Saul Steinberg (businessman)

Businessman

Birthday August 13, 1939

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace New York City, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2012-12-7, New York City, U.S. (73 years old)

Nationality United States

#46106 Most Popular

1817

Reliance had been in business 150 years, having been established in 1817 to provide fire insurance.

It was managed conservatively.

Insurance companies have much capital, which is just what computer leasing companies need.

Steinberg offered the Reliance shareholders a combination of convertible subordinated debentures and common stock warrants (rather than cash).

1930

He became a millionaire before his 30th birthday and a billionaire before his 40th birthday.

1939

Saul Phillip Steinberg (August 13, 1939 – December 7, 2012) was an American businessman and financier.

Steinberg was born to a Jewish family on August 13, 1939, and grew up in Brooklyn, New York, the son of Julius and Anne Cohen Steinberg.

He had one brother, Robert Steinberg, and two sisters, Roni Sokoloff and Lynda Jurist.

Steinberg finished a degree from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

1959

He was listed as a member of the class of 1959, but some accounts have said that he graduated in two years at age 18.

1961

In 1961, at the age 22, Steinberg founded Leasco Data Processing Equipment Corporation, a computer leasing company that leased IBM computers.

While at Wharton, Steinberg had written a paper about IBM Corp., and he had learned that IBM was charging premium prices to lease its computers.

Steinberg discovered that he could offer computer leases that would undercut IBM's prices and still obtain bank financing for the entire purchase price of the computers by using the signed leases as collateral with lenders.

1965

Leasco grew rapidly, and in 1965, it went public.

Leasco bid to acquire Reliance Insurance Company, a Philadelphia insurance company ten times the size of Leasco.

1968

He started a computer leasing company (Leasco), which he used in an audacious and successful takeover of the much larger Reliance Insurance Company in 1968.

Reliance management resisted but eventually capitulated, and Leasco was successful in assuming control of Reliance in 1968.

Steinberg was 29 when he took over Reliance.

1969

He was best known for his unsuccessful attempts to take over Chemical Bank in 1969 and Walt Disney Productions in 1984.

In 1969, Steinberg attempted to take over Chemical Bank, then one of the nation's largest financial institutions.

The attempt failed.

Steinberg also successfully took over Pergamon Press from British businessman Robert Maxwell.

The two initially got along, but the relationship quickly soured, and Steinberg was able to rally British investors to oust Maxwell from his position.

1974

However, Maxwell bought Pergamon back with borrowed funds in 1974.

Steinberg became the CEO of Reliance, and he and his brother were the senior managers of Reliance for the next thirty years.

Steinberg took on large amounts of debt during the junk bond era and grew, apparently by underpricing its insurance policies.

The company paid out dividends to the shareholders, including the Steinberg family members as major shareholders, and paid Saul Steinberg large sums in compensation.

1986

At Reliance, Steinberg hired dealmaker Henry Silverman, who later became the CEO of HFS Inc. and later Cendant Corp. In 1986, while Silverman was at Reliance, he and Steinberg were involved with television executive Joseph Wallach in acquiring Spanish language television stations and creating the Spanish-language media company Telemundo.

1995

In 1995, Steinberg had a serious stroke.

He was forced to step back from management of Reliance.

The leverage, low pricing on insurance policies led Reliance to financial problems.

Management attempted to sell the company.

2000

Reliance Group negotiated a transaction to be sold to Leucadia National in 2000 for stock and the assumption of debt.

However, this transaction fell apart in July 2000.

Steinberg was forced to sell his extensive art collection along with his 17,000 square-foot, 34-room duplex apartment at 740 Park Avenue in Manhattan, which was bought for "slightly above or below $30 million" in 2000 by Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group.

Steinberg was a major benefactor of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.

He served as chairman of Wharton's Board of Overseers for over 15 years and continued as a member of the board until his death.

The Steinberg name is highly visible at Wharton, most notably attached to Steinberg-Dietrich Hall, which served as the main undergraduate building, containing classrooms, lounges, computer labs, and departmental offices.

The Steinberg Conference Center serves as home to the Executive Education Center and the Aresty Institute of Executive Education.

2001

Reliance filed for bankruptcy in 2001 and entered into a long process of liquidation.