Banca Cantoni: Salvatore Cantoni & Co. (1865-1896) Shortly after his graduation, Lionello Perera emigrated to New York. He arrived at
Ellis Island on board of the
Kaiser Wilhelm II on April 19, 1894. In New York, his maternal uncle, the banker Salvatore Cantoni, had invited him to start working at Salvatore Cantoni & Co. His uncle’s banking business was the first Italian bank in North America and the only one to have access to the
Wall Street stock exchange. Lionello Perera became essential to his uncle's business thanks to his commercial and linguistic expertise. He also quickly gained the trust of the New York Italian immigrant community.
Banca Perera: Lionello Perera & Co. (1896-1926) After his uncle's death, Lionello Perera decided to take over his banking business. In 1896, with the help of other Jewish American investors, he purchased the majority shares and renamed the business Lionello Perera & Co. He decided to carry on with the tradition of a commercial bank specialized in money exchange, later adding various financial products such as savings, loans, safe deposits, and long-term investments. During the following three decades the bank evolved into New York’s largest savings bank, largely due to the exponential growth of Italian American customers following the increase of immigration from the
Kingdom of Italy. Thanks to the professional abilities of its founder and to trust-building among the Italian American community, Lionello Perera & Co. overcame various financial crises that shaped the financial field in the USA, which at the time was characterized by a lack of regulation and had experienced several
bank runs. He invested and donated considerable amounts of money to support the Kingdom of Italy, both during and after
World War I.
Bank of America (1926-1932) A
bank run finally hit the Perera Bank during the 1920s with customers lining up at the counters. On February 21, 1924, many account holders came to withdraw all their savings fearing the bank’s insolvency. The panic was luckily overcome in a few days, thanks to Lionello Perera’s ability to manage the situation and accommodate the requests of all customers asking to withdraw their money, thus soon reassuring the Italian American community with regard to the bank’s solvency. This bank run in February 1924 and the increasing difficulties of the financial sector in the USA convinced Lionello Perera to start a process of acquisition and mergers that aimed at strengthening his business. He embarked on a business relationship with the Italian American banker
Amadeo Peter Giannini and his brother Attilio, who were expanding their branches from California to New York. On August 31, 1926, he transformed his company into the Commercial Exchange Bank of New York, which allowed Giannini to buy shares of his banking activity and enter Wall Street for the first time. In 1927, together they bought the second largest Italian American bank in New York, Sessa Bank of Brooklyn. Eventually, in April 1928 they announced the constitution of the
Bank of America National Association, the first nationwide bank of the United States, with Lionello Perera as vice president. The association broke up in 1932 and Lionello Perera's share was subject to a hostile takeover by the predecessor of today's
Citibank, while
Amadeo Giannini recovered his shares only years later and relaunched today's
Bank of America. == Patron and Philanthropist ==