The Charles Schwab Corporation

views updated May 18 2018

The Charles Schwab Corporation

101 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, California 94104
U.S.A.
Telephone: (415) 627-7000
Toll Free: (800) 435-4000
Fax: (415) 636-5970
Web site: http://www.schwab.com

Public Company
Incorporated:
1974 as Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.
Employees: 14,000
Total Assets: $47.35 billion (2005)
Stock Exchanges: NASDAQ
Ticker Symbol: SCHW
NAIC: 523110 Investment Banking and Securities Dealing; 523120 Securities Brokerage; 523920 Portfolio Management; and 523930 Investment Advice

The Charles Schwab Corporation ranks among the nation's largest financial services firms. Explosive growth within the stock market during the 1990s has helped operating subsidiary Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. become the largest discount stock broker in the United States and the largest provider of online brokerage services. A pioneer in the area of no-transaction fee mutual funds, the company has also earned standing as one of the three largest managers of mutual funds, alongside Fidelity and Vanguard. Despite its reputation as a major player in the industry, Charles Schwab has been forced in the 2000s to scale back, rethink its strategy, and rethink it again.

PIONEER DISCOUNT BROKER

Charles Schwab, the company's founder, had received an M.B.A. degree from Stanford University and had been working for a small California investment adviser when, in 1971, he founded his own company, First Commander Corp. He and two partners created a stock mutual fund that soon had $20 million in assets. They ran into trouble with securities regulators, however, when it was learned that they had failed to register the fund. This error temporarily forced Schwab out of business, but he soon reopened a small money-management firm, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., in San Francisco, which he incorporated in 1974.

On May 1, 1975, the U.S. Congress deregulated the stock brokerage industry by taking away the power of the New York Stock Exchange to determine the commission rates charged by its members. This opened the door to discount brokers, who took orders to buy and sell securities, but did not offer advice or do research the way larger, established brokers such as Merrill Lynch did. This presented an opportunity to win individual investors well enough versed in the stock market not to need the advice offered by established brokers. Schwab quickly took advantage of deregulation, opening a small San Francisco brokerage, financed primarily with borrowed money, and buying a seat on the New York Stock Exchange.

The new discount brokers, whose commissions might be only 30 percent of the rates before deregula-tion, were scorned by the old-line brokerages. During his first few years as a discount broker, Schwab had to contend with bad publicity generated by the older firms, some of whom threatened to break their leases if landlords allowed Schwab to rent offices in the same building.

Schwab fought back by buying newspaper ads featuring his photograph and asking customers to contact him personally, helping to build the firm's credibility. Possibly the most important early decision made by Schwab was to open branch offices around the United States. He reasoned that even investors not needing advice would prefer doing business through a local office instead of a toll-free telephone number. The move won customers and helped differentiate Schwab from the large number of discount firms appearing after deregulation.

Over the next few years Schwab did several things to pull away from the pack. The company offered innovative new services including the ability to place orders 24 hours a day. It bought advanced computer systems to deal quickly with huge volumes of orders and continued its heavy advertising, seeking to project an upscale image. Top executives were given expensive foreign cars, and an interior design staff was commissioned to help showcase certain new branches. Some industry analysts maintain that with these measures Schwab helped bring discount brokering into the mainstream of financial institutions.

PURCHASE BY BANKAMERICA: 1983

The firm's rapid expansion was costly, however. Partly as a result of high operating costs and partly because sales were dependent on the sentiments of small investors, profits were erratic. Schwab sometimes turned to employees and larger customers to raise money for further expansion. By 1980 Schwab was by far the largest discounter in the country. That year, to fund further growth, Schwab decided to take the company public. The offering was called off, however, when some problems caused by the attempted conversion to a new computer system proved an embarrassment to the company. Raising sufficient capital in private became more difficult, partly because of the erratic earnings. Finally, in 1983, Schwab arranged for San Francisco's BankAmerica Corporation to acquire the company for $55 million in BankAmerica stock. BankAmerica also agreed to supply Schwab with capital. The bank loaned Schwab $50 million over the next three years, but Schwab remained one of the most highly leveraged brokerages.

The sale to BankAmerica may have provided needed capital, but it also fettered the company with banking regulations. Schwab wanted to offer new, proprietary lines of investments including Charles Schwab mutual funds. However, federal law at the time forbid banks and their subsidiaries from underwriting such securities. Although Schwab initially sought to challenge the law, as its wording contained some ambiguities, BankAmerica did not want to irritate banking regulators. Tensions between Schwab and its parent were further exacerbated when BankAmerica's stock price began falling, making Schwab's stake in the corporation worth less.

Schwab introduced the Mutual Fund Marketplace in 1984 with an initial investment of $5 million. The Marketplace allowed customers to invest in 250 separate mutual funds and switch between them using Schwab as the bookkeeper. All of a customer's mutual fund accounts were put on a single monthly statement. The company's profile was further raised in 1984 when Schwab's book How to Be Your Own Stockbroker was published. In it Schwab presented himself as a populist fighting against Wall Street stockbrokers in the name of the average investor. He contended that there is an inherent conflict of interest when a firm owns stock in inventory, writes favorable research recommendations on those stocks, and has commissioned salespeople sell those stocks to the public. At the same time, Schwab's company was moving into elegant new headquarters in downtown San Francisco.

In 1985 Schwab had 90 branches and 1.2 million customers, generating $202 million in revenue. Though it was far larger than its leading discount competitors, it was small compared with the largest retail brokerages, which had over 300 branches. The firm was growing in other ways, however. It offered personal computer software, called the Equalizer, that allowed investors to place orders via computer as well as to call up stock information and obtain research reports.

COMPANY PERSPECTIVES

Our MissionTo be the most useful and ethical financial services firm in the world.

BUYBACK AND PUBLIC OFFERING IN 1987

In 1987 Charles Schwab and a group of investors bought the company back from BankAmerica for $280 million. Seven weeks later, he announced plans to take the company public. The buyback had resulted in a debt of $200 million, and the initial public offering (IPO) was partly designed to eliminate some of this debt. It was also intended to raise money for further expansion. Schwab wanted to increase the number of branches to 120, including offices in Europe. The September 1987 IPO created a new holding company, The Charles Schwab Corporation, with Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. as its principal operating subsidiary.

The discount brokerage business had grown intensely competitive. Discounters handled a significant amount of retail equity trades by 1987, but hundreds of firms had entered the field, including banks, savings and loans, and mutual fund companies. Since Schwab was clearly the player to beat in discounting, competitors' advertisements specifically offered rates lower than Schwab's. Nevertheless, at this time Schwab had 1.6 million customers, about five times as many as its nearest competitor, Quick & Reilly Group. In 1987 the firm had sales of $465 million and profits of $26 million, twice the industry's average profit margin. To achieve this success, Schwab was spending about $15 million a year on advertising.

