First Niagara Bank

First Niagara Bank, N.A. (First Niagara Financial Group)
Type Public
Industry Banking and Finance
Founded United States (1870)
Headquarters Buffalo, New York
Area served Mid-Atlantic New England
Key people

John R. Koelmel

Michael W. Harrington

Robert G. Weber
Products Financial Services
Employees ~1800
Parent First Niagara Financial Group, Inc.
Website http://www.fnfg.com/

First Niagara Bank (NASDAQFNFG) is a Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation-insured regional banking corporation headquartered in the historic Larkin Terminal Warehouse in Buffalo, New York.

Contents

History

It was founded in 1870 as Farmers and Mechanics' Savings Bank and was then re-branded as Lockport Savings Bank in 1967. The bank was based in its former home county, Niagara until the 1990s when it spread to nearby Buffalo, New York and its surrounding Erie County. Part of this growth could be attributed to the collapse of the Buffalo-centric banks Goldome and Empire of America.[1] Most of this growth was from the recruitment of new customers, as opposed to the purchase of other firms' assets. Although, in 1998 the bank did purchase the regional insurance brokerage firm Warren-Hoffman & Associates Inc. as a means of entering the insurance business.[2]

In September, 2007 it was announced that First Niagara was to purchase Great Lakes Bancorp, parent company of Greater Buffalo Savings Bank. The price to purchase the 16 branch bank was $153 million. With the nearly $900 million of assets of the Great Lakes Bancorp, First Niagara became the fourth largest bank in the Buffalo-Niagara region [1] [2]. In April 2009 First Niagara acquired 57 of the 61 of National City branches in Erie and Pittsburgh, PA. They were rebranded on Labor Day weekend in 2009.

In April 2010, First Niagara Financial Group acquired Pennsylvania-based Harleysville National. As a result of the acquisition, First Niagara Financial through its wholly owned subsidiary, First Niagara Bank, have approximately $19.7bn in assets, 254 branches and approximately $13.7bn in deposits.[3]

In August 2010, First Niagara announced its acquisition of NewAlliance Bank of Connecticut.[4] The stock holders approved the merger in December 2010 and The transaction closed on April 15, 2011. This provides First Niagara with over 340 Branches and 500 ATMs.

On July 31, 2011, First Niagara announced that they had bought all of HSBC's upstate New York branches for $1 billion.[5]. On August 25, 2011, First Niagara bought the naming rights for HSBC Arena in Buffalo, renaming it the First Niagara Center.[6] First Niagara bought the naming rights for a concert pavillon in Pittsburgh, PA during Feb. 2010 it is callled First Niagara Pavilon.

Expansion into Pennsylvania

National City

On April 7, 2009, First Niagara agreed to buy 57 National City branches in Western Pennsylvania from PNC Financial Services[7] and officially took over those branches on September 8 after the signs were changed over from National City during Labor Day Weekend.[8]

PNC, which had acquired National City in late 2008 with money from the $700 billion bailout plan after National City suffered losses in the subprime mortgage crisis, was required by the United States Department of Justice to sell 50 National City branches in the Pittsburgh area and 11 more branches in and around Erie to competitors,[9] since the two banks had significant overlap in Western Pennsylvania--PNC and National City were number 1 and 2 in market share, respectively[10]--and had potential antitrust issues in the area. (Even after the sale was completed, PNC retained a market-leading 46% share in the Pittsburgh market, with Citizens Financial Group in a distant second at 13%.)[7] A dark horse candidate, the sale to First Niagara was considered a surprise, considering that PNC was also in negotiations with much larger banks such as JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Fifth Third Bank, KeyBank, Huntington Bancshares, and FNB Corporation for the branches.[11] Fifth Third, Huntington, & FNB had existing branches in the market, while JPMorgan Chase's retail banking division & Key were in adjacent territories, and Wells Fargo was in the process of expanding its Eastern U.S. operations by way of its acquisition of Wachovia. Before the deal was announced, First Niagara was thought to be interested only in the Erie-area National City branches.[11]

First Niagara, which had been eyeing at expanding into Pittsburgh for some time,[7] was immediately ranked third in market share at 8%, ahead of the longer-established Dollar Bank and First Commonwealth Bank at six and five percent, respectively.[7] First Niagara retained all National City employees at the acquired branches in the Pittsburgh and Erie areas, and established a regional office in Downtown Pittsburgh's 11 Stanwix Street tower.[7]

First Niagara was outbid for the four branches in Crawford County, Pennsylvania that PNC had to divest.[12] Of those four, one branch in Titusville was sold to Emclaire Financial Group[13] while the other three (one in Conneaut Lake, the other two in Meadville, including the branch inside Wal-Mart) were sold to Marquette Savings Bank.[14]

On August 4, 2009, First Niagara agreed to take over the automatic teller machines (ATMs) at 95 Sheetz locations throughout Western Pennsylvania, replacing M&T Bank, which doesn't have any bank branches in the region.[15] The ATMs, which officially become First Niagara ATMs at the same time First Niagara took over the former National City branches, will be surcharge-free from First Niagara itself, though people using the ATMs may still be charged a foreign ATM fee from their primary financial institution if they charge such fees.

