Mitch Caplan

Mitchell H. Caplan is a former CEO of E-Trade Financial Corporation.

Background

Caplan grew up in Portsmouth, Virginia, and graduated from the Norfolk Academy in 1975. He subsequently received a BA in history from Brandeis University later receiving his JD and an MBA from Emory University.

Caplan became involved with Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, serving on its board, when one of his daughters (Ilana, 21) was diagnosed with diabetes. He has also served as a board member for the American Committee for the American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science (ACWIS) and the Aspen Music Festival and School, as well as on the Corporate Fund Board of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and as chairperson for Teach for America's Washington, DC advisory board.

Career

From 1984 to 1990 Caplan was an associate of the law firm Shearman & Sterling.[1] Caplan served as vice-chairman and president of Telebanc Financial Corporation, a federally chartered savings bank, from January 1994. Caplan became CEO of Telebanc in 1998. E-Trade Financial acquired Telebanc in early 2000. The bank became known as E-Trade Bank.

After the acquisition of Telebanc, Caplan served as chief financial products officer and managing director of E-Trade North America. He also became chairman of the board and CEO of E-Trade Bank. In 2002, Caplan was named president and COO of E-Trade Financial. In January 2003, after the departure of Christos Cotsakos, Caplan became CEO and director of E-Trade Financial.

During his term as CEO, Caplan was instrumental in the strategic acquisitions of Harrisdirect from Bank of Montreal and BrownCo from JPMorgan Chase.

During the credit crisis of 2007, Caplan was criticized for investing in risky and complex debt instruments. He stepped down as CEO of E-Trade on November 29, 2007. That same day, an agreement with Citadel LLC was announced resulting in a cash infusion of $2.5B.

From October 2008 to 2010 Caplan served as a senior advisor with Aquiline Capital Partners, a private equity firm based in New York, which invests in financial services enterprises and industries including property and casualty insurance, banking, securities, asset management, life insurance and financial technology.[2][3]

In 2010 Caplan became CEO of Jefferson National, a financial services firm that specializes in servicing registered investment advisers and their clients.[4] In his time at Jefferson National, Caplan has oversaw a management buyout from CNO Financial Group Inc. (then Conseco Inc.) in 2012.[5]

In 2018, Professional Capital Services, an independent retirement services platform, announced the appointment of Mitch Caplan to its Board of Directors.[6]

gollark: On the moon.
gollark: There's a 28-day-ish day/night cycle.
gollark: No, you just have... longer hours?
gollark: Actually, come to think of it, you would probably need a pretty powerful microcontroller to hold and handle the whole database of time zone insanity.
gollark: An RTG might be better for the whole "overengineering" thing than solar power, but they're pretty hard to get hold of, and it might be a bit heavy.

References

  1. "IT 100 Special Report 2006: E-Trade Financial", BusinessWeek. Accessed 3 December 2007
  2. "Mitchell Caplan Joins Aquiline Capital Partners as an Executive Advisor". Business Wire, October 21, 2008. 2008.
  3. "Mitchell Caplan Joins Aquiline Capital Partners as an Executive Advisor". The Wall Street Journal, Career Journal, Susanne Craig, October 21, 2008. 21 October 2008.
  4. "Greater Louisville Inc - The Metro Chamber of Commerce". greaterlouisville.com. Archived from the original on 2015-06-14. Retrieved 2015-06-13.
  5. "What ex-E*TRADE CEO Mitchell Caplan says emboldened him to lead an $83 million management coup of Jefferson National". riabiz.com.
  6. Services, Professional Capital. "PCS Announces the Appointment of Visionary Financial Services Leaders Tom Bradley and Mitch Caplan to its Board of Directors". www.prnewswire.com. Retrieved 2020-02-18.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.