Schwab was already doing well with its expanded product line. Mutual Fund Marketplace had attracted $1.07 billion in client assets by year-end 1986. The company was also offering Individual Retirement Accounts, certificates of deposit, money-market accounts, and Schwab One cash-management accounts. Despite these successes, Schwab was badly hurt by the stock market crash of October 1987. By mid-1988, trading volume had fallen to about 10,400 trades a day, a 40 percent drop from the months before the crash. Schwab cut costs to maintain profitability, reducing managerial salaries anywhere from 5 to 20 percent and laying off employees. Charles Schwab cut his own pay by 20 percent for six months and put branch expansion plans on hold. The firm also raised its trading commission by 10 percent, so that it needed only 8,000 trades a day to break even, down from 12,000 trades. Even with the cost-cutting, the firm's 1988 earnings plummeted 70 percent to $7.4 million on sales of $392 million.

RAPID EXPANSION

By 1989 Schwab was expanding again. The company bought Chicago-based Rose & Co. for $34 million from Chase Manhattan; as the fifth largest discount broker in the United States, Rose & Co. brought Schwab 200,000 new customers at a cost of about $70 each. With the purchase, Schwab controlled about 40 percent of the discount market, though discounters made only 8 percent of all retail commissions. Over the long run, Schwab realized its best strategy was to win customers from the full-service brokers. To help create more independent stock investors, it pioneered a service called TeleBroker that let customers place stock orders and get price quotes from any touchtone telephone 24 hours a day. It also released a new version of the Equalizer. The software had already sold 30,000 copies at $169 each since its introduction.

Individual investors returned to the stock market in 1989, and the firm's income surged to $553 million, with profits of $18.9 million. Income was further helped by an increase in client assets, from $16.8 billion in 1987 to $25 billion in early 1990. Commissions accounted for 70 percent of revenue, down from 85 percent in 1987.

Throughout the 1980s, Schwab updated its Mutual Fund Marketplace to allow customers to switch their investments from fund to fund by telephone. Customers paid a commission ranging from .6 percent to .08 percent, with a minimum fee of $29. Analysts were generally positive, pointing out that the amount of interest lost from having a check in the mail would pay for most of the service's commission fees. In 1991 Schwab entered a new and lucrative market with the acquisition of Mayer & Schweitzer, an over-the-counter stock market maker.

KEY DATES

1971:
Charles Schwab and partners form short-lived stock mutual fund.
1975:
End of fixed rate commissions opens door for discount brokers.
1980:
Public offering is sidetracked by technology problems.
1983:
Bank of America buys firm.
1987:
Management buyback, followed by public offering, creates new holding company.
1992:
Company finds instant success with Mutual Fund OneSource.
1997:
Company ranks as top online broker in the United States.
2000:
Merger with U.S. Trust is completed.
2002:
Company begins building affluent client base.
2004:
Company works to regain traditional customers.
2005:
Charles Schwab Corporation posts record numbers.

Meanwhile, Schwab was opening branch offices at a furious pace17 in 1992 aloneand doubling the amount of money it spent on advertising. Schwab's aggressive stance helped raise its share of the discount market to 46 percent as the company attracted more than 40,000 new accounts a month. In 1992 Schwab acquired its first corporate jet, spending $12 million on a model with enough fuel capacity to reach London, where it was opening its first European branch. These additional costs helped drag down third-quarter earnings in 1992 when stock trading temporarily tapered off. The dip was a reminder that the company was still highly dependent on commissions and caused its stock to drop 20 percent.

Schwab cut advertising by 20 percent and took other steps to slow cost increases. The company converted a greater share of new branch offices into bare-bones operations with only one broker. Schwab already paid its 2,500 brokers less than other discounters, an average of $31,000 a year, compared with $50,000 at Fidelity Brokerage Services and $36,000 at Quick & Reilly.

INTRODUCTION OF ONESOURCE LEADING TO EXPLOSIVE GROWTH

The firm also continued searching for ways to become less dependent on commissions. The introduction in July 1992 of the Mutual Fund OneSource, a program allowing investors to trade mutual funds (more than 200 in all) from eight outside fund companies, without paying any transaction fees, attracted more than $500 million in assets within two months and over $4 billion by July 1993; it was thus the most successful first-year pilot of any new service in Schwab's history. The fund companies paid Schwab a small percentage fee, typically 0.25 to 0.35 percent, of the fund assets held in Schwab accounts.

During 1992 Schwab customers opened 560,000 new accounts at its 175 branch offices, while assets in customer accounts grew 38 percent to $65.6 billion. Revenue soared to $909 million, with record profits of $81 million. As a result of these successes, Schwab opened 20 more branch offices in 1993, opened an office in London (its first in Europe), and introduced several proprietary mutual funds, including Schwab International Index Fund and Schwab Small-Cap Index Fund.

As the 1990s continued, the OneSource program became wildly successful. By 1997 investors could choose among more than 1,400 mutual funds and had poured $80 billion into the funds through the program. One-Source, aided by the long bull market, helped Schwab grow at an amazing rate in the 1990s. From 1992 through 1997, revenues increased at a 25 percent compounded annual rate, while customer assets increased 40 percent per year, from $65.6 billion to $353.7 billion. Also fueling this growth was the emergence of Internet trading as Schwab rapidly gained the number one position among online brokerage services. By May 1997 the firm claimed 700,000 of the 1.5 million active, online brokerage accounts in the United States. It also moved into the top five among all U.S. brokerages.

Schwab's explosive growth, which saw customer accounts increase from two million in 1992 to 4.8 million in 1997, was accompanied by several technological snafus, prompting some company clients to conclude that Schwab was growing too fast. For instance, in the summer of 1997 two computer-related outages temporarily left thousands of Schwab clients without access to their accounts. In addition, some clients were mistakenly sent the statements of other clients. Schwab officials contended that these were isolated incidents and not indicative of out-of-control growth.

The company also had to contend with the aging of the baby boom generation, the members of which were somewhat belatedly planning for retirement. Schwab set up a retirement plan services unit offering 401(k) and other retirement plans. Aging investors also tended to want more advice before deciding where to put their money. In response, Schwab bolstered its ability to deliver investment advice to clients, developing written investment kits; providing access to a wide range of research reports, earnings forecasts, and news stories on its web site; and offering the opportunity to meet in person with representatives at company branches. Another new and highly sought-after service added by Schwab in 1997 was access to initial public offerings at the offering price. The firm entered into alliances with Credit Suisse First Boston Corporation, J.P. Morgan & Co., and Hambrecht & Quist Group to gain access to IPOs led by these companies.

