BMO Harris Bank

BMO Harris Bank, N.A. is a United States bank based in Chicago, Illinois. It is a member of the Federal Reserve System and operates branches in the states of Illinois, Indiana, Arizona, Missouri, Minnesota, Kansas, Florida, and Wisconsin. BMO Harris Bank has over 600 branches and 1,300 ATMs and employs 14,500 staff in the United States. BMO Harris Bank is 20th on the list of largest banks in the United States. [2]

BMO Harris Bank, N.A.
Formerly
N.W. Harris & Co.
(1882–1907)
M&I Marshall & Ilsley Bank
(1847–2012)
Harris Trust and Savings Bank (1907–1972)
Harris Bank, N.A.
(1972–2005)
(Harris Bank name then retired in 2005)
Subsidiary
IndustryBanking
Founded1882 (1882)
FounderNorman Wait Harris
Headquarters,
Key people
Daryl White (CEO - BMO Financial Group)
David R. Casper(US CEO)
Mark Furlong (former CEO)
William Downe
(CEO, BMO Financial Group)
ProductsFinancial services
OwnerHarris Bankcorp, Inc.
(1972-1984)
Bank of Montreal
(through BMO Financial Group)
(1984-present)
Number of employees
14,200 (2016)[1]
ParentBankmont Financial Corporation
(1984-2004)
Harris Financial Corporation
(2004-2011)
BMO Financial Corporation
(2011–present)
Websitewww.bmoharris.com

The bank is a subsidiary of the Canadian multinational investment bank and financial services company Bank of Montreal, commonly known as "BMO" (pronounced /ˈbm/), which owns BMO Harris Bank through the holding company BMO Financial Corporation (formerly Bankmont Financial Corporation, then Harris Financial Corporation).

History

BMO Harris Bank footprint
Harris Trust Building in Chicago
Norman Wait Harris (c. 1911), founder of N.W. Harris & Co., later Harris Trust & Savings Bank

In 1882, Norman Wait Harris established N.W. Harris & Co., a Chicago-based municipal bond broker and the forerunner of Harris Bank. Harris Trust and Savings Bank was established 1907. It merged with Chicago National Bank in 1960 and was restructured as Harris Bank, N.A. in 1972. Bank of Montreal (later known as BMO Financial Group) acquired Harris in 1984.[2]

The bank grew rapidly through a series of acquisitions beginning with the First National Bank of Barrington in 1985, State Bank of St. Charles and First National Bank of Batavia in 1988 and Libertyville Federal Savings Bank and Loan and Frankfort Bancshares in 1990. Harris Bankcorp and Suburban Bancorp combined under the Harris name in 1994 and two years later, the company acquired 54 Chicago area branches from Household Bank.[3] In 1999, the direct brokerage firm Burke, Christensen & Lewis merged with Harris Investors Direct to form Harris InvestorLine. The company's further acquisitions include Freeman Welwood in 2000;[4] Village Bank of Naples, and Century Bank (Arizona) and First National Bank of Joliet in 2001; Northwestern Trust and Investors Advisory Company (Seattle) in 2002. Also in 2002, InvestorLine combined with CSFBdirect to form Harrisdirect and Harris acquired online client accounts of Morgan Stanley Individual Investor Group and myCFO. The following year, it purchased Sullivan, Bruyette Speros & Blayney Incorporated, followed by Lakeland Community Bank in Round Lake, Trust and Savings Bank in 2005.[5]

The bank encourages pronouncing it as "B-MO" (/ˈbiːmoʊ/).

BMO continued its acquisitions in 2007 with First National Bank & Trust, (Kokomo, Indiana)[6] followed by Ozaukee Bank, (Cedarburg, Wisconsin) and Merchant and Manufacturers Bankcorp Inc., (New Berlin, Wisconsin) in 2008[7] and Amcore Bank N.A. (Rockford, Illinois) on April 23, 2010.[8]

On December 17, 2010, Bank of Montreal agreed to purchase Milwaukee-based Marshall & Ilsley Corporation in an all-stock transaction valued at about US$4.1 billion. Marshall & Ilsley and Harris Bankcorp were both rebranded as BMO Harris. The company restructured as BMO Bankcorp July 5, 2011.

