Washington Mutual
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Washington Mutual Inc. | |
Type | Public (NYSE: WM) |
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Founded | 1889 |
Headquarters | Seattle, Washington |
Key people | Kerry Killinger, CEO & Chairman |
Industry | Finance and Insurance |
Products | Financial Services |
Revenue | $15.962B USD |
Employees | 60,798 |
Subsidiaries | WM Financial Services; Washington Mutual Insurance Services; Washington Mutual Card Services |
Website | http://www.wamu.com/ |
Washington Mutual (or WaMu; NYSE: WM) is one of the United States's leading consumer and small business banks. Despite its name, it is not a credit union or mutual company. It is publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange. As of June 30, 2005, it stands as the 6th largest bank in the United States by assets, valued at $350.7 billion.
In March of 2006, Washington Mutual began moving into its new headquarters, WaMu Center, located in downtown Seattle. The company's previous headquarters, Washington Mutual Tower, still stands about a block away from the new building on Second Avenue.
Washington Mutual's principal activities are to provide financial services to consumers and small businesses such as retail banking, mortgage lending, consumer lending, business banking, business lending, insurance services, credit card services, commercial real estate mortgage and consumer investment services.
Washington Mutual is the sole surviving major Seattle-based bank after the flurry of mergers in the 1980s and 1990s ended the independence of Rainier Bank, Seafirst Bank, and People's Bank, among others.
Washington Mutual operates more than 2,600 retail banking, mortgage lending, commercial banking, and financial services offices, as of June 30, 2006.
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[edit] History
Washington Mutual was founded as the Washington National Building Loan and Investment Association on September 25, 1889 in an attempt to save Seattle's economy after a fire nearly destroyed the city. It made the first home mortgage loan on the West Coast on Feburary 10, 1890. Its name was changed to Washington Savings and Loan Association on June 25, 1908. During World War I its assets would expand by 68%.
By now called Washington Mutual Savings Bank, the company made its first acquisition on July 25, 1930, by purchasing Continental Mutual Savings Bank. Over the next fifty years it would be involved in pioneering cash machine networks and telephone banking.
Its marketing slogan for much of its history was "The Friend of the Family."
In 1983, Washington Mutual bought the brokerage firm Murphey Favre and demutualized. Today, it trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol WM. By 1989, its assets had doubled.
In March of 2006, Washington Mutual re-introduced its Free Checking product under the trademark WaMu Free Checking. It introduced benefits including: free checks for life, free ATM withdrawals (no Washington Mutual fees for non-proprietary ATMs), one free overdraft or insufficient funds refund per year, three cents back on debit card purchases, free custom email alerts, and free outgoing wire transfers (both international and domestic). Along with the new product, Washington Mutual changed its slogan from "More Human Interest" to "The WaMu Way" (WaMu is the official abbreviation for the company name).
In August 2006, Washington Mutual began using the official abbreviation of WaMu in all but the legal viewpoint.
[edit] Occasio Branches
Occasio is Latin for "favorable opportunity" or "special occasion" (which is also the root of the English word, occasion). It has an open, welcoming space with the look and feel of a contemporary retail store. Occasio branches are unique to Washington Mutual, as their design has taken a completely different direction from normal banks. Instead of teller windows and the traditional counter (which are normally roped off making customers form a line), tellers process customer transactions at individual stations. Washington Mutual is also unique in that it does not have tellers hand back any monies to customers, but instead gives customers a receipt with a PIN code. Customers walk over to an ATM like dispensing machine where they enter the one-time generated PIN code to retrieve their funds. At some Occasio branches, the money is dispensed directly from the teller station, instead of a central machine. This system eliminates the possibility of theft by tellers or other customers from clients. Some occasio branches dispense cash at each station, and each occasio branch entrance has a sign that says, "Tellers have no access to safe. Our cash is dispensed to you."
In October, 2006, Jaime Quiroz Sanchez filed suit against Washington Mutual over a security issue in the Occasio layout. Because of the open design, he claims, anyone can see the money being handled by the teller. When a Washington Mutual branch refused to allow him to deposit $20,805 because of an expired driver's license, he was robbed of the money on the way out, as the open layout allowed people both inside and looking into the bank from outside to become aware that he was carrying a large amount of money (LA Times: Client Faults WaMu Layout in Robbery).
