firstar's buyout of U.S. Bancorp, headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota. That buyout was completed on February 27 2001. Firstar changed its name to U.S. Bancorp at that time.
The original U.S. Bancorp was the successor of the United States National Bank of Portland, which was founded in Portland, Oregon in 1891 and changed its name to the United States National Bank of Oregon in 1964. That corporation was acquired in 1997 by First Bank System, Inc., which had its headquarters in Minneapolis, Minnesota. With that acquisition, First Bank System changed its name to U.S. Bancorp. First Bank System was the successor of a bank holding company formed in 1929 by several banks in the Upper Midwest, most notably the First National Bank of Minneapolis and the First National Bank of St. Paul, both of which had been founded in 1864.[1][2][3][4]
In early June 1999, Minnesota Attorney General Mike Hatch filed a lawsuit against Minneapolis-based U.S. Bancorp, alleging that the bank illegally released private customer information to a telemarketer.
Several other banks were acquired by U.S Bancorp's legacy companies. Other banks that were bought by Firstar include Banks of Iowa, Federated Bank, First Colonial Bankshares Corporation, and Investors Bank. Banks bought by Mercantile Bancorporation include Mark Twain Bancshares, Firstbank of Illinois, Hawkeye Bancorporation, and Ameribanc. Star Bank Corporation bought Great Financial Bank, and US Bancorp bought West One Bancorp and WestStar Bank
[edit] Coverage
U.S. Bancorp has locations in Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. It has some operations in Canada as well.
[edit] Subsidiaries
Former subsidiaries include Piper Jaffray NYSE: PJC, which became an independent, publicly held company following its spin-off from U.S. Bancorp on December 31, 2003. U.S. Bancorp's subsidiary credit card processor is Nova Information Systems.[edit] Namesakes
- The U.S. Bank Tower in Los Angeles
- US Bancorp Tower in Portland, Oregon
- U.S. Bank Center in Seattle, WA
- U.S. Bank Tower in Cincinnati, Ohio
- U.S. Bank Center in Milwaukee, WI
- U.S. Bank Arena in Cincinnati, Ohio
- U.S. Bank Plaza in St. Louis, Missouri
- U.S. Bank Plaza in Minneapolis, MN
- U.S. Bank Center in Saint Paul, MN
- U.S. Bank Tower in Sacramento, California.
- U.S. Bank Tower in Nashville,Tennessee.
[edit] References
- ^ (2007) Standard and Poor's 500 Guide. The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.. ISBN 0-07-147906-6.
[edit] External links
50 largest American banks and bank holding companies |
|---|
| ABN AMRO North America • Associated • BancWest • Bank of America • Bank of New York Mellon • BBVA USA • BB&T • BOK Financial • Capital One • Charles Schwab • Citigroup • Citizens Financial Group • City National • Colonial • Comerica • Commerce Bancorp • Commerce Bancshares • Compass • Fifth Third • First BanCorp • First Citizens • First Horizon National • Fulton • Harris • HSBC Bank USA • Huntington • JPMorgan Chase • Key • M&T • Marshall & Ilsley • National City • New York Community • New York Private • Northern Trust • PNC • Popular • RBC Centura • Regions • State Street • SunTrust • Synovus • Taunus • TD Banknorth • U.S. • UnionBanCal • W Holding • Wachovia • Webster • Wells Fargo • Zions Bancorporation |
Minnesota-based Corporations | |
|---|---|
| Fortune 500 Corporations (by size) | UnitedHealth Group · Target Corporation · Best Buy · Travelers · 3M · Supervalu · U.S. Bancorp · CHS · Northwest Airlines · General Mills · Medtronic · Xcel Energy · Ameriprise Financial · Land O'Lakes · C. H. Robinson Worldwide · Thrivent Financial for Lutherans · Hormel · The Mosaic Company · Ecolab · Nash Finch |
| Fortune 1000 Corporations (by size) | Companies listed above, plus: PepsiAmericas · Pentair · St. Jude Medical · Alliant Techsystems · Valspar · Patterson Dental · Minnesota Life · Regis Corporation · Polaris Industries · Toro · Deluxe Corporation · Donaldson Company · Fastenal · H.B. Fuller · Federated Mutual Insurance · Ceridian |
| Major non-public or externally owned corporations (alphabetically) | Andersen Windows · Cargill · Carlson Companies · Dairy Queen · Musicland · Schwan Food Company |
Companies formerly based in Oregon |
|---|
Moved out of state: Georgia Pacific · Louisiana Pacific
|
de:U.S. Bancorp

