Northern Trust was founded in 1889 by Byron Laflin Smith in a one-room office in the
Rookery Building in
The Loop, Chicago, with a focus on providing trust and banking services for the city's prosperous citizens. It opened on August 12, 1889, with 7 accounts and $137,981.25 in deposits. Smith provided 40% of the bank's original capitalization of $1million, and the original 27 shareholders included
Marshall Field,
Martin A. Ryerson, and
Philip D. Armour. The company's headquarters building at 50 South LaSalle Street in the Financial District of Chicago dates from 1905 and was designed by
Frost and Granger. The structure opened with five stories, but is designed to accommodate additional floors. However, when the bank needed additional space in 1965, it opted to construct a new 14-story building in the international style to the west and selected
Cesar Pelli as its architect. In 1914, Byron Laflin Smith died. His son, Solomon Albert Smith, took over the bank. The company's conservative policies served it well during the 1920s and the company's assets actually grew during the
Great Depression, while many other banks suffered from
bank failure. In 1986, the bank acquired First Lake Forest Corporation for $61million in cash. Edward Byron Smith retired as chief executive officer in 1979. He was succeeded by E. Norman "Bud" Staub. A few years later, Philip W. K. Sweet took over but he resigned in 1984. In 1984, Weston Christopherson, former CEO of
Jewel, took the helm. He is credited with guiding the bank through a difficult period when sour loans to Latin American countries were hurting profits. When oil prices dropped suddenly in the early 1980s, many South American nations realized they could not repay their enormous bank loans. The bank suffered uncharacteristically high losses. Aggressive management, loan reserves, and write-offs enabled the bank to restore its asset quality. During Christopherson's six years at Northern Trust, profits rose from $34million to $113million. At the time of his retirement in 1990, the company was the 11th most profitable of the 100 largest banks in the United States.
William A. Osborn was named president and chief operating officer in 1993 and became chairman and chief executive officer, in addition to president, in 1995. In 2005, Northern Trust and
Enron reached a $365million settlement with 20,000 employees of
Enron after the energy company's collapse (see
Enron scandal). Northern Trust had managed the
401k plan for Enron's employeees, who alleged mismanagement and breach of
fiduciary duty. The initial settlement was reduced a year later to $32.5million in an agreement approved by federal judge
Melinda Harmon, with Northern Trust neither admitting nor denying wrongdoing. Osborn stepped down as president in 2006 and as CEO on January 1, 2008. During his tenure, Waddell was able to guide the bank through the
2008 financial crisis. In 2009 Northern Trust was one of 3 banks able to gain large profits. Along with
M&T Bank, Northern Trust was one of two banks in the
S&P 500 Index not to lower their dividends during the
2008 financial crisis. In November 2008, the
United States Department of the Treasury invested $1.5billion in the company as part of the
Troubled Asset Relief Program and in June 2009, the company repurchased the investment from the Treasury. The company had been criticized for heavy spending on parties during a 2009 golf tournament that it sponsored, after receiving government funds. The company strives to give approximately 1.5% of its pre-tax profits to charities every year. In the 10 years preceding 2014, the company gave over $120million in support of non-profit organizations. In 2017, Northern Trust acquired UBS Asset Management's fund administration servicing units in Switzerland and Luxembourg. In 2018, Michael O'Grady became chief executive officer of the company. He also assumed the chairmanship on January 23, 2019. In January 2026, Northern Trust reported fourth-quarter net income of $466 million and an 11% increase in assets under custody/administration (AUC/A) to $18.7 trillion. ==References==