On January 1, 1998, David S. Pottruck became president and co-CEO of Charles Schwab Corporation, with Charles Schwab remaining chairman and sharing the co-CEO title. This unusual arrangement seemed to indicate that Pottruck, age 49 at the time, was in line to succeed the 60-year-old Schwab, though the company founder had made no retirement plans. Just a month or so earlier, Timothy F. McCarthy was named president and chief operating officer of Charles Schwab & Co., giving him day-to-day responsibility for the management of the brokerage unit, with Pottruck controlling overall administration, finance, technology, and corporate strategy.

It was this new management team that would have to contend with what would likely be an increasingly volatile stock market in the early 21st century. Also, the shift to more trading on the Internet, where fees were lower, was cutting into Schwab's bread-and-butter commissions. It was reported in September 1998 that the company, which already offered services in Hong Kong and the United Kingdom, was considering entering the Japanese market, among other international expansion possibilities.

A VOLATILE NEW MILLENNIUM

The new century started out with a bang. Schwab put down $3 billion for the 149-year-old U.S. Trust Corp. The wealth advisory company, looking toward the retirement of insiders, had been positioning itself for change. Schwab, meanwhile, wanted to expand its services to investors with very high net worth. When the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act which allowed financial institutions crossover businesses passed in 1999, the way was eased for a merger between the pair.

A bust followed the bang, however. Schwab soon was reeling from a dramatic drop-off in online trading precipitated by the tech stock collapse and deepened by the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks and the Enron bankruptcy in December.

To avoid layoffs, Schwab eliminated bonuses, cut executive pay, promoted unpaid sabbaticals and days off, and encouraged part-time or job-share positions, Fortune recounted. Yet those and other efforts failed to stem the tide of pink slips to come. During 2001, daily average trades dropped by roughly a third. Yearly revenue fell 25 percent to $4.35 billion and net income was off by 72 percent to $199 million.

Seeking to regain some ground, in May 2002, the firm established Schwab Private Client to serve individuals with more than $500,000 to invest. Concurrently, they began promoting a new in-house computer-based stock grading system. "It's a systematic approach with nothing but objectivity, not influenced by corporate relationships, investment banking, or any of the above," Pottruck told Business Week. Meanwhile, households with less than $50,000 to invest were being asked to pay more for Schwab services.

While Schwab had a strong track record bringing new ventures into the financial market, some of its endeavors had of late been less successful. In 1999, Schwab led a consortium to establish Epoch Partners Inc. to underwrite tech IPOs, but it stalled with the tech stock meltdown and Schwab sold its stake in the venture in 2001 to Goldman Sachs. Two other endeavors, wireless-trading service PocketBroker and online-service CyberTrader, had yet to find their stride.

The merger with U.S. Trust (UST) had not yet lived up to expectations, due, in part, to the market downturn. Private banking assets had generally declined, with UST average assets falling more precipitously than its competitors, according to Institutional Investor. Another fly in UST's ointment was a $10 million fine for violation of money laundering rules, a judgment handed down after the merger with Schwab. Moreover, a melding of clients between Schwab and UST had yet to manifest itself, as Schwab investment advisers balked at the idea. Late in 2002, Schwab instituted a change of leadership and direction at UST.

Schwab relinquished his position as co-CEO in 2003, leaving Pottruck in charge. Schwab, who controlled 25 percent of the company and continued as chairman, attributed the decision to step down to a current wave of concern regarding corporate governance.

Changes were taking place abroad as well. Charles Schwab Europe, the firm's pound-denominated brokerage in the United Kingdom, was sold to Barclays PLC, American Banker reported. The dollar-denominated business continued to offer trades on U.S. exchanges and in U.S. investment products. The company's Canadian brokerage operation had been sold in 2002 and joint ventures in Japan and Australia exited in the final quarter of 2001. The rise, then fall, of the markets prompted Schwab to enter, then exit, online international markets.

In a move to bring in new revenue, the Charles Schwab Bank opened in 2003. The bank planned to focus on mortgages, tapping into the red-hot market. Long-term interest rates were at their lowest levels in more than four decades. Operating primarily online, by phone, and mail, the bank also would offer checking, savings, and certificates of deposit accounts, according to Long Island Business News.

During the later half of 2003, Schwab joined the growing list of financial companies targeted for investigation by Eliot Spitzer, New York's attorney general, and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Schwab faced allegations regarding market timing by a fund family operated by UST and illegal late trading in the Schwab Mutual Fund Marketplace. The tarnishing of its trustworthiness, a trait crucial to the brand, hit Schwab stock harder than other financial operations under investigation. Brokerage stock overall had been climbing as the market recovered.

For much of its history, Schwab had been aided by bull market conditions that drew a broader range of investors into the arena. When the bear market took hold, both revenue and stock price suffered. Revenue of $5.8 billion in 2000 fell to $4.1 billion in 2002. Stock as high as $50.16 per share in April 1999, traded in the $11 per share range in 2003. A quarter of its employees had been axed. Survivors of the cuts lost bonuses, which made up a good deal of compensation, and their 401(k) matches.

In July 2004, the board asked Pottruck to resign. Schwab returned as CEO. The firm's new mission was to win back retail customers and reestablish its discount brokerage status. Some industry watchers expected Schwab to divest noncore, unprofitable businesses such as Schwab Capital Markets, according to American Banker. Sale of the upscale U.S. Trust Corp. also was the subject of speculation. Efforts to add multimillionaire clients and sell advisory services to less well-heeled investors produced lackluster results. In addition, while Schwab was moving into new areas, E*Trade Financial Corp. and Ameritrade, offering cheaper trades, eroded Schwab's core market share.

Schwab did sell Schwab Capital Markets in 2004, to USB AG. The firm also settled the SEC's mutual fund late trade investigation by agreeing to pay a $350,000 fine.

In an effort to retain clients and entice new ones Schwab had been cutting fees: seven price cuts in the past 16 months, according to a September 2004 American Banker article. The latest cuts included elimination of the annual service fee on accounts of less than $25,000 and the order-handling fee on equity trades.

Cuts in fees, an aggressive nationwide ad campaign, and severance costs at UST ate into 4th quarter earnings in 2005. Another sour note was hit when the New York Stock Exchange fined Schwab $1 million in regard to violations involving disbursement of customer assets. Schwab began trading concurrently on the NYSE and NASDAQ in 2004 and moved solely to the NASDAQ in 2005. On the flip side, trading activity improved at Schwab and UST made gains in new assets. Since May, UST had been headed up by the former CEO of Citi-group's global private bank.

Schwab succeeded in posting record income for the year, at $725 million up from $286 million in 2004. Total client assets reached a new peak, $1.2 trillion. Both net income and earnings per share surpassed previous records set in 2000.

