Alleghany Corporation

Alleghany Corporation
Company typeSubsidiary
NYSE: Y
IndustryInsurance
Founded1929; 95 years ago (1929)
FoundersOris and Mantis Van Sweringen
HeadquartersTimes Square Tower
New York City, U.S.
Key people
ProductsTitle insurance, others
RevenueIncrease US$12.00 billion (2021)
Increase US$1.52 billion (2021)
Increase US$1.03 billion (2021)
Total assetsIncrease US$32.27 billion (2021)
Total equityIncrease US$9.19 billion (2021)
Number of employees
13,313 (2021)
ParentBerkshire Hathaway
Websitealleghany.com
Footnotes / references
[1]

Alleghany Corporation is an American investment holding company originally created by the railroad entrepreneurs Oris and Mantis Van Sweringen as a holding company for their railroad interests. It was incorporated in 1929[2] and reincorporated in Delaware in 1984.[3] On March 21, 2022, Berkshire Hathaway made an $11.6 billion offer to acquire the company, which completed in October 2022.[4][5]

After the company's bankruptcy in the Great Depression, control of the company fell into the hands of Robert Ralph Young and Allan Price Kirby. Young used the company as a vehicle for his vendetta against the J.P. Morgan banking interests, who had financed the Van Sweringens and managed to defeat them and the Vanderbilt interests in a 1954 proxy fight for the New York Central Railroad. The failing New York Central was in worse shape than Young had bargained for and he committed suicide shortly after being forced to suspend the dividend in January 1958.[citation needed] After Young's death, his role in NYC management was assumed by his protégé Alfred E. Perlman. Although much had been accomplished to streamline NYC operations, in those tough economic times, mergers with other railroads were seen as the only possible road to financial stability. The most likely suitor became the NYC's former arch-rival Pennsylvania Railroad. During the early 1960s, New York Central negotiated a merger with the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR), which was led by Stuart T. Saunders after 1963. Saunders had most recently led the Norfolk and Western Railway through a successful expansion through acquisition and mergers including the Virginian Railway, Nickel Plate Road and Wabash Railway. There was great hope that success would result from the NYC-PRR combination. Penn Central Transportation Company was formed by the merger on February 1, 1968. However, the underlying financial weakness of both former railroads, combined with the fact that the ICC forced the chronically weak New Haven Railroad into the system, doomed the Penn Central and bankruptcy was declared a little over 2 years later, on June 21, 1970. Many of the Penn Central railroad assets ended up in Conrail, formed in 1976. The bankruptcy of the Penn Central railroad mostly ended Alleghany's involvement in the railroad business.

The company's residual railroad investments led to president and CEO John J. Burns serving on the board of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation from 1995 to 2004.[citation needed]

Now Alleghany Corporation focuses on the insurance business (property, casualty, surety and fidelity insurance). Until his death in February 2011, Allan Kirby's son, Fred M. Kirby 2nd, was the chairman of the board and a sometime member of the Forbes 400 list of richest Americans.[6]

  1. ^ "US SEC: Form 10-K Alleghany Corporation". United States Securities and Exchange Commission. February 23, 2022.
  2. ^ "Alleghany Corp.". Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. Cleveland, Ohio: Case Western Reserve University. 1997-07-10. Retrieved 2009-09-19.
  3. ^ "Articles of Incorporation". New York City: Alleghany Corporation. 1986-12-22. Archived from the original on 2009-04-12. Retrieved 2009-09-19.
  4. ^ Funk, Josh (19 October 2022). "Buffett's conglomerate closes $11.6B Alleghany insurance buy". Associated Press.
  5. ^ "Berkshire Hathaway to buy Alleghany in $11.6 bln deal". Reuters. 21 March 2022. Retrieved 2022-03-21.
  6. ^ Strom, Stephanie (2011-02-11). "Fred Kirby, Who Built Giant Title Insurance Company, Is Dead at 91". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-03-16.