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Cassatt & Co.

Cassatt & Company
Acquired
Industry Financial services
Fate Acquired in 1940 by E.A. Pierce Merrill Lynch
Predecessor Lloyd, Cassatt & Company
Successor Merrill Lynch, E. A. Pierce and Cassatt
Merill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Beane (later Smith)
Founded 1872
Founder Robert K. Cassatt
Defunct 1940
Headquarters Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Products Brokerage, Investment banking

Cassatt & Company was a Philadelphia based investment banking and brokerage firm founded in 1872. The firm was acquired by Merrill Lynch & Co. in 1940, shortly after Merrill's merger with E.A. Pierce & Co. that created Merril Lynch, E.A. Pierce & Cassatt.

The Cassatt name was dropped in 1940 when the newly combined firm acquired New Orleans-based Fenner & Beane.

The firm, which was originally known as Lloyd, Cassatt & Company was founded by Robert S. Cassatt, father of railroad executive Alexander Cassatt.

By 1919, the firm had offices in Philadelphia, New York, Pittsburgh and Baltimore.

In 1931, the firm split its investment banking business from its traditional brokerage business.

In 1934, Cassatt began discussions with E.A. Pierce & Co., the largest brokerage firm in the U.S. at the time about a potential merger. In 1935, these discussions resulted in a partnership between the two firms. As part of the deal, Cassatt transferred its brokerage business to E.A. Pierce and focused exclusively on investment banking and merchant banking.

In the late 1930s, E.A. Pierce began discussions with Merrill Lynch about a potential merger. E.A. Pierce was struggling financially in the 1930s and was thinly capitalized. Following the death of Edmund C. Lynch in 1938, Winthrop Smith began discussions with Charles E. Merrill, who owned a minority interest in E.A. Pierce about a possible merger of the two firms. On April 1, 1940, Merrill Lynch, E.A. Pierce & Cassatt was formed when the two firms merged and also acquired Cassatt & Co.


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