Donald Marron

This article is about the financier. For Donald Marron (economist), see Donald B. Marron Jr..
Donald B. Marron
Born July 21, 1934
New York City
Nationality United States
Alma mater Bronx High School of Science (1950)
The City University of New York (1954)
Occupation Finance, Private equity
Known for Paine Webber (Former Chairman & CEO),
Lightyear Capital (Founder),
Data Resources (Co-Founder)
Net worth Increase 1.0 billion (approx.)[1]

Donald B. Marron (born July 21, 1934) is an American financier, private equity investor and entrepreneur, notable as the chairman and chief executive officer of brokerage firm Paine Webber from 1980 through the sale of the company in 2000, as well as the founder of private equity firm Lightyear Capital and of Data Resources Inc.

Career

In 1959, Marron founded D.B. Marron & Company. In 1965, Marron sold his company to Mitchell Hutchins and in 1967 was named president of the company. In 1977, Mitchell Hutchins was acquired by Paine Webber.

Aside from his primary role at Mitchell Hutchins, in 1969 Marron founded Data Resources Inc. together with Harvard University notable economist Otto Eckstein. DRI became the largest non-governmental source of economic data in the world and was sold to McGraw-Hill in 1979.

In 1980, Marron was named Paine Webber’s Chief Executive Officer, and in 1981, he was named chairman of the board of Paine Webber, roles he would hold for the next two decades. In 2000, as CEO, Marron engineered the sale of Paine Webber to UBS AG.

Lightyear Capital

Main article: Lightyear Capital

After two years at the bank, in 2002, Marron left UBS to found Lightyear Capital, a private equity firm focused on investments in financial services companies. The firm has raised approximately $2 billion since inception across its two funds. In May 2002, Lightyear closed on its first fund, The Lightyear Fund, with $750 million of investor commitments, approximately $500 million of which came from UBS AG. In 2006, the firm completed fundraising for its second private equity fund, with $850 million of commitments from over 40 investors.[2][3]

Art collector and philanthropy

Under Marron's five-year term as president of the Museum of Modern Art's board of trustees in the late 1980s, the endowment increased significantly, from $26 million in 1985 to $59 million in 1990. The museum's annual fund, supported by donors every year, also increased from $2.5 million to $3.8 million, contributing to an operating budget of $46 million a year.[4]

While at Paine Webber, Marron assembled a corporate collection of postwar art for the firm over 30 years. In 2002, UBS PaineWebber promised MoMA 37 works, including paintings, drawings and sculpture by Andy Warhol (including Cagney, 1962), Roy Lichtenstein, Lucian Freud, and Jasper Johns. The donation was to be made over 15 years to take advantage of tax benefits for UBS PaineWebber and to ensure that the corporation could still hang the art for a while.[5][6]

Board memberships and other affiliations

Education

References

External links