[edit] Acquisitions
Since the acquisition of Murphey Favre, Washington Mutual has made numerous acquisitions with the aim of expanding the corporation. By acquiring corporations such as PNC Mortgage, Fleet Mortgage, and Homeside Lending; Washington Mutual is now the 3rd largest mortgage lender in the United States. With the acquisition of Providian Financial Corporation in October 2005, WaMu has also become the nation's 9th largest credit card company. The acquisitions were notable amongst the wave of other bank mergers because WaMu lost control of post-merger integrations. In the case of the Fleet Mortgage merger, customer proxy funds were lost by WaMu, in some cases for years. When consolidating Dime, WaMu mistakenly reported account beneficiaries as account owners, leading some low-income beneficiaries to lose state college aid.
A list of Washington Mutual acquisitions since demutualization follows:
- Commercial Capital Bancorp, California, 2006
- Providian Financial Corporation, California, 2005
- HomeSide Lending, Inc., Florida, a unit of National Australia Bank, 2002
- Dime Bancorp, Inc., New York, 2002
- Fleet Mortgage Corp., South Carolina, 2001
- Bank United Corp., Texas, 2001
- PNC Mortgage, Illinois, 2001
- Alta Residential Mortgage Trust, California, 2000
- Long Beach Financial Corp., California, 1999
- Industrial Bank, California, 1998
- H.F. Ahmanson & Co. (Home Savings of America), California, 1998
- Great Western Bank, 1997
- United Western Financial Group, Inc., Utah, 1997
- Keystone Holdings, Inc. (American Savings Bank), California, 1996
- Utah Federal Savings Bank, 1996
- Western Bank, Oregon, 1996
- Enterprise Bank, Washington, 1995
- Olympus Bank FSB, Utah, 1995
- Summit Savings Bank, Washington, 1994
- Far West Federal Savings Bank, Oregon, 1994
- Pacific First Bank, Ontario, 1993
- Pioneer Savings Bank, Washington, 1993
- Great Northwest Bank, Washington, 1992
- Sound Savings & Loan Association, Washington, 1991
- CrossLand Savings FSB, Utah, 1991
- Vancouver Federal Savings Bank, Washington, 1991
- Williamsburg Federal Savings Association, Utah, 1990
- Frontier Federal Savings Association, Washington, 1990
- Old Stone Bank of Washington, FSB, Rhode Island, 1990
[edit] External links
- Official corporate websites
- http://www.wamu.com/
- http://www.wamuhomeloans.com/
- http://www.wamu.com/wmfinancial/investmentshome.asp
- http://www.wamuins.com/
- http://www.wamucards.com/
- http://www.wmfinancial.com/
- http://www.wamoolaforschools.com/
- WaMu Financial Center locater
Commercial banks in the United States |
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Apple Bank • Arvest Bank • Bank of America • Bank of the West • BB&T • Capital One Bank • Chase • Citibank • Citizens Bank (Rhode Island)/ Charter One • Citizens Bank (Michigan) • Comerica • Commerce Bank • Commerce National • Compass Bank • Fifth Third Bank • First Tennessee Bank • Harris Bank • HSBC • Huntington • Key Bank • LaSalle Bank/LaSalle Bank Midwest • M&T Bank • Marshall & Ilsley • National City • North Fork Bank • PNC Bank • RBC Centura • Regions Bank • Sovereign Bank • SunTrust Bank • TCF Bank • TD Banknorth • Union Bank of California • U.S. Bank • Wachovia • Washington Mutual • Wells Fargo • Zions Bancorp |
Seattle-based Fortune 500 Corporations (by size):
Washington Mutual • Amazon.com • Nordstrom • Starbucks • Safeco
Seattle-based Fortune 1000 Corporations (by size):
Companies listed above, plus: Alaska Airlines • Expeditors International • Plum Creek Timber
Puget Sound-based Fortune 1000 Corporations (by size):
Companies listed above, plus: Costco Wholesale • Microsoft • Weyerhaeuser • Paccar • Puget Energy
Major Seattle- and Puget Sound-based non-public or externally owned corporations:
Nintendo of America • R.E.I. • T-Mobile USA • WestFarm Foods