Thomas Rowe Price Jr.

Thomas Rowe Price Jr. (March 16, 1898 – October 20, 1983) was the founder of T. Rowe Price, an American publicly owned investment firm, established in 1937 and headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland. The company offers mutual funds, subadvisory services, and separate account management for individuals, institutions, retirement plans, and financial intermediaries.[1]

Thomas Rowe Price Jr.
Born(1898-03-16)March 16, 1898
DiedOctober 20, 1983(1983-10-20) (aged 85)
Baltimore, Maryland
Resting placeDruid Ridge Cemetery, Baltimore, Maryland
Occupationinvestment banker, businessman, T. Rowe Price
Spouse(s)Eleanor Baily Gherky Price
(m. 1927-1981; her death)
Children
  • Richard Baily Price
  • Thomas Rowe Price III
Relativesfirst cousin, S. Duncan Black, founder of Black and Decker

Early life

Price was born on March 16, 1898 to Thomas Rowe Price Sr. and Ella Stewart Black, in Glyndon, Maryland, near Baltimore. His father was a graduate of the University of Maryland School of Medicine, as was his grandfather Benjamin F. Price. Thomas Sr. served as a surgeon for the Western Maryland Railroad for many decades as well as a local "country doctor" for Glyndon, and was the attending physician at the birth of his own children. Price's mother Ella was the daughter of Samuel Black, a prominent builder and contractor in Baltimore, and the aunt of S. Duncan Black, one of the two founders of the electric tool company Black and Decker based in Towson, Maryland.[2][3]

Price attended the Glyndon School in Glyndon, Maryland, as well as Franklin High School in what is now Reisterstown, Maryland, and, briefly, the Friends School of Baltimore. In 1919, he received a bachelor's degree in chemistry from Swarthmore College, where he was a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity. In 1927, Price married Eleanor Baily Gherky, originally of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, who was then attending Goucher College in Baltimore. Eleanor's father, William D. Gherky, was an inventor and engineer who had been a "former research associate of Thomas Alva Edison" and had helped to convert major American cities such as New York, Boston, Chicago, Columbus, Philadelphia, and Baltimore from gas and steam power to electricity.[4] Together, they had two sons.

With his degree in chemistry, Price initially sought a career with the chemical company DuPont. However, he soon realized that he was more interested in money management than scientific research, and left DuPont to join a series of small investment firms and brokerages.

Career

After a decade spent at three investment firms and brokerages, Price formed a particular vision for the operation of an investment firm that specifically combined a focus on growth investing with a no-load (commission) fee system for clients. By the mid-1930s, he had risen to the head of investment for the firm MacKubin, Legg and Co. (a precursor to present-day investment firm Legg Mason), but found himself continually clashing with his colleagues who focused on commission-based value investing. With three other colleagues from MacKubin in tow, Rowe set out to form his own firm, which he established in 1937 and named T. Rowe Price and Associates. T. Rowe Price, as it is named today, is a Baltimore-headquartered multinational investment and mutual fund firm that manages billions of dollars per annum. Price personally managed the firm until he sold his shares in the company in 1966 and retired in 1971.

Price is best known for defining and promoting the concept of growth stocks, for which he has been called "the father of growth investing". He believed that investors could earn superior returns by investing in well-managed companies in fertile fields whose earnings and dividends could be expected to grow faster than inflation and the overall economy. The core of Price's approach, proprietary research to guide investment selection and diversification to reduce risk, has remained part of the firm's principles. Instead of charging a commission, as others in the business did at the time, Price charged a fee based on the assets under management, which binds the success of the investment firm to the success of the portfolio and stocks invested in.

Price died in 1983, after which the Price family no longer took part in the running of the company. The firm, now named T. Rowe Price Associates, went public in 1986 and was added to the S&P 500 Index in 1999.

gollark: You could also just bruteforce the hash of the name in probably at most an hour with a good GPU assuming my wild assumptions.
gollark: Maybe an order of magnitude or so slower as it is slower to check.
gollark: Krist mining can do a few GH/s on a good GPU, and that's SHA256, so you could bruteforce the entire practical namespace in 100 seconds.
gollark: Especially if you can wrangle a good FPGA into running hashes really fast.
gollark: This sounds like a lot, but computers *are* fairly fast.

References

  1. The Greatest Investors: Thomas Rowe Price Jr.. investopedia.com. Retrieved March 13, 2009.
  2. Vartanig G. Vartan. "T. Rowe Price, 85, Growth Stock Strategist, Dead". The New York Times, October 22, 1983. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  3. Thomas Rowe Price Jr. Gravestone and Interment – Retrieved March 7, 2016
  4. William Gherky obituary, The New York Times , January 18, 1937.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.