Former Citigroup Global Consumer Group Chair and CEO Marjorie Magner joined the Schwab board of directors in 2006. The addition of Magner, who led one of Citigroup's most profitable business divisions, fueled speculation as to her future role with the company, perhaps that of a successor to the founder.

                                           Scott M. Lewis

                 Lewis Updated, David E. Salamie; Kathleen Peippo

PRINCIPAL SUBSIDIARIES

Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.; U.S. Trust Corporation; Charles Schwab Bank, N.A.; CyberTrader, Inc.

PRINCIPAL COMPETITORS

E*Trade Financial Corporation; FMR Corp.; Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.; Scottrade, Inc.; TD Ameritrade Holding Corporation.

FURTHER READING

Bianco, Anthony, "Schwab vs. Les Quick," Business Week, May 12, 1986.

Blake, Rich, "Breach of Trust: Recasting Itself As a Money Manager, Charles Schwab Is Shaking Up U.S. Trust," Institutional Investor, December 2002, pp. 29+.

Cole, Jim, "'Relentless' Fee Cutting, Bigger Profits at Schwab," American Banker, September 16, 2005, p. 20.

, "Schwab Cites Ad, Other Costs in New Guidance," American Banker, November 16, 2005, p. 23.

Ferguson, Tim W., "Do It Yourself: Charles Schwab Has Ridden the Bull Market to a Splendid Present, but Its Future Is in Boomer Retirements," Forbes, April 22, 1996, p. 70.

Heins, John, "After Cost Cuts, What?" Forbes, May 1, 1989.

, "How Now, Chuck Schwab?" Forbes, June 15, 1987.

Kador, John, "Schwab Makes His Move: The Inside Story on How Charles Schwab and His Board Finally Agreed It Was Time for the Fatigued Founder to Step Aside," Chief Executive (U.S.), March 2003, p. 56.

Laderman, Jeffrey M., "Remaking Schwab," Business Week, May 25, 1998, pp. 122-24, 127-29.

Lee, Louise, and Emily Thornton, "Schwab vs. Wall Street," Business Week, June 3, 2002, p. 64.

Lee, Louise, Emily Thornton, and Justin Hibbard, "Restore the Core," Business Week, August 2, 2004, p.72.

McGeehan, Patrick, "Charles Schwab's Pottruck Will Share Title of CEO with Company's Founder," Wall Street Journal, December 2, 1997, p. B5.

, "Schwab's Offer of Rivals' Research Meets a Quick End," Wall Street Journal, January 19, 1998, pp. C1, C19.

McGough, Robert, "Schwab's Swelling Girth Holds Sway in the Fund Field," Wall Street Journal, November 9, 1993, pp. C1, C21.

Mitchell, Russell, "The Schwab Revolution," Business Week, December 19, 1994, pp. 88-91, 94-95, 98.

Morris, Betsy, "When Bad Things Happen to Good Companies: Schwab Was the Brokerage Built on Integrity and Fair Play," Fortune, December 8, 2003, p. 78.

Oliver, Suzanne L., "One-Stop Shopping," Forbes, November 11, 1991.

Pare, Terence P., "How Schwab Wins Investors," Fortune, June 1, 1992, p. 52.

Raghavan, Anita, "Schwab's Series of Misfires Puts Firm on the Defensive," Wall Street Journal, February 24, 1998, pp. C1, C27.

Raghavan, Anita, and Patrick McGeehan, "Schwab Again Plans to Offer Stock Research," Wall Street Journal, July 8, 1998, pp. C1, C15.

Ring, Niamh, "'Brain Drain' or a Facelift at Schwab," American Banker, October 1, 2004, p. 1.

, "'Everything on the Table' with Schwab Back As CEO," American Banker, July 21, 2004, p. 1.

, "Probe Knocking Schwab's Stock for a Loop," American Banker, November 18, 2003, p. 8.

, "Schwab Blames War Jitters for Latest Cuts," American Banker, March 14, 2003, p. 8.

, "Schwab Separates Chairman, CEO," American Banker, February 3, 2003, p. 20.

, "Schwab Settles SEC Probe," American Banker, September 15, 2004, p. 18.

Schifrin, Matthew, "Cyber-Schwab: As Retail Brokerage Moves On-line, Charles Schwab Has Grabbed Nearly Half the Market," Forbes, May 5, 1997, p. 42.

"Schwab Expands into Banking Biz," Long Island Business News, May 2, 2003, pp. 9B+.

Shao, Maria, "Suddenly the Envy of the Street Is Schwab?" Business Week, March 19, 1990.

Siconolfi, Michael, "Schwab's Profit Stumbles amid Rise in Expenses Coupled with Less Trading," Wall Street Journal, September 29, 1992.

Sommar, Jessica, "Magner Joining Schwab Sparks Succession Talk," Wall Street Letter, February 6, 2006, pp. 1+.

The Charles Schwab Corporation

views updated Jun 11 2018

The Charles Schwab Corporation

101 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, California 94104
U.S.A.
(415) 627-7000
Fax: (415) 627-8538
Web site: http://www.schwab.com

Public Company
Incorporated:
1974 as Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.
Employees: 12,700
Operating Revenues: $2.30 billion (1997)
Stock Exchanges: New York Boston Cincinnati Midwest Pacific Philadelphia
Ticker Symbol: SCH
SICs: 6211 Security Brokers & Dealers; 6282 Investment Advice; 6719 Holding Companies, Not Elsewhere Classified

The Charles Schwab Corporation, through its operating subsidiary Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., is the largest discount stock broker in the United States, and the largest provider of online brokerage services. A pioneer in the area of no-transaction fee mutual funds, the company is one of the three largest managers of mutual funds, alongside Fidelity and Vanguard. Expanding at a dizzying pace, Charles Schwab is one of the nations fastest-growing financial services firms.

Pioneer Discount Broker

Charles Schwab, the companys founder, had received an M.B.A. degree from Stanford University and had been working for a small California investment advisor when, in 1971, he founded his own company, First Commander Corp. He and two partners created a stock mutual fund that soon had $20 million in assets. They ran into trouble with securities regulators, however, when it was learned that they had failed to register the fund. This error temporarily forced Schwab out of business, but he soon reopened a small money-management firm, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., in San Francisco, which he incorporated in 1974.

On May 1, 1975, the U.S. Congress deregulated the stock brokerage industry by taking away the power of the New York Stock Exchange to determine the commission rates charged by its members. This opened the door to discount brokers, who took orders to buy and sell securities, but did not offer advice or do research the way larger, established brokers such as Merrill Lynch did. This presented an opportunity to win individual investors well enough versed in the stock market not to need the advice offered by established brokers. Schwab quickly took advantage of deregulation, opening a small San Francisco brokerage, financed primarily with borrowed money, and buying a seat on the New York Stock Exchange.

