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BB&T

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BB&T Corporation
Type Public (NYSEBBT)
Founded 1872
Headquarters Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Key people Kelly King, CEO; John A. Allison IV Chairman
Industry Finance, Investments, and Insurance
Products Commercial banking, Investment banking
Revenue US$ 10.67 billion (2008)
Net income US$ 1.734 billion (2008)
Total assets US$ 132.6 billion (2008)
Employees 30,200
Website www.bbt.com]

The BB&T Corporation (NYSEBBT) is a large American bank, offering full-service commercial and retail banking services along with other financial services like insurance, investments, retail brokerage, mortgage, corporate finance, consumer finance, payment services, international banking, leasing and trust. Based in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, with $136.5 billion in assets (as of September 2008), BB&T operates more than 1,500 financial centers in the U.S. South, throughout the states of North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, Florida, Alabama and Indiana, and in Washington, D.C.. The "BB&T" acronym stands for "Branch Banking and Trust."

Contents

[edit] History

BB&T building in Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Typical branch office. Located in Lexington, North Carolina

BB&T's beginnings date back to 1872, when Alpheus Branch and Thomas Jefferson Hadley founded the "Branch and Hadley" merchant bank in their small hometown of Wilson, North Carolina. After many transactions, mostly with local farmers, Branch bought out Hadley's shares in 1887 and renamed the company to "Branch and Company, Bankers". Two years later, Branch, his father father-in-law Gen. Joshua Barnes, Hadley, and three other men, secured a charter from the North Carolina General Assembly to operate the "Wilson Banking and Trust Company". After numerous additional name changes, the company finally settled on the name "Branch Banking and Company". Branch remained an active member in the company until his death in 1893.

In 1900, all of Branch's banking companies consolidated as Branch Banking and Company, allowing the institution to expand its services. In 1902 a savings department was created and in 1907 a trust department was authorized; this made Branch's company the first in the state to engage in trust activities. The bank made its final name change in 1913 to "Branch Banking and Trust", or BB&T, to reflect its new activities.

BB&T sold Liberty Bonds during World War I and grew to have more than $4 million in assets by 1923. An insurance division was added in 1922, followed by a mortgage division in 1923. As banks across the nation failed as a result of the 1929 Stock Market Crash, BB&T survived; it was the only one to do so in the town of Wilson.

World War II revived BB&T. BB&T's prosperity continued into the 1960s, as mergers and acquisitions grew to company to $343 million in assets with new branches in 35 cities. By 1994, BB&T had become North Carolina's largest bank with $10.5 billion in assets and 263 offices in 138 cities in the Carolinas.

In 1995, BB&T and Southern National Bank, another bank with roots in the eastern part of the state, completed a "merger of equals." In an unusual arrangement, the holding company retained the Southern National name for a few years, but all of its banks took the BB&T name. This gave the the new BB&T 437 branches in 220 cities in the Carolinas and Virginia. The bank continued to expand nationwide through the 1990s, purchasing Fidelity Federal Bankshares, First Financial of Petersburg, Maryland Federal Bancorp and Franklin Bancorporation in the Virginia/Maryland area. In 1999, BB&T acquired MainStreet Financial Corp. of Martinsville, and Mason-Dixon Bancshares of Westminster, and further expanded into Georgia and West Virginia after purchasing First Liberty of Macon and Matewan Bancshares.

From 2000 to 2005, BB&T acquired numerous smaller banks, expanding into Tennessee, Kentucky, and even Florida. As of Dec. 31, 2005, BB&T Corporation had $109.2 billion in assets; operated more than 1,500 banking offices in 11 states and the District of Columbia; and had more than 28,000 employees.

In early 2007 BB&T acquired Coastal Federal Bank which is primarily located in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. It has been one of the Carolina's fastest growing banks. After BB&T's announcement of an opportunity for a "merger of equals" it's often been speculated for a merger with either Regions Financial of Birmingham or Fifth Third of Cincinnati.

In late 2008 the bank accepted $3.1 billion in bailout money through the sale of its preferred shares to the U.S. Treasury's Troubled Asset Relief Program. The bank said in June 2009 that it had received approval to repurchase the shares. [[1]].

In June 2009, its chairman, John A. Allison IV delivered a keynote address to a meeting of the right-wing libertarian Competitive Enterprise Institute, where he said government regulation caused the 2007-2009 financial collapse [[2]].

[edit] Response to Kelo v. New London

On January 25, 2006, BB&T announced through a press release that it would not lend money to developers to build commercial projects on land purchased from private citizens by the government through the power of eminent domain. This was a reaction to the United States Supreme Court's decision in Kelo v. New London in 2005 that such transfers are permissible.[1]

[edit] Donations

The company donated $3M to fund the establishment of BB&T Program of Free Enterprise at the Florida State University.

The company donated $2M to fund the teaching of Objectivism at the University of Texas.

The company donated $600,000 to Florida Gulf Coast University for the growth of programs at the Lutgert College of Business.

The company donated $350,000 to fund the teaching of "The Moral Foundations of Capitalism" at the Loyola College in Maryland.

[edit] External links

[edit] Data

[edit] References

  1. ^ Nowell, "BB&T ends loans for eminent domain", USA today, 2006. However, this Supreme Court ruling did not announce a wholly new understanding of eminent domain law; rather, commercial projects had been undertaken in the name of urban renewal for decades using formerly private land.
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