First Niagara has stated that it does have some "holes" in the Pittsburgh metropolitan area, with PNC still retaining 110 National City branches in the area and is completely absent from Beaver & Lawrence County. (Aside from the aforementioned Sheetz ATM deal, First Niagara didn't buy any National City branches in those areas since PNC was able to keep the National City branches as there were no existing PNC branches in the two counties.) First Niagara is looking at acquiring some former National City branches PNC will close due to close proximity to an existing PNC branch, since First Niagara does have the right of first refusal to buy any shuttered National City branches. First Niagara may also buy out a smaller local bank.[16]

Harleysville National

On July 27, 2009, First Niagara agreed to acquire the Philadelphia-area-based Harleysville National Corporation financial services company in an all-stock transaction valued at approximately $237 million or $5.50 per share. The deal will provide First Niagara with $5.6 billion in assets including, $3.6 billion in loans and $4.1 billion in deposits in 83 bank branches in nine Eastern Pennsylvania counties. The parent company of Harleysville National Bank also operates East Penn Bank, Millennium Wealth Management and Cornerstone Companies.

First Niagara intends to maintain all Harleysville National and East Penn branches, and the Pennsylvania company's growing commercial banking and wealth-management business. Harleysville has over 1,100 employees.

HSBC deal expands presence in US northeast

On July 31, 2011, First Niagara announced it would purchase from UK-based HSBC Holdings plc nearly half of its HSBC Bank USA branch network, including 195 branches for a price of US$1 billion. Of these, 183 branches are in upstate New York, six in New York City suburbs and six in Connecticut; most of these branches had been part of Buffalo-based Marine Midland Bank before being re-branded to HSBC Bank USA in the late 1990s. The deal included US$15 billion in deposits, US$2.8 billion in loans and US$4.3 billion in assets under management. The deal also nearly doubled First Niagara's branch network to about 450 branches, US$38 billion in assets and US$30 billion in deposits. Pending regulatory approval, the deal will close in early 2012. Investors had complained that HSBC had spread itself too thinly, with roughly 95 million customers and 300,000 employees in 87 markets.

References

  1. ^ Hartley, Tom (April 21, 1997). "Lockport Savings builds empire". http://buffalo.bizjournals.com/buffalo/stories/1997/04/21/story2.html. 
  2. ^ "Lockport Savings Bank Enters the Insurance Market; Savings Bank Agrees to Acquire Warren-Hoffman & Associates". Business Wire. 1998. http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_1998_Sept_2/ai_50280382. 
  3. ^ First Niagara acquired Harleysville National
  4. ^ http://www.marketwatch.com/story/first-niagara-to-buy-newalliance-in-15-bln-deal-2010-08-19?reflink=MW_news_stmp
  5. ^ Mider, Zachary R.. "HSBC to Sell Some U.S. Branches for $1B". Bloomberg Businessweek. http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-07-31/hsbc-to-sell-some-u-s-branches-to-first-niagara-for-1-billion.html. Retrieved 31 July 2011. 
  6. ^ "Sabres Announce HSBC Arena Name Change to First Niagara Center". WBEN. http://www.wben.com/HSBC-Arena-Becomes-First-Niagara-Center/10730994. Retrieved 25 August 2011. 
  7. ^ a b c d e http://kdka.com/business/PNC.First.Niagara.2.978660.html
  8. ^ http://kdka.com/consumer/first.niagara.switchover.2.1170342.html
  9. ^ http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/documents/branches-divested.pdf
  10. ^ Fitzpatrick, Dan (September 9, 2007). "Smaller banks aiming to raise profiles locally". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07252/815602-28.stm. 
  11. ^ a b Sabatini, Patricia (March 21, 2009). "FNB won't buy National City units". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09080/957219-28.stm. 
  12. ^ Sabatini, Patricia (April 8, 2009). "PNC sells National City branches". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09098/961257-28.stm. 
  13. ^ http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601208&sid=afGesS_sXPd4
  14. ^ http://www.marquettesavings.com/MarquetteAcquisitionRelease040709.pdf
  15. ^ Sabatini, Patricia (August 4, 2009). "First Niagara gets Sheetz ATMs". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09216/988328-28.stm. 
  16. ^ Sabatini, Patricia (September 5, 2009). "First Niagara arrives in Western Pa". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09248/995688-28.stm. 

External links

See also