The new discount brokers, whose commissions might be only 30 percent of the rates before deregulation, were scorned by the old-line brokerages. During his first few years as a discount broker, Schwab had to contend with bad publicity generated by the older firms, some of whom threatened to break their leases if landlords allowed Schwab to rent offices in the same building.

Schwab fought back by buying newspaper ads featuring his photograph and asking customers to contact him personally, helping to build the firms credibility. Possibly the most important early decision made by Schwab was to open branch offices around the United States. He reasoned that even investors not needing advice would prefer doing business through a local office instead of a toll-free telephone number. The move won customers and helped differentiate Schwab from the large number of discount firms appearing after deregulation.

Over the next few years Schwab did several things to pull away from the pack. The company offered innovative new services including the ability to place orders 24 hours a day. It bought advanced computer systems to deal quickly with huge volumes of orders and continued its heavy advertising, seeking to project an upscale image. Top executives were given expensive foreign cars, and an interior design staff was commissioned to help showcase certain new branches. Some industry analysts maintain that with these measures Schwab helped bring discount brokering into the mainstream of financial institutions.

Acquired by BankAmerica in 1983

The firms rapid expansion was costly, however. Partly as a result of high operating costs and partly because sales were dependent on the sentiments of small investors, profits were erratic. Schwab sometimes turned to employees and larger customers to raise money for further expansion. By 1980 Schwab was by far the largest discounter in the country. That year, to fund further growth, Schwab decided to take the company public. The offering was called off, however, when some problems caused by the attempted conversion to a new computer system proved an embarrassment to the company. Raising sufficient capital in private became more difficult, partly because of the erratic earnings. Finally, in 1983, Schwab arranged for San Franciscos BankAmerica Corporation to acquire the company for $55 million in BankAmerica stock. BankAmerica also agreed to supply Schwab with capital. The bank loaned Schwab $50 million over the next three years, but Schwab remained one of the most highly leveraged brokerages.

The sale to BankAmerica may have provided needed capital, but it also fettered the company with banking regulations. Schwab wanted to offer new, proprietary lines of investments including Charles Schwab mutual funds. However, federal law at the time forbid banks and their subsidiaries from underwriting such securities. Although Schwab initially sought to challenge the law, as its wording contained some ambiguities, BankAmerica did not want to irritate banking regulators. Tensions between Schwab and its parent were further exacerbated when BankAmericas stock price began falling, making Schwabs stake in the corporation worth less.

Schwab introduced the Mutual Fund Marketplace in 1984 with an initial investment of $5 million. The Marketplace allowed customers to invest in 250 separate mutual funds and switch between them using Schwab as the bookkeeper. All of a customers mutual fund accounts were put on a single monthly statement. The companys profile was further raised in 1984 when Schwabs book How to Be Your Own Stockbroker was published. In it Schwab presented himself as a populist fighting against Wall Street stockbrokers in the name of the average investor. He contended that there is an inherent conflict of interest when a firm owns stock in inventory, writes favorable research recommendations on those stocks, and has commissioned salespeople sell those stocks to the public. At the same time, Schwabs company was moving into elegant new headquarters in downtown San Francisco.

In 1985 Schwab had 90 branches and 1.2 million customers, generating $202 million in revenue. Though it was far larger than its leading discount competitors, it was small compared with the largest retail brokerages, which had over 300 branches. The firm was growing in other ways, however. It offered personal computer software, called the Equalizer, that allowed investors to place orders via computer as well as to call up stock information and obtain research reports.

Buyback and Public Offering in 1987

In 1987 Charles Schwab and a group of investors bought the company back from BankAmerica for $280 million. Seven weeks later, he announced plans to take the company public. The buyback had resulted in a debt of $200 million, and the public offering was partly designed to eliminate some of this debt. It was also intended to raise money for further expansion. Schwab wanted to increase the number of branches to 120, including offices in Europe. The September 1987 IPO created a new holding company, The Charles Schwab Corporation, with Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. as its principal operating subsidiary.

The discount brokerage business had grown intensely competitive. Discounters handled a significant amount of retail equity trades by 1987, but hundreds of firms had entered the field, including banks, savings and loans, and mutual fund companies. Since Schwab was clearly the player to beat in discounting, competitors advertisements specifically offered rates lower than Schwabs. Nevertheless, at this time Schwab had 1.6 million customers, about five times as many as its nearest competitor, Quick & Reilly Group. In 1987 the firm had sales of $465 million and profits of $26 million, twice the industrys average profit margin. To achieve this success, Schwab was spending about $15 million a year on advertising.

Schwab was already doing well with its expanded product line. Mutual Fund Marketplace had attracted $1.07 billion in client assets by year-end 1986. The company was also offering Individual Retirement Accounts, certificates of deposit, money-market accounts, and Schwab One cash-management accounts. Despite these successes, Schwab was badly hurt by the stock market crash of October 1987. By mid-1988, trading volume had fallen to about 10,400 trades a day, a 40 percent drop from the months before the crash. Schwab cut costs to maintain profitability, reducing managerial salaries anywhere from five to 20 percent and laying off employees. Charles Schwab cut his own pay by 20 percent for six months and put branch expansion plans on hold. The firm also raised its trading commission by ten percent, so that it needed only 8,000 trades a day to break even, down from 12,000 trades. Even with the cost-cutting, the firms 1988 earnings plummeted 70 percent to $7.4 million on sales of $392 million.

Company Perspectives:

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Rapid Expansion

By 1989 Schwab was expanding again. The company bought Chicago-based Rose & Co. for $34 million from Chase Manhattan; as the fifth largest discount broker in the United States, Rose & Co. brought Schwab 200,000 new customers at a cost of about $70 each. With the purchase, Schwab controlled about 40 percent of the discount market, though discounters made only eight percent of all retail commissions. Over the long run, Schwab realized its best strategy was to win customers from the full-service brokers. To help create more independent stock investors, it pioneered a service called TeleBroker that let customers place stock orders and get price quotes from any touchtone telephone 24 hours a day. It also released a new version of the Equalizer. The software had already sold 30,000 copies at $169 each since its introduction.

Individual investors returned to the stock market in 1989, and the firms income surged to $553 million, with profits of $18.9 million. Income was further helped by an increase in client assets, from $16.8 billion in 1987 to $25 billion in early 1990. Commissions accounted for 70 percent of revenue, down from 85 percent in 1987.

Throughout the 1980s, Schwab updated its Mutual Fund Marketplace to allow customers to switch their investments from fund to fund by telephone. Customers paid a commission ranging from .6 percent to .08 percent, with a minimum fee of $29. Analysts were generally positive, pointing out that the amount of interest lost from having a check in the mail would pay for most of the services commission fees. In 1991 Schwab entered a new and lucrative market with the acquisition of Mayer & Schweitzer, an over-the-counter stock market maker.

