Bear, Stearns & Co., Inc.
Bear, Stearns & Co., Inc. is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Bear, Stearns & Co., Inc..
Bear, Stearns & Co., Inc. is a company.
Key people at Bear, Stearns & Co., Inc..
Key people at Bear, Stearns & Co., Inc..
# Bear Stearns: A Historical Overview
Bear Stearns operated as a full-service investment banking and brokerage firm serving corporations, institutions, governments, and individuals[1]. The firm's business encompassed corporate finance, mergers and acquisitions, institutional equities, fixed income sales and risk management, trading and research, private client services, derivatives, foreign exchange and futures sales and trading, asset management, and custody services[1]. Through its subsidiaries, Bear Stearns also provided global clearing services to broker dealers and professional traders, including securities lending[1].
The firm was particularly influential in shaping modern capital markets, playing a pioneering role in bond market development during the Great Depression and becoming instrumental in block trading strategies by the 1950s[2][3]. By the 1980s, Bear Stearns had evolved into a billion-dollar powerhouse and became a publicly traded company in 1985, establishing itself as a globally recognized dominant player in capital markets and securities trading[2].
Bear Stearns was founded on May 1, 1923, by Joseph Ainslie Bear, Robert B. Stearns, and Harold C. Mayer with $500,000 in capital[1]. The firm emerged during the booming investment climate of the early 1920s, when World War I's heavy capital demands had encouraged mass public participation in securities markets[3].
The company demonstrated remarkable resilience early in its history. It survived the Wall Street Crash of 1929 without laying off any employees, a distinction that set it apart from competitors during the Great Depression[1]. By 1933, the firm had grown from seven original employees to 75, opened its first regional office in Chicago, and accumulated a capital base of $800,000[3]. That same year, Salim L. "Cy" Lewis was hired to direct the firm's new institutional bond trading department, marking the beginning of Bear Stearns' influential role in bond market development[3].
Bear Stearns played a formative role in modernizing American capital markets. The firm was instrumental in responding to President Franklin Roosevelt's infrastructure development initiatives by developing the bond market during the Depression[2]. Its pioneering work in block trading and retail investment services helped democratize access to capital markets and shaped the investment banking industry's evolution throughout the 20th century.
The firm's influence extended beyond markets into the private equity space—Jerry Kohlberg, who led Bear Stearns' corporate finance department, pioneered the leveraged buyout model that would later become the foundation for KKR (Kohlberg Kravis Roberts), one of the world's leading private equity firms[4].
Bear Stearns' 85-year history reflects both the opportunities and vulnerabilities of investment banking. From its founding during the Roaring Twenties through its emergence as a global financial powerhouse, the firm demonstrated innovation and resilience. However, its exposure to collateralized debt obligations during the 2008 financial crisis proved fatal—the firm was acquired by JPMorgan Chase in a stock swap worth $2 per share (less than 7 percent of its market value just two days prior), with the Federal Reserve creating Maiden Lane LLC to absorb $30 billion of Bear Stearns' troubled assets[1][2].