In December 2015, the company completed its acquisition of General Electric Capital Corp.'s transportation finance business.[9]

Operations

BMO Harris Bank N.A. is the 16th largest (by total assets) commercial bank in the US (not including total assets from parent company).[10]

BMO Harris Bank is one of the largest banks in the Midwest with over 600 branches and approximately 1,300 ATMs in Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri, Minnesota, Arizona and Florida.[2] It is the second-largest Chicago-area bank based on market share, behind JPMorgan Chase, and the second largest US subsidiary of a Canadian bank after TD Bank, N.A. (owned by the Toronto-Dominion Bank).[11] BMO Harris Bank, N.A. is the issuer of the Diners Club cards in United States.

Headquarters

BMO Harris is headquartered in a complex of three buildings in Chicago's Loop neighborhood. The original 21-story building was constructed in 1910 at 119 West Monroe Street. The entrance to the building is flanked by two bas-relief sculptures of lions, which inspired various iterations of the bank's logo until 2011, along with the bank's mascot character, Hubert the Lion. In 1960, a 23-story structure was added to the east with the address of 111 West Monroe. In 1974, a second 38-story tower was added to the west with the address of 115 South LaSalle Street. Both additions were designed by the firm of Skidmore, Owings and Merrill and are in the modern style. The bank uses the address of the 1960 building.[12] In December 2018, the bank announced it would move its headquarters to 14 floors of a 50-story office tower adjacent to Chicago Union Station. The bank expects the new BMO Tower to be ready in 2022.[13]

Additionally, notable BMO Harris buildings are located in Milwaukee (BMO Harris Financial Center), at 770 North Water Street, and Indianapolis (BMO Plaza). In 2017, the bank began construction of a 25-story BMO Tower at North Water and East Wells, adjacent to its current Milwaukee headquarters. The bank expects to occupy 123,000 square feet (11,400 m2) of the building beginning in December 2019. In August 2017, the BMO Harris sold the 20-story structure it currently occupies to real estate firm Irgens who plans to remodel and lease it.[14]

Community Partnerships

Partnerships led by BMO Harris include:[15]

gollark: I was intending to run this.
gollark: websockify exists, yes.
gollark: <@783460822525149196> You are isomorphic to https://github.com/novnc/noVNC.
gollark: ????
gollark: Potato*ASM* is a potatOS experimental thing I have somewhere which interprets anomalous machine code.

See also

  • Harris, Hall & Co., securities affiliate established in 1934, following passage of the Glass Steagall Act and acquired by Dean Witter & Co. in 1953
  • Harris, Forbes & Co., securities affiliate established in 1911 and acquired by Chase Manhattan Bank in 1930

References

  1. "BMO Harris Bank Facts". BMO Harris. April 30, 2017. Retrieved 2017-08-03.
  2. "About BMO Harris Bank". BMO Harris. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  3. "Harris Bank To Become A Household Name, To Buy 54 Of Its Branches". Chicago Tribune. chicagotribune.com. Bloomberg Business. 16 April 1996. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  4. "BofM buying Freeman Welwood for $140 million". CBC News. cbc.ca. 10 November 2000. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  5. "Harris Announces Intent to Purchase Villa ParkTrust and Savings Bank" (Press release). harrisbank.com. 7 July 2005. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  6. Dempsey, John (27 September 2006). "Harris Buys First National". Kokomo Tribune. kokomotribune.com. Archived from the original on 11 April 2013. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  7. "Harris closes on Merchants, Ozaukee bank acquisitions". Milwaukee Business Journal. bizjournal.com. 4 March 2008. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  8. Gores, Paul (23 April 2010). "Regulators shut down Amcore Bank". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  9. Bauter, Allison (December 1, 2015). "BMO Harris closes on acquisition of GE Capital business". Milwaukee Business Journal. Retrieved 2017-08-03.
  10. Kanjani, Aarti (21 March 2011). "Top 50 US banks and thrifts by assets". SNL Financial. Retrieved 2012-09-27.
  11. van Doorn, Philip (24 February 2012). "Illinois Banks: Strongest and Weakest". TheStreet.com. Retrieved 2012-09-27.
  12. "Harris Bank Complex". Hines Interests. Archived from the original on 23 November 2010. Retrieved January 3, 2011.
  13. Gores, Paul (December 10, 2018). "BMO Harris plans 50-story headquarters tower in downtown Chicago". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Retrieved May 1, 2019.
  14. Daykin, Tom (November 16, 2017). "BMO Tower development starts in downtown Milwaukee with parking structure demolition". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Retrieved May 1, 2019.
  15. "Supporting the Home Team". BMO Harris. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
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