Meanwhile Schwab was opening branch offices at a furious pace17 in 1992 aloneand doubling the amount of money it spent on advertising. Schwabs aggressive stance helped raise its share of the discount market to 46 percent as the company attracted more than 40,000 new accounts a month. In 1992 Schwab acquired its first corporate jet, spending $12 million on a model with enough fuel capacity to reach London, where it was opening its first European branch. These additional costs helped drag down third-quarter earnings in 1992 when stock trading temporarily tapered off. The dip was a reminder that the company was still highly dependent on commissions and caused its stock to drop 20 percent.

Schwab cut advertising by 20 percent and took other steps to slow cost increases. The company converted a greater share of new branch offices into bare-bones operations with only one broker. Schwab already paid its 2,500 brokers less than other discounters, an average of $31,000 a year, compared with $50,000 at Fidelity Brokerage Services and $36,000 at Quick & Reilly.

OneSource Introduced in 1992, Leading to Explosive Growth

The firm also continued searching for ways to become less dependent on commissions. The introduction in July 1992 of the Mutual Fund OneSourcea program allowing investors to trade mutual funds (more than 200 in all) from eight outside fund companies, without paying any transaction feesattracted more than $500 million in assets within two months and over $4 billion by July 1993; it was thus the most successful first-year pilot of any new service in Schwabs history. The fund companies paid Schwab a small percentage feetypically 0.25 to 0.35 percentof the fund assets held in Schwab accounts.

During 1992 Schwab customers opened 560,000 new accounts at its 175 branch offices, while assets in customer accounts grew 38 percent to $65.6 billion. Revenue soared to $909 million, with record profits of $81 million. As a result of these successes, Schwab opened 20 more branch offices in 1993, opened an office in London (its first in Europe), and introduced several proprietary mutual funds, including Schwab International Index Fund and Schwab Small-Cap Index Fund.

As the 1990s continued, the OneSource program became wildly successful. By 1997 investors could choose among more than 1,400 mutual funds and had poured $80 billion into the funds through the program. OneSourceaided by the long bull markethelped Schwab grow at an amazing rate in the 1990s. From 1992 through 1997, revenues increased at a 25 percent compounded annual rate, while customer assets increased 40 percent per year, from $65.6 billion to $353.7 billion. Also fueling this growth was the emergence of Internet trading as Schwab rapidly gained the number one position among online brokerage services. By May 1997 the firm claimed 700,000 of the 1.5 million active, online brokerage accounts in the United States. It also moved into the top five among all U.S. brokerages.

Schwabs explosive growth, which saw customer accounts increase from 2.0 million in 1992 to 4.8 million in 1997, was accompanied by several technological snafus, prompting some company clients to conclude that Schwab was growing too fast. For instance, in the summer of 1997 two computer-related outages temporarily left thousands of Schwab clients without access to their accounts. In addition, some clients were mistakenly sent the statements of other clients. Schwab officials contended that these were isolated incidents and not indicative of out-of-control growth.

The company also had to contend with the aging of the baby boom generation, the members of which were somewhat belatedly planning for retirement. Schwab set up a retirement plan services unit offering 401(k) and other retirement plans. Aging investors also tended to want more advice before deciding where to put their money. In response, Schwab bolstered its ability to deliver investment advice to clients, developing written investment kits; providing access to a wide range of research reports, earnings forecasts, and news stories on its web site; and offering the opportunity to meet in person with representatives at company branches. Another new and highly sought-after service added by Schwab in 1997 was access to initial public offerings at the offering price. The firm entered into alliances with Credit Suisse First Boston Corporation, J.P. Morgan & Co., and Hambrecht & Quist Group to gain access to IPOs led by these companies.

On January 1,1998, David S. Pottruck became president and co-CEO of Charles Schwab Corporation, with Charles Schwab remaining chairman and sharing the co-CEO title. This unusual arrangement seemed to indicate that Pottruck, age 49 at the time, was in line to succeed the 60-year-old Schwab, though the company founder had made no retirement plans. Just a month or so earlier, Timothy F. McCarthy was named president and chief operating officer of Charles Schwab & Co., giving him day-today responsibility for the management of the brokerage unit, with Pottruck controlling overall administration, finance, technology, and corporate strategy.

It was this new management team that would have to contend with what would likely be an increasingly volatile stock market in the early 21st century. Also, the shift to more trading on the Internetwhere fees were lowerwas cutting into Schwabs bread-and-butter commissions. It was reported in September 1998 that the company, which already offered services in Hong Kong and the United Kingdom, was considering entering the Japanese market, among other international expansion possibilities.

Principal Subsidiaries

Schwab Holdings, Inc.; Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.; Charles Schwab Investment Management, Inc.; The Charles Schwab Trust Company; Mayer & Schweitzer, Inc.; Charles Schwab Europe (U.K.).

Further Reading

Bianco, Anthony, Schwab Vs. Les Quick, Business Week, May 12, 1986.

Ferguson, Tim W., Do It Yourself: Charles Schwab Has Riden the Bull Market to a Splendid Present, but Its Future Is in Boomer Retirements, Forbes, April 22, 1996, p. 70.

Heins, John, After Cost Cuts, What?, Forbes, May 1, 1989.

_______, How Now, Chuck Schwab?, Forbes, June 15, 1987.

Laderman, Jeffrey M., Remaking Schwab, Business Week, May 25, 1998, pp. 122-24, 127-29.

McGeehan, Patrick, Charles Schwabs Pottruck Will Share Title of CEO with Companys Founder, Wall Street Journal, December 2, 1997, p. B5.

_______, Schwabs Offer of Rivals Research Meets a Quick End, Wall Street Journal, January 19, 1998, pp. Cl, C19.

McGough, Robert, Schwabs Swelling Girth Holds Sway in the Fund Field, Wall Street Journal, November 9, 1993, pp. Cl, C21.

Mitchell, Russell, The Schwab Revolution, Business Week, December 19, 1994, pp. 88-91, 94-95, 98.

Oliver, Suzanne L., One-Stop Shopping, Forbes, November 11, 1991.

Pare, Terence P., How Schwab Wins Investors, Fortune, June 1, 1992, p. 52.

Raghavan, Anita, Schwabs Series of Misfires Puts Firm on the Defensive, Wall Street Journal, February 24, 1998, pp. Cl, C27.

Raghavan, Anita, and Patrick McGeehan, Schwab Again Plans to Offer Stock Research, Wall Street Journal, July 8, 1998, pp. Cl, C15.

Schifrin, Matthew, Cyber-Schwab: As Retail Brokerage Moves On-line, Charles Schwab Has Grabbed Nearly Half the Market, Forbes, May 5, 1997, p. 42.

Shao, Maria, Suddenly the Envy of the Street Is Schwab?, Business Week, March 19, 1990.

Siconolfi, Michael, Schwabs Profit Stumbles Amid Rise in Expenses Coupled with Less Trading, Wall Street Journal, September 29, 1992.

Scott M. Lewis
updated by David E. Salamie

The Charles Schwab Corporation

views updated May 29 2018

The Charles Schwab Corporation

101 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, California 94104
USA
Telephone: (415) 627-7000
Fax: (415) 636-5970
Web site: www.schwab.com

SMARTER INVESTOR CAMPAIGN

OVERVIEW

Known as a discount broker in a world of traditional full-service investment firms, the Charles Schwab Corporation diversified during the 1980s and 1990s. In keeping with an industry-wide trend toward offering customers one-stop financial services, it expanded into banking, annuities, bond trading, and mutual funds. With the rise of the Internet, Schwab's core brokerage business evolved to allow trading on its website, making it America's leading online broker by the late 1990s. While a host of upstart, low-fee online trading services challenged Schwab from below, the company also needed to position itself against a wide range of consolidated financial-services companies. In response to these pressures, and amid an unprecedented bull market on Wall Street, Schwab rapidly increased its marketing profile at the end of the millennium, an effort that culminated with the well-received "Smarter Investor" campaign, which began in 1999 and ran through 2000.

Created by the New York office of Omnicom Group's BBDO agency for an estimated first-year price tag of $50 million, "Smarter Investor" began as a series of four television commercials featuring sports celebrities. According to the agency, the use of celebrities was meant to make Schwab seem accessible and good-natured, in touch with ordinary Americans' interests, and the athletes' humorously surprising grasp of the intricacies of investing terminology suggested that anyone, no matter what their previous level of financial expertise had been, could become a smarter investor with Schwab's help. Supporting print ads used the campaign's tagline, "Creating a world of smarter investors." Subsequent TV spots featured entertainment celebrities, and then the campaign evolved to shift the focus away from celebrities and onto Schwab's retirement-planning products and services.

The campaign attracted favorable industry attention and awards, but a sputtering stock market led Schwab to rethink the do-it-yourself ethos embodied by the "Smarter Investor" campaign. The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, dramatically heightened the investing public's already palpable anxiety, and Schwab further changed its advertising message, in the subsequent months and years, to suit a more anxious investing public.

HISTORICAL CONTEXT

Stanford graduate Charles Schwab founded his eponymous company (then Charles Schwab & Co.) as a full-service brokerage firm in 1971. When the Securities and Exchange Commission banned fixed brokers' commissions in 1975, Schwab's competitors responded by increasing commissions. Schwab instead lowered commissions and positioned itself as a no-frills alternative to traditional full-service brokers. Between 1977 and 1983 Schwab revenues grew by a factor of 30. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s Schwab diversified into banking, retirement, personal investment advising, mutual funds, and other products similar to those offered by its full-service rivals. But those rivals also diversified during this time, as did most other key players in the financial-services industry. Schwab had, however, built an unparalleled system of local branches over the course of its first three decades, along with a corresponding reputation for accessibility and value that distinguished it from its pricier rivals.

In addition to competing against this wide range of financial-services giants, Schwab had to contend with new down-market rivals as well. The number of online investing services went from none in 1995 to 82 in 1998, and though Schwab was early to establish itself in the online brokerage wars, upstart companies continued to undercut one another (and Schwab) in pricing, with online transaction fees falling below $10, a significant difference from Schwab's fee of $29.95.

By 1998 more than 50 percent of Schwab's brokerage customers were trading online, and Schwab had almost 30 percent of the online trading market. To maintain its position atop the online investing industry, and to remain competitive with higher-priced rivals, Schwab embarked on its first concerted effort at brand-building (it had focused most of its previous advertising on specific products). When it hired BBDO in 1998, Schwab dramatically increased its advertising budget, setting out to unify its products and services under an umbrella concept and to define its image for the investing public. Initial BBDO spots included documentary-style branding work featuring ordinary Schwab customers praising the company.

TARGET MARKET

Though it continued to stress Schwab's accessibility and usefulness to a wide range of investors, the 1999 "Smarter Investor" campaign took Schwab beyond BBDO's initial ordinary-investor approach and into glitzier territory. As a broad corporate-image campaign, "Smarter Investor" did not focus on specific Schwab products or segments of investors but instead sought to communicate the firm's position amid the wide range of available financial-services companies.

According to BBDO's creative director, Jimmy Siegel, the agency wanted to play up Schwab's reputation for offering "a very down-to-earth, honest way to invest," and the use of celebrities underscored the firm's desire to seem affable and in tune with the interests of ordinary people. Each spot revolved around the humorous use of investing jargon by people who were well known for reasons other than their stock-market savvy, which sent the message that anyone, with Schwab's help, could become knowledgeable about investing. Poised between the world of conventional full-service brokers and that of discount, limited-service online brokers, Schwab wanted investors to see it as unique in that it did not charge exorbitant fees but still provided its customers with solid advice and market knowledge. The idea that Schwab was in the business of creating knowledgeable investors was, in the words of BBDO senior creative director Charlie Miesmer, "a compliment to investors and Schwab alike."

COMPETITION

E*TRADE Financial Corporation, second to Schwab in online-brokerage market share, spent more than a quarter of its 1998 revenues on the rollout of its new website. Targeting investors who used the web to research financial matters but who did not yet use it for trading, the E*TRADE push included direct-mail promotions offering $50 signing bonuses to select new customers. The company also ran text-heavy print ads detailing the site's features. TV spots were aired on cable television, and a significant portion of the advertising budget was devoted to online media.

Merrill Lynch & Co., the nation's largest brokerage firm at the time, was hardly immune to the challenges of the evolving financial-services marketplace. With its "Human Achievement" campaign it had positioned itself as a desirable, people-focused firm that was preferable to the electronic realm of online brokerages. Observers were surprised, therefore, when Merrill did an about-face in June of 2000, announcing that it would begin offering low-cost online trading. Merrill phased out the "Human Achievement" message and began the process of refining a marketing approach that could reconcile the company's full-service brokerage heritage with its new discount online offerings.

FMR Corp., also known as Fidelity Investments, was the world's leading mutual fund company in addition to offering a range of financial services, such as brokerage, life insurance, trust services, and securities clearing. Fidelity had in the preceding years been using a significant proportion of its marketing resources to spread the word about its capabilities beyond mutual funds, focusing on its brokerage business in particular. In 2000 the company launched the "See Yourself Succeeding" campaign, which showed Fidelity advisers teaching customers about new products or helping them find solutions to investment problems.

MARKETING STRATEGY

The factors that set Schwab apart from other companies—its heritage of no-nonsense investing capabilities and customer service provided via its comprehensive branch system—formed the basis of BBDO's vision for the "Smarter Investor" campaign. Additionally, the campaign's reliance on humor was a departure from traditional financial-services advertising, a contrast, in the words of BBDO co-CEO and chief creative officer Tedd Sann, to the "heavy and amorphous" marketing of competitors. Celebrities had the obvious advantage of attracting attention to the ads, and further, as Adweek columnist Barbara Lippert noted, the presentation of the celebrities as "knowing users of complicated information" was a refreshing departure from typical endorsement ads.

FUNNY BUSINESS

Schwab's "Smarter Investor" campaign was a departure from much financial-services advertising in its reliance on humor, but "Smarter Investor" was not Schwab's first foray into the business of trying to be funny. In 1998, advertising shop BBDO's first year helming Schwab's corporate-image efforts, the agency came up with a series of spots employing the tagline "Ready to Move Up?" The ads featured such professionals as a plastic surgeon and an airline pilot who, because they had to spend so much time thinking about their finances, botched their primary, high-stakes jobs. Schwab pulled the campaign following complaints by organizations such as the American Medical Association, and BBDO went with a more palatable brand of humor in the ensuing "Smarter Invetor" spots.

The first four spots in the campaign began running in late August 1999. They were featured during CBS's coverage of the U.S. Open tennis tournament as well as during tennis, golf, and football programming on both network and cable stations throughout that year. The professional athletes featured in the ads were tennis players Anna Kournikova and Mary Joe Fernandez, football players Shannon Sharpe and Jason Sehorn, skier Picabo Street, and basketball player Dikembe Mutombo. In each case an athlete showed an unexpectedly sophisticated grasp of financial matters while engaged in his or her acknowledged field of expertise. For example, in one spot Fernandez remarked about the Russian Kournikova (known for her attractive appearance as well as for her tennis playing), "I'm not really friends with Anna Kournikova. First of all, there's that whole language thing." The scene then shifted to Kournikova telling an umpire, "A P/E ratio is price divided by earnings," before she turned to a group of tennis students and asked, "Can anyone say asset allocation?"

In another spot, called "Trash Talk," New York Giants cornerback Jason Sehorn bemoaned the verbal abuse he had received from Denver Broncos tight end Shannon Sharpe. Sharpe was shown, at the line of scrimmage, bad-mouthing Sehorn with putdowns such as "Your mama pays full commission!" and "I bet you pay transaction fees on your mutual funds!" The ads used the voice-over line "When we created a smarter kind of investment firm, we created a smarter kind of investor," and the primary campaign tagline was "Creating a world of smarter investors." Print ads featuring the tagline alone ran in such publications as the Wall Street Journal, Forbes, and Fortune.

The second series of television spots featured non-sports celebrities and employed the same concept and tagline. In one ad, first aired during the 2000 Super Bowl, Beatles drummer Ringo Starr was shown rhyming various financial catchphrases with the word "elation." Another spot depicted two lovers on a seaside balcony, with a female voice-over supplying their dialogue. The man asked, "What's wrong?" and the woman replied, "My portfolio is totally unbalanced. My mutual funds are underperforming." The voice behind the dialogue was revealed to be that of romance writer Jackie Collins, supposedly reading from her new novel.

Schwab similarly featured celebrities in a humorous way to pitch its retirement-planning capabilities during and after the main campaign's run. In "Retirement Home" a group of sports superstars who had only recently passed their prime were gathered at a retirement home, variously napping, knitting, and playing bingo or shuffleboard. A voice-over stated, "These days, it's never too early to think about retirement." Another spot featured baseball slugger Barry Bonds, who was then on the verge of breaking Hank Aaron's career home-run record, being subliminally encouraged by Aaron, via a stadium loudspeaker, to think about retiring.

OUTCOME

Schwab's "Tennis Player" ad, featuring Fernandez and Kournikova, was named an Adweek Best Spot of 1999. The "Jackie Collins" spot also garnered Adweek Best Spot honors in April 2000. "Retirement Home" won a Silver Lion at the 2000 International Advertising Festival in Cannes, France. Barbara Lippert called the campaign "truly deft, delightful work, mostly because it's smartly written and well-executed."

But as the stock market declined, Schwab began to phase in new messages and marketing approaches, beginning with spots featuring the company's founder, Charles Schwab, comforting anxious investors in a town-hall setting. During the September 11 terrorist attacks Schwab lost its World Trade Center headquarters, but all of its employees survived. The company was the first financial-services firm to launch a new campaign after the attacks, running spots that compared Schwab advisers to the most trustworthy people in investors' lives. Because the stock market had plunged and consumer trading had fallen dramatically, Schwab had to cut its advertising budget, and it dropped BBDO without a review in 2002. Instead it appointed GSD&M, the Austin, Texas shop that had been in charge of advertising for Schwab online, as its primary creative agency. Between 2000 and 2003 Schwab laid off more than a third of its workforce and struggled to return to the levels of profitability it had enjoyed in years prior.

FURTHER READING

Barney, Lee. "Schwab and MassMutual Initiate Ad Campaigns to Remake Their Images." Mutual Fund Market News, September 13, 1999.

Buckman, Rebecca. "On-Line Brokerage Firms Advertise Big as Volume of Stock Trading Skyrockets." Wall Street Journal, September 11, 1998.

Buckman, Rebecca, and Kathryn Kranhold. "Schwab Serves Up Sports-Themed Ads." Wall Street Journal, August 30, 1999.

Cardona, Mercedes. "Financial Firms Press On with Advertising Plans." Advertising Age, October 1, 2001.

Gasparino, Charles. "Merrill Hopes New Ads Can Integrate Its Image as Full-Service Firm, Leading Online Broker." Wall Street Journal, January 3, 2000.

Gianatasio, David. "A Solid Investment." Adweek, December 11, 2000.

Hein, Kenneth. "Charles in Charge." Brandweek, March 19, 2001.

Linnett, Richard. "Personality Plus." Adweek, August 30, 1999.

Lippert, Barbara. "Star Power." Adweek, December 6, 1999.

Parpis, Eleftheria. "Best Campaigns of 1999." Adweek (western ed.), January 24, 2000.

Petrecca, Laura, and James B. Arndorfer. "Schwab Enlists BBDO for $50 Mil in Brand Ad Work." Advertising Age, June 26, 1998.

Warner, Bernhard. "Taking Stock of the Web." Adweek (western ed.), September 21, 1998.

Woodward, Sarah. "BBDO New York Puts Its Money Where the Mouth Is." Shoot, September 17, 1999.

                                              